Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Shelter’s laundry room catches fire

15 people at Salvation Army site displaced by smoke damage

- WILLIAM SANDERS

“There’s soot everywhere, and we definitely need to make sure that the safety of our clients and residents remain our conern as it was [Thursday], too.”

— Maj. Stephanie Mockabee, Salvation Army

LITTLE ROCK — A fire at the Salvation Army shelter in Little Rock displaced 15 people, including children, and left uncertain when the facility can reopen for overnight guests.

Maj. Stephanie Mockabee said that the fire Thursday evening was contained to the laundry room, but the large amount of soot forced out the residents.

“There’s too much soot damage,” said Mockabee, of the Central Arkansas Area Command. “There’s soot everywhere, and we definitely need to make sure that the safety of our clients and residents remain our concern as it was [Thursday], too.”

The Little Rock Fire Department responded to the blaze in a laundry room at the shelter at 1111 W. Markham St. and promptly put it out, according to fire Capt. Jacob Lear-Sadowsky. There were no reports of injuries.

The Fire Department estimates $2,500 in damage, including an industrial gas dryer, the clothes inside and minor damage to two other dryers, said Lear-Sadowsky, but the blaze and the items burned produced a large amount of smoke.

“The gas dryer itself was on fire as well as the clothes inside of it,” Lear-Sadowsky said. “That filled the building with quite a bit of smoke that we spent some time after the fire was out clearing with … fans.”

Mockabee said the shelter will not be able to open its doors for a few days, making the 12 spaces for women and three spaces for families unusable in the short term. The dryer also is a big loss.

“Even if we’re able to get everything clean and the building is deemed safe, the constructi­on in that room where the fire was contained is going to take a little time,” Mockabee said. “And of course, we want to open our doors as soon as we get the clear that it’s safe to do so.”

The Salvation Army arranged for housing for the people at the shelter at the time of the fire — including a mom and her toddler son, and a woman with disabiliti­es who is cared for by her adult son — and will continue to work with the residents as the building is repaired, Mockabee said.

“We’re really just working hard to continue to do the case management for our clients who have been staying with us,” Mockabee said. “There’s 15 people, that includes the children, that were staying with us, and so our department is working very hard to continue that contact with them and ensure they have a secure, safe place to stay until we get our doors back open.”

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