Three workers during welding work in the basement killed in fire at Thanksgiving Tower in downtown Dallas, TEXAS - allegedly, the contractor had no valid permits to do welding, cutting or hot work
updated-12-13-2014
All three of the workers’ deaths have been ruled accidental due to smoke inhalation, the Dallas County Medical Examiner’s office said.
The three workers who died in a fire under Thanksgiving Tower on Thursday were using a torch to repair a 30-foot-deep water tank, according to federal authorities.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration said in a statement Friday that the men were Texas HVAC employees whom Best Mechanical Inc. hired to clean four water tanks in the lower levels of the tower.
The storage tank they were working in — part of the building’s heating, ventilation and air conditioning system — caught fire as the workers used a torch to cut away its rusted and corroded components, according to the OSHA statement.
OSHA said its investigators remain on site and do not know how long the investigation will take. The organization has not yet said whether it has found any safety violations.
But Dallas Fire-Rescue Assistant Fire Chief Ted Padgett said Best Mechanical hasn’t had a valid permit to welding or cutting since December 2009. He also said Thanksgiving Tower’s permit for welding, cutting and hot work expired in March.
The 32-year-old skyscraper is undergoing an $18 million renovation.
Updated at 9 p.m.: Two of the three victims were identified by the Dallas County Medical Examiner as Oscar Esparza-Romo, 36, and Luis Carrillo-Solorzano, 43.
All three of the workers’ deaths have been ruled accidental due to smoke inhalation, the Dallas County Medical Examiner’s office said.
The three workers who died in a fire under Thanksgiving Tower on Thursday were using a torch to repair a 30-foot-deep water tank, according to federal authorities.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration said in a statement Friday that the men were Texas HVAC employees whom Best Mechanical Inc. hired to clean four water tanks in the lower levels of the tower.
The storage tank they were working in — part of the building’s heating, ventilation and air conditioning system — caught fire as the workers used a torch to cut away its rusted and corroded components, according to the OSHA statement.
OSHA said its investigators remain on site and do not know how long the investigation will take. The organization has not yet said whether it has found any safety violations.
But Dallas Fire-Rescue Assistant Fire Chief Ted Padgett said Best Mechanical hasn’t had a valid permit to welding or cutting since December 2009. He also said Thanksgiving Tower’s permit for welding, cutting and hot work expired in March.
The 32-year-old skyscraper is undergoing an $18 million renovation.
Updated at 9 p.m.: Two of the three victims were identified by the Dallas County Medical Examiner as Oscar Esparza-Romo, 36, and Luis Carrillo-Solorzano, 43.
Updated at 5:55 p.m.
by Robert Wilonsky, Claire Z. Cardona and Tristan Hallman: Jason Evans, spokesman for Dallas
Fire-Rescue, says the bodies of three workers were found following this
morning’s fire at Thanksgiving Tower.
The workers were in
the basement of the downtown Dallas high-rise working in the thermal storage
tank that is part of the heating, ventilating and air conditioning unit beneath
the building. Said Evans, it was initially believed to be an electrical fire or
a car fire because “the smoke was so thick” it was difficult to tell where it
began.
“But when
firefighters made their way to the source of the smoke, it turned out to be
located in an equipment room, located at the bottom of a 35-foot hatch, on a
lower parking garage level,” Evans says.
At least one of the
men killed was a subcontractor hired by Best Mechanical Inc.
“Our heartfelt
sympathy goes out to these families, especially at this time of the year,” said
Cheri Torres, a spokesperson for Best Mechanical. She said all the men had
safety equipment, and had evacuation procedures.
Evans says
firefighters knew there might be workers “in the area where the fire was
located, but heat and visibility” kept them from reaching the three men. Only
after the smoke cleared were their bodies found.
“Currently
firefighters are still in the process of extricating them from their resting
point,” Evans says. They will then be transferred to the Dallas County Medical
Examiner, where a cause of death will be determined.
“There were
approximately 2,800 people in the building when the fire began, and they were
our primary concern as the incident evolved,” Evans says. “While several people
were evaluated outside of the building, only three were taken to hospitals with
non-life-threatening issues.”
Assistant Fire Chief
Ted Padgett said Thanksgiving Tower’s permit for welding, cutting and hot works
expired in March of this year. A contractor doing business as “Best Mechanical”
at 1601 Bryan Street (the flip side of the same building) also hasn’t had a
valid permit to do that kind of work since December 2009, he said.
Elm and Ervay and St.
Paul have reopened in front of the tower, and DART has resumed bus service in
the area.
Update at 4:24 p.m.: Officials confirm that there are
fatalities at Thanksgiving Tower, but they are not yet releasing the number of
dead — or the names. Dallas Fire-Rescue is preparing to release a statement to
the media with more details.
Rescue workers, having
completed their search and recovery efforts, are wheeling equipment out of the
garage. Meanwhile, family members are returning to the lobby.
Massey Disaster
Planning CEO Curtis Massey, whose firm wrote the plan for firefighters to deal
with fires in the high-rise building, happened to be nearby while the blaze
started.
He said Thanksgiving
Tower’s underground areas are in a confined space, making them vulnerable to
heavy smoke. That could make it difficult for firefighters to see anything, he
said.
Massey said Dallas
Fire-Rescue was on top of the fire from the start.
“There was excellent
interface between building staff and fire commanders,” he said. “It seemed to
be a very well-coordinated operation.”
Update at 3:56 p.m.: Juan Rodriguez, the Occupational Safety
and Health Administration spokesperson in Dallas, says federal authorities are
“investigating the circumstances surrounding the fire.” But that is all he can
say, at the moment: “It’s just too early in the investigation.”
Meanwhile, family of
the three missing men await word concerning their location or condition.
Update at 3:19 p.m.: A woman who says she’s related to two
of the missing men — one is her uncle, the other is her cousin — is in the
lobby of Thanksgiving Tower and says authorities have not yet told relatives
whether they have been able to locate the missing workers.
Police aren’t telling
them much, actually, because in the words of one officer, they don’t “want to
give them any information that is not true.”
One of the workers’
wives is waiting in the tower lobby, awaiting word of her husband’s
whereabouts. That couple has five young children.
Despite earlier
reports that the Dallas County Medical Examiner’s Office was headed to
Thanksgiving Tower, coroners have not been sighted at the location.
Update at 2:30 p.m.: People who work inside the building
were allowed back in around 2:15 p.m. to retrieve their belongings. But many
offices inside Thanksgiving Tower closed shop for the day and told employees to
come back Friday.
Around 2:30, cars
began exiting the underground garage through the entrance as fire officials
continued their investigation inside. Streets near the garage exit remain
blocked off.
The streets quickly filled up with
people evacuated from the building.
Update at 2:22 p.m.: A worried family member of three men
working in the garage has not heard from them since the fire broke out.
She said the family
has been trying to reach the men since this morning, but “they have no signal
down there.”
Fire officials have
yet to confirm any serious injuries or fatalities in this morning’s fire.
But a
search-and-rescue team just went into the parking garage, carrying gurneys
loaded down with equipment.
Updated at 1:20 p.m.:
There are reports
that up to three construction workers are unaccounted for after this morning’s
fire at Thanksgiving Tower.
Our colleagues at
KXAS-TV (NBC5) report that the medical examiner’s office was called to the
scene, so that may signal a fatality at the parking garage. Dallas Fire-Rescue,
however, has not confirmed any fatalities, however — just two people
transported for smoke inhalation.
And the ME’s office
will not confirm that they were called to the skyscraper: “We have no
information about downtown, period,” a rep said.
J.D. Miles with KTVT-TV (Channel 11) also reports that two
workers are unaccounted for after the fire. Initial reports were that two
welders may have been trapped in a room that was too hot for investigators to
enter.
Firefighters have set
up a stretcher near the entrance to the parking garage.
Updated at 11:20 a.m.:
Dallas Fire-Rescue
reports that the fire at Thanksgiving Tower has been extinguished.
The streets around
the building will remain closed off for at least another 90 minutes.
Original post:
Dallas firefighters
evacuated Thanksgiving Tower in downtown Dallas after a fire broke out in the
building’s parking garage.
The fire was reported
about 10:20 a.m. at the high-rise in the 1600 block of Elm Street. Fire-Rescue
spokesman Jason Evans said there was an electrical fire in the underground
parking garage.
“We are currently
coordinating with the power company so they can cut the power to the location
before we can attack the fire directly,” he said.
The building, which
houses the Tower Club, was evacuated, and the alert quickly
escalated to three alarms, with more than a dozen fire engines called to the
scene. At least two people were taken to a hospital for smoke inhalation, while
others were treated at the scene.
Some people were treated at the scene
for smoke inhalation.
Evans said there were
2,800 people in the building, “and they are all in the process of being
evacuated.” Hundreds of people packed the sidewalks around the tower.
Scott Hayes, a lawyer
whose office is in Thanksgiving Tower, said he saw and smelled heavy smoke
coming from the north side of the tower when he returned from a break to buy
some gum.
He said he saw
workers with hard hats rushing out of the tower, as other occupants streamed
out of the high rise’s staircases. Other people said they saw smoke billowing
out of the driveway that leads to the underground garage.
Hayes’ car is parked
in the tower’s garage and he said he hopes it wasn’t damaged in the fire.
Devon Smith, who
works in the high-rise, told our colleagues at KXAS-TV (NBC5), that it could be
hours before they will be allowed to return to the building.
Several streets are
closed around the tower, including Elm Street from St. Paul to Akard and Ervay
from Pacific to Main.
The 32-year-old
skyscraper is in the midst of an $18 million renovation, our Steve Brown reported last month.