MEC&F Expert Engineers : Smoking material coming in contact with a couch in the garage appears to have started a fire that severely damaged a home and killed a dog in the Barberton area of Vancouver, WA

Thursday, August 2, 2018

Smoking material coming in contact with a couch in the garage appears to have started a fire that severely damaged a home and killed a dog in the Barberton area of Vancouver, WA







Smoking material seen as cause of house fire



By Andy Matarrese, Columbian Breaking News Reporter

August 1, 2018

  Vancouver, WA

Smoking material coming in contact with a couch in the garage appears to have started a fire that severely damaged a home and killed a dog Monday afternoon in the Barberton area.
Firefighters were called to the home, at 11906 N.E. 40th Ave., around 5:30 p.m., and they could see a column of smoke in the distance as they approached.

The fire tore through the garage and made it inside the attic of the home’s living area before firefighters could bring it under control.

Deputy Clark County Fire Marshal Dan Young said investigators believe burning matter from a cigarette burned a couch, and the resident spotted it when the home’s heating and cooling system spread the smoke inside.

The fire also damaged a vehicle parked in the garage and another inside. Young said an estimate of the total damages was still pending.

He also warned that even though the past weeks’ stretch of hot weather seems to be abating, conditions are still dangerously primed for fires. 


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Vancouver, WA

A fire tore through a home north of Vancouver Monday afternoon, killing a family’s dog.

The fire, at 11906 N.E. 40th Ave. in the Barberton area, was reported around 5:30 p.m. Responding firefighters saw a column of smoke as they approached the neighborhood, according to emergency radio traffic monitored at The Columbian.

Clark County Fire District 6 spokesman David Schmitke said the firefighters arrived to find the two-story house in flames.

“It was really going when we got here,” he said.

Joseph Caver said he was inside, in the living room, watching television when he started to smell smoke.

“I thought it was the A/C, so I looked outside and I saw smoke,” he said. “So then I ran outside into the yard, looked over the fence and saw smoke, saw it wasn’t the A/C.”

He then ran around to the front of the house and saw fire coming from the garage’s windows.

Leann Caver, Joseph’s wife, was away when the fire started. She called the house their “dream home,” and said they moved in last November.

Her father was hospitalized after losing consciousness at the scene. Schmitke said it wasn’t clear whether the man’s medical issue was directly related to the fire.

Schmitke said the family’s dog — a Dobermann named Perseus, Leann Caver said — was found upstairs.

The fire gutted the home’s garage, destroyed a vehicle parked inside and damaged another vehicle parked in the driveway. Firefighters cut a hole in the building’s roof, but Schmitke said it wasn’t clear how much fire burned inside the home’s living areas.

The Clark County Fire Marshal’s Office was investigating what happened, but Schmitke said it appeared initially that the fire started in the garage. The fire was brought under control in about 40 minutes.

He expected there’d be firefighters at the scene well into the night. Schmitke said the home was uninhabitable for now. The Red Cross said it responded to help three adults and two children.