Fire on Froude
Social housing units decimated, one person taken to hospital
Crowds of people were out on the street amid billowing clouds of smoke on the Froude Avenue Monday night as fire claimed three social housing buildings, totalling 12 units.
Sharon Simms was in one of the buildings when she heard a scream, ran out of her house and realized it had caught fire.
Simms said she tried to go back in for her cats, but by the time she got back to the door, it was on fire.
Standing on a lawn as firefighters worked to put out the flames, she said she figured her pets were dead.
“I’m after cryin’ and cryin’, I can’t cry no more,” she said.
Simms said she also tried to help a neighbour get out of the adjacent building
“I remember grabbing her and hauling her down over the stairs, and I said, ‘Now she’s out, everything is fine,’” Simms said.
“When I looked, she was after going back in her house for her bird, and she got all of her face burned. She’s in the Health Sciences.”
Firefighters said only one person was taken to hospital.
Part of the reason the fire caused so much damage was because when firefighters first arrived on the scene, they struggled with low water pressure, so it took longer to get the blaze under control.
Some people who were displaced from their homes took refuge in the St. John’s Women’s Centre across the road on Cashin Avenue, or in the nearby Froude Avenue Community Centre.
Jean Proctor, who was inside the community centre, had tears streaming down her face.
Proctor said she had serious health issues, including being post-cancer, diabetic and having multiple broken ribs from a recent fall. Proctor’s daughter, who was in a powered wheelchair, was also out of a home.
Proctor was in a state of anguish because all her medication had been lost in the fire.
“Everything’s in there — gone,” she said.
“I’m just glad that we’re all safe. But I did have some personal belongings there, like all my memories of my children from 30 years were there in a box. I’m just glad we got our animals out and we’re safe.”
Proctor was defensive about her neighbourhood, and the people who live in the area.
“There was people saying it’s about time this dump burned down. I said, ‘Listen buddy, I’m going to tell you now, you’d better watch your mouth, because 12 families just lost their f---ing homes here, right.’”
Nearby in the community centre, MHA Gerry Rogers was working on her Blackberry, trying to find a pharmacy that could help Proctor, and other people.
“Froude Avenue is a fabulous community, it’s a real strong community,” Rogers said.
“There’s a lot of people that have been living here for years. As a matter of fact, there’s families who have been here for generations.”
Rogers said that for the night, some people would stay in the Women’s Centre, but multiple people were worried about lost medication or medical devices, such as powered wheelchairs that need to be connected to a charger.
Several survivors told The Telegram that they didn’t know where they would spend the night.