Dayton Daily News

Some gas leak fires ‘preventabl­e’ if right steps taken

- By Rick McCrabb and Eric Schwartzbe­rg Staff Writers

Two recent Butler County fires that displaced 10 apartment residents and temporaril­y closed a Hamilton restaurant show the dangers of faulty gas lines and leaking gas.

On Tuesday, a kitchen fire broke out at Kostas Restaurant, 221 Court St., which had recently re-opened under new ownership after months of renovation­s. Hamilton Fire Chief Mark Mercer said the blaze was accidental and believed to have started in a faulty gas line or gas connection to the griddle.

The fire caused an estimated $45,000 in damage to the cooking appliance and interior furnishing­s, Mercer said. The city of Hamilton gas department will check on the restaurant’s gas lines, he said. Earlier this month, natural gas escaping from piping led to the explosion at a Middletown apartment building that seriously injured one resident and displaced 10, officials said.

Lt. Frank Baughman, city fire marshal, said the natural gas permeated the nearby apartments and that the furnace unit in Apt. 422 ignited the gas, which caused the explosion about 11:30 a.m. Dec. 2 at the Townhomes West apartment complex in the 400 block of Cribbs Avenue.

Ken Klouda, fire prevention bureau chief for the State Fire Marshal’s office, said fires blamed on furnaces or portable space heaters are “preventabl­e” if routine maintenanc­e is performed and safety precaution­s taken.

He said business and home owners should have their furnaces inspected yearly by a licensed technician. That way, he said, cracks and leaks can be possibly detected before starting a fire.

Furnace filters also should be checked every month for dirt even if they are to be replaced every three months. Klouda said he has a monthly reminder on his cell phone to check the filters and smoke detectors in his house.

Carbon monoxide detectors should be replaced every five years and smoke detectors every 10 years, he said.

Portable space heaters can be effective, he said, as long as certain safety steps are taken. They should be used only when the resident is home and awake and be shut off at night. Klouda said the heaters should have switches that automatica­lly turn them off if they tip over.

Ben Jones, executive director of the Butler Metro Housing Authority, said preventati­ve maintenanc­e typically is performed on the public housing apartments every January and Townhomes West was inspected again in September.

The apartments have been condemned by the city of Middletown because they’re uninhabita­ble, according to a city official. The city will notify BMHA it must demolish or rebuild the structure, according to an official. Jones said after meeting with the insurance adjuster, he will determine the “best path for the future” of the 44-yearold building.

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