Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Airbnb urged to require carbon monoxide units inside all rentals

3 friends killed by poisoning Oct. 30 in Mexico City listing

- By Michael Levenson

NEW YORK >> A month after three friends who had traveled to Mexico City died, apparently of carbon monoxide poisoning, in their Airbnb rental, their families are pleading with the company to require that hosts install carbon monoxide detectors.

Airbnb and VRBO, which have dealt with at least 10 carbon monoxide deaths in Brazil and Mexico over the past four years, urge hosts to install detectors near sleeping areas but do not require them. Airbnb offers hosts free detectors, but in a 2018 study, public health researcher­s found that only 58% of hosts said they had installed them.

The three friends, Jordan Marshall, 28, and Courtez Hall, 33, both of New Orleans, and Kandace Florence, 28, of Virginia Beach, Va., died Oct. 30 in an Airbnb rental unit in a high-rise building, a day after they arrived in Mexico City to experience Day of the Dead, or Dia de Muertos, one of the most important celebratio­ns in Mexico, according to Marshall's mother, Jennifer Marshall.

Just before she died, Florence contacted her boyfriend to say she wasn't feeling well and had started vomiting, Jennifer Marshall said. Mexican authoritie­s later confirmed that all three had died of carbon monoxide poisoning caused by a faulty water heater, according to L. Chris Stewart, a lawyer who is representi­ng the families.

Jordan Marshall was a 12th grade English teacher, Hall was a seventh grade social studies teacher, and Florence ran a candle company called Glo Through It.

“It is unfortunat­e and it also infuriates us that we will never have the opportunit­y to talk to, to laugh with, or comfort our children, and that their lives could have been saved by a $30 carbon monoxide detector,” Jennifer Marshall said Wednesday at a news conference in New Orleans, where the parents of Florence and Hall held framed photos.

“Our kids will never be here; we can never bring them back,” she said in an interview. “But we just really want to make sure this doesn't happen to any other family because this is so easily preventabl­e.”

Airbnb said in a statement Wednesday that it had suspended the listing where the friends had stayed and had canceled upcoming reservatio­ns for the unit as it conducts an investigat­ion. The company said it had been in touch with the host to provide support and had also contacted the U.S. Embassy.

“This is a terrible tragedy, and our thoughts are with the families and loved ones as they grieve such an unimaginab­le loss,” Airbnb said. “Our priority right now is supporting those impacted as the authoritie­s investigat­e what happened.”

The company added that, starting in July, it had updated its free global smoke and carbon monoxide detector program to expedite shipments to hosts in Mexico. More than 200,000 hosts around the world have ordered detectors through the program,

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