The Welland Tribune

Police search charred ruins

All four victims of N. S. fire younger than eight years old, relative says

- MICHAEL MacDONALD

PUBNICO, N. S. — The victims of a tragic house fire that swept through a rural Nova Scotia home Sunday were all children under the age of eight, according to a family member who has launched a fundraisin­g campaign to pay for funeral costs.

The children — a girl and three boys — ran in ages from an infant to a seven- year- old and included a cousin who was at the Pubnico, N. S., home for a sleepover, said Rod Hand, whose wife’s sister is the grandmothe­r of one of the children.

“They’re still in shock,” said Hand, an artist from Conception Bay South, N. L., who is fundraisin­g for the family by selling tickets to one of his canvas prints and starting a GoFundMe page.

“It’s a blended family,” he said. “One was actually a relative having a sleepover, so there are a number of families affected by this.”

Two adults escaped the early morning blaze and were taken to hospital by ambulance. Ervin Olsen, great- grandfathe­r of two children who died in the blaze, said Monday the father of at least one of the children remains in hospital.

“We’re at the hospital now and ... the father is struggling to stay alive,” said Olsen, whose granddaugh­ter is the mother of some of the children.

The remains of at least some of the victims remained at the scene, an official said Monday, and police used a cadaver dog to search the rubble of the two- storey home about 265 kilometres southwest of Halifax.

Nova Scotia RCMP’s Major Crimes Unit ruled out foul play, noting that a preliminar­y investigat­ion determined it is not suspicious.

“This is an absolute tragedy,” Cpl. Jennifer Clarke said in a statement. “There are no words to express this type of devastatio­n.”

She could not confirm the identities or number of dead.

The province’s Medical Examiner Service has assumed the lead of the investigat­ion.

“I extend my heartfelt sympathies to the families of those lost in the fire as well as the communitie­s of Pubnico and Yarmouth County as they grieve these extremely difficult losses,” Dr. Matt Bowes, the province’s chief medical examiner, said in a statement.

A day after the deadly blaze, yellow police tape surrounded the scorched ruins of the roadside home, reduced to a pile of blackened beams after an excavator ripped down walls to allow fire officials to get inside.

An RCMP dog handler spent about 20 minutes combing the jagged, charred debris of the house with the assistance of what he called a “human remains detection dog.”

At least three times, the black German shepherd stopped and sat motionless, and his handler moved to place orange flag tape at the spot. Four fire trucks were later lined up along the road to stymie onlookers, and a blue tarp placed over much of the rubble.

The remains of at least some victims were “still there” in the house, West Pubnico Fire Chief Gordon Amiro said Monday morning.

He said flames had already engulfed the home when firefighte­rs arrived early Sunday and firefighte­rs could not attempt to enter it.

“There was no way of going into the house. It was just a matter of putting the fire out,” Amiro said, noting that flames shooting out of the windows and roof. “There was nothing we could do in that situation.”

An ambulance was first to arrive on the scene of the fire, he said, and it took two adult survivors to hospital.

Residents of the area identified the father as a lobster fisherman. The Canadian Red Cross has said his common- law wife is with him in hospital.

Amiro said it could be days before the cause of the fire is known.

“It will probably be the end of the week before we know,” he said. “There was a wood stove in the structure. We presume that’s probably what happened, but we don’t know yet.”

While it could be days before investigat­ors pinpoint what sparked the blaze, details about the immediate response to the fire are emerging.

Firefighte­rs arrived at 12: 30 a. m. Sunday, about 12 minutes after the call came in, Amiro said.

In all, five fire department­s and about 40 firefighte­rs responded to the deadly blaze. Firefighte­rs stayed on the scene for nearly 18 hours — returning late Sunday night to respond to a flare- up, Amiro said.

“It was the longest time I’ve spent at a house fire in my life,” said the veteran firefighte­r, who has volunteere­d at the local department for 40 years. “It took us two and a half hours to get the flames down and then we had to put out the hot spots.”

The small fishing community in the province’s southern tip appears to have banded together to buoy volunteers and officials investigat­ing the fire.

“It’s a small community, we’re only about 2,000 people in this area,” Amiro said. “We had people coming with food. One came with a whole bunch of subs, another one came with sweets, two local restaurant­s came with sandwiches and tea and coffee and another one came with pizzas.”

— With files from Alison Auld and Brett Bundale in Halifax

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? An RCMP officers and a human remains detection dog search the scene of a house destroyed in a weekend fire in Pubnico Head, N. S. on Monday. The fire left four people dead, including at least two children, according to a relative.
ANDREW VAUGHAN/ THE CANADIAN PRESS An RCMP officers and a human remains detection dog search the scene of a house destroyed in a weekend fire in Pubnico Head, N. S. on Monday. The fire left four people dead, including at least two children, according to a relative.

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