Newsman: A malfunctioning space heater sparked a major fire in a New York City high-rise apartment building Sunday morning, leaving at least 19 people dead — including nine children, city officials said Sunday evening. The Bronx apartment building was home to a high population of immigrants, including many from Gambia officials said.
Officials said the blaze in the city’s Bronx borough injured more than 63 people, 32 of whom were in life-threatening condition. Many firefighters’ air tanks ran out of air as they continued working to rescue people.
“This is a horrific, horrific, painful moment for the city of New York,” New York City Mayor Eric Adams said earlier on Sunday.
“This is going to be one of the worst fires that we have witnessed during modern times here in the city of New York,” he added.
The mayor urged any residents who need assistance to reach out, regardless of immigration status. “Your names will not be turned over to ICE or any other institution,” he said. “We want people to be comfortable coming forward.”
“We’re all feeling this. And we’re going to be here for this community to help them navigate through this,” Mayor Adams said. the city would coordinate with faith leaders to ensure they respect Islamic burial rites he said as many of the victims were Muslims according to the city official.
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said she would establish a victim’s compensation fund, and New York Sen. Chuck Schumer promised to offer housing, tax and immigration assistance at the federal level. “Tonight is a night of tragedy and pain. And tomorrow we begin to rebuild,” Hochul said.
New York City Fire Department Commissioner Daniel Nigro said the fire, caused by a portable space heater in a bedroom, was contained to a two-story apartment that spanned the second and third floors. But when the residents fled the burning apartment, the door was left open, he said — spreading smoke throughout the building and contributing to the loss of life.
All of the injuries were due to severe smoke inhalation, Nigro said. The building didn’t have fire escapes; the only means of escape was through the interior stairwells. But some residents couldn’t escape due to the volume of smoke, he said.
According to the FDNY, about 200 of its members responded to the five-alarm fire at 333 East 181 Street in the Bronx on Sunday morning, after the department received several calls of a fire from residents in the upper floors.
Nigro said units arrived at the fire within three minutes of the first call of a fire at a duplex apartment in the 19-story building.
“This smoke extended the entire height of the building — completely unusual,” Nigro said earlier on Sunday. “Members found victims on every floor in stairways and were taking them out in cardiac and respiratory arrest.”
The last time the city saw such a deadly blaze could be the Happy Land fire in 1990, Nigro said. Eighty-seven people died after an arsonist set fire to the social club, trapping attendees inside.