San Francisco Chronicle

Survivors sue after deadly Oakland fire

- By Kimberly Veklerov Kimberly Veklerov is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: kveklerov@ sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @kveklerov

Survivors of a deadly fire that tore through a West Oakland halfway house last month sued their former landlord and the nonprofits that acted as master tenants Wednesday in Alameda County Superior Court, saying their slum-like housing conditions were illegal and led to the inferno.

The lawsuit brought by 15 former tenants alleges that the building near San Pablo and Mead avenues had no working fire alarms, sprinkler system, emergency lights or carbonmono­xide detectors. Those defects, the suit says, created a chaotic scene in the early hours of March 27 as residents constructe­d makeshift fire escapes out of bedsheets or kicked down neighbors’ doors to alert them to the flames.

“This is probably one of the worst properties in Oakland,” Ken Greenstein, an attorney representi­ng the survivors, said during a news conference. “This property was so substandar­d that even if this fire hadn’t started, it was a fire that was waiting to happen.”

The blaze killed four people, injured six and displaced more than 80 residents.

Named in the complaint are owner Keith Kim and his company Mead Avenue Housing Associates, as well as the nonprofit organizati­ons that held the master lease at different points in time: Urojas Community Services, House of Change and Dignity House West. An attorney representi­ng Urojas said he had to review the lawsuit before responding to its allegation­s, and an attorney for Kim said the building owner was trying to remove Urojas as a tenant because of concerns about its oversight of the facility and the people it was bringing in.

Representa­tives for the other defendants did not immediatel­y return requests for comment.

One of the survivors filing suit, Eliza Anderson, 29, said she and her three daughters dealt with deplorable conditions — rats, mold, leaks, cockroache­s, power outages, no working heat — for years before the fire.

The night of the fire, Anderson said her elderly aunt was able to kick down her door and tell her to get out only because its wood was so derelict. Once in the hallway, Anderson said she and her children were guided to the fire escape with just the light from her cell phone.

“I didn’t hear no alarms. All I heard was people banging on walls, that was the alert,” said Anderson, who’s staying in a transition­al home in Oakland. “There was no sprinklers wetting us as we were going out. Nothing. It was just pitch-black, like a barbecue grill.”

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