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One Simple Fix Could Have Prevented Tragic Deaths of 12 People in Philadelphia Fire

  None of the smoke detectors were working in a Philadelphia rowhouse fire in which 12 people died, fire officials told   WTXF-TV . The Wedn...

 None of the smoke detectors were working in a Philadelphia rowhouse fire in which 12 people died, fire officials told WTXF-TV.

The Wednesday morning fire in a three-story rowhome operated by the Philadelphia Housing Authority killed eight children and four adults, according to the Fox affiliate.

Two people were injured in the blaze, while eight others escaped unhurt. Authorities said 26 people were living inside the property at the time of the fire.

Officials said the structure had four smoke detectors, but none were working on Wednesday, WTXF reported.

Philadelphia Housing Authority President & CEO Kelvin A. Jeremiah said the smoke detectors were working the most recent time the structure was inspected, however.


The cause of the fire was still being investigated.

“The property was last inspected in May 2021, and all the smoke detectors were operating properly at that time,” Jeremiah said. “The Fire Department, ATF and others are handling the investigation. Any information on the cause will come through them. Our primary goal right now is to support our residents in any way we can.”

Deputy Fire Commissioner Craig Murphy said the Philadelphia Housing Authority installed the four smoke detectors in 2019.

Two detectors were replaced in 2020, according to the authority.

According to The New York Times, the 12 people who died in the fire were three sisters and nine of their sons and daughters. The Times said it was one of the deadliest residential fires in the nation’s recent history.

The Philadelphia Housing Authority told WPVI-TV that the smoke alarms had sealed, lithium batteries when the rowhouse was inspected this past spring.

“I don’t know if they were replaced or tampered with; we have no idea. We’re working with the fire department,” said Dinesh Indala, the authority’s senior executive vice president of operations.

When asked whether 26 was an appropriate number of people to live in that rowhouse property, authorities said no, but they qualified that statement.

“You don’t know the circumstances of each and every family,” Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney said, according to WTXF. “Maybe there were relatives or people that needed to be sheltered. Obviously, the tragedy happened and we all mourn for it, but we can’t make judgment on the number of people living in the house because sometimes people just need to be indoors.”

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