Greensboro, NC fire that killed 5 children exposes
more concerns with US refugee program, by Ann Corcoran 5/21/18
At tense meeting about deadly Greensboro apartment fire, city says it will inspect complex— As Greensboro officials, refugee advocates and immigrants gathered days after the deaths of five children in an apartment fire, many people voiced concerns that the city’s deadliest fire in nearly two decades could have been prevented.
“There’s a breakdown at many levels for this to happen,” said Adamou Mohamed, a grassroots organizer for Church World Service, an immigration and refugee program.
UPDATE! No stove malfunction. Parents admitted food was left cooking on the stove, story here:
At tense meeting about deadly Greensboro apartment fire, city says it will inspect complex— As Greensboro officials, refugee advocates and immigrants gathered days after the deaths of five children in an apartment fire, many people voiced concerns that the city’s deadliest fire in nearly two decades could have been prevented.
“There’s a breakdown at many levels for this to happen,” said Adamou Mohamed, a grassroots organizer for Church World Service, an immigration and refugee program.
UPDATE! No stove malfunction. Parents admitted food was left cooking on the stove, story here:
There is a “breakdown at many levels” said Church World Service employee Adamou Mohamed.
Did
you hear the news about the five children from the DR Congo who died in an
apartment fire in Greensboro, North Carolina just over a week ago? Probably not
because stories showing the unhappy side of refugee resettlement are rarely
seen outside the immediate locale.
In
a tense community meeting last week, the blame for the children’s deaths was
placed on the city and on the landlord, all assuming the fire was from landlord
and city inspector neglect. Here are a few snips from the story on that meeting
from the local News & Record:
“We shouldn’t have had to come to this point,” said community activist
Sandra Isley, as others wiped away tears and some trembled in anger during a
meeting of the Greensboro International Advisory Committee, which works with
the city’s Human Relations Department.
City
officials did announce during the meeting that housing inspectors would go
door-to-door early next week at the 3100 Summit Ave. complex to conduct
inspections on every unit. Beth Benton, the city’s Code Compliance manager,
said that action was possible after five residents — the minimum necessary to
take action — had signed a petition.
Fire investigators have yet to determine a cause of the Saturday
morning fire, but say it started in the kitchen and they are analyzing the
unit’s stove. The apartment had no working smoke or carbon monoxide
detectors.
The
city’s action comes amid claims that the children’s father reported several
small fires near the apartment’s stove to management in the days before the
tragedy. It is unclear who the father might have notified about the problems
with the stove, but the building’s owners said they had no repair request on
file.
Others around him questioned why it has taken so long for the city to
get involved.
Resettlement
agencies place refugees in cheap apartments and help to build ethnic enclaves….The North Carolina African Services Coalition
placed the family there 18 months ago, when they arrived from the Democratic
Republic of Congo as part of a resettlement program. But the agency has since stopped setting
up homes there because of complaints about living conditions.
Officials with the resettlement agencies say the complex remained
attractive to refugees because of the low rent and because it allowed them to
live with others who speak their language or understand their customs. Several
units there are rented by members of this same family.
Officials
have yet to identify the family other than to say the children who died were
three boys and two girls between the ages of 18 months and 9 years old. The
husband, who works at a local factory, was home with the children but could not
get them out.
And
here we have the final informative bit of news—Mom was working the night shift
for BIG CHICKEN!
If
you are new to RRW, you may not know that refugee contractors, including Church World
Service, act as headhunters for the meat industry in places like North
Carolina.
The wife was working the overnight shift at a chicken plant several
counties away. She commutes there with a group of others who share the cost of
the drive. You can
read more here.
Unattended cooking led to fire that killed 5 children in
Greensboro, fire department say. Read it all.
You
really need to see the bio for Church World Service’s community organizer who was clearly leading the charge and attempting to stoke
anger with claims of government neglect before all the facts were in.
Why does a taxpayer-funded resettlement agency need a political
community organizer (aka community trouble-maker) in the first place?
Adamou Mohamed’s bio at Welcoming America is informative….at:
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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