Tuesday, 01 April 2008

  • SAN BERNARDINO
    Hotel fire evacuee files $ 50,000 claim
    A former resident of the fire-damaged Sunset Hotel has filed a
    claim against the city of San Bernardino, saying city officials
    should have given evacuees more time in city-paid hotel rooms
    before requiring them to find their own housing.
    In a claim filed Monday, Dawn Crawford, 33, says she has
    experienced emotional distress and financial hardship after a
    mid-June fire at the Sunset Hotel in downtown on G Street closed
    the hotel and forced her and her neighbors to move.

    Crawford is seeking $ 50,000 in damages. She says city officials
    and charitable groups helping with the fire's aftermath did not
    help her find housing as promised and gave her false hope that
    she would have a month of free shelter.
    Crawford said she was forced to use money she had set aside for
    educational expenses.
    City Attorney James Penman said the city paid for hotel rooms
    for many evacuees for about two weeks, using money earmarked by
    law for moderate and low-income housing.
    Penman said the city paid through July 2 to help those who
    already had paid for a full month's rent at the Sunset. Many
    were due to receive monthly federal assistance checks on July 1
    that would cover rent from then on, he said.

     


    Hotel's relocated residents worried

    FIRE: They fear city help will end. The Sunset's owner is eager to reopen.

    01:05 AM PDT on Wednesday, June 30, 2004

    By KAREN GAUDETTE / The Press-Enterprise

    SAN BERNARDINO - It could be a matter of days or several weeks before the fire-damaged Sunset Hotel in downtown San Bernardino is able to reopen its doors to the dozens of low-income men, women and families who called it home.

    A June 16 fire at the residential hotel on G Street badly damaged one room and critically burned the room's tenant, 36-year-old Sarah Clymer. She was in fair condition Tuesday at Arrowhead Regional Medical Center, said Jorge Valencia, a hospital spokesman.

    San Bernardino fire officials confirmed that the blaze began in Clymer's second-floor room and are investigating whether arson was the cause.

    The fire displaced about 70 residents. Most have been staying in local motels with financial help from the city and charities such as the Red Cross.

    Veno Nathraj, who runs the Sunset Hotel for owner Protea Hotel Inc. of Anaheim Hills, said he has met with electricians, fire-alarm companies and other subcontractors in the nearly two weeks since the fire to assess damage.

    Many workers have told him that it could take at least a week each to replace doors, drywall and fire alarms and fix the roof, which firefighters cut open to release heat and smoke, he said.

    In the meantime, Nathraj said he is asking city fire officials to allow him to board up the hotel's second floor and reroute elevators to avoid it during construction. He hopes to reopen first- and third-floor rooms to residents, many of whom worry about being able to find affordable housing until the Sunset reopens, he said.

    "Our main concern isthe safety ofanybody staying in the hotel," he said. "It'snot just putting heads to beds, to make sure when they put their heads on the beds, that they are safe."

    Doug Dupree, the city's fire marshal, said safety concerns likely make Nathraj's proposal unfeasible. However, he plans to meet with Nathraj today to gauge the damage and discuss his options, he added.

    "There may be something we can do, but I'm not sure," Dupree said. "I need to see what he has finished and what still needs to be done."

    Dawn Crawford, a Riverside Community College student who lived at the Sunset for the $500 monthly rent that helped make ends meet, said many fellow residents are in limbo. Some are worried that the city would end its financial help this week because a large number of the residents receive their checks on the first of the month.

    Many survive on monthly aid checks of about $700, Crawfordsaid. The Sunset is one of their few options because most other places require that tenants earn two or three times the monthly rent, she added.

    City Attorney James Penman said the city, as it has during past disasters, has temporarily housed evacuees using money required by law for low- and moderate-income housing.

    Penman said the Salvation Army and the San Bernardino County Department of Behavioral Health are working with evacuees to find housing. The city will fund emergency housing for as long as a month on a case-by-case basis, he added. The city began paying the residents' motel bills on June 19.

    This month's fire was the latest incident to befall the 111-unit hotel, which sits among senior housing, residential motels and a Greyhound bus station in a neighborhood where transients are a common sight. In late 2002, a fire at the Sunset left four dead and injured about 18 people.

    Under its previous ownership, the hotel was cited for nonfunctioning smoke detectors and fire alarms and flimsy doors that were not self-closing.

    The hotel's alarms worked properly in the latest fire, officials said.

    Built in 1968, the hotel is not required to have fire sprinklers, but Nathraj said he is considering installing them in the future.

    *************************************************


    Fire again strikes residential hotel

    SAN BERNARDINO: One woman is burned, and the building is evacuated. In 2002, four people died.

    12:57 AM PDT on Thursday,June 17, 2004

    By RICHARD BROOKSAND ELENA ARNOLD / The Press-Enterprise

    SAN BERNARDINO - For the second time in 18 months fireravaged a downtown hotel Wednesday, this time forcing the evacuation of about 55 residents andcritically burning a woman who police said may have been smoking in bed.

    Fire officials said the burned woman, 36-year-old Sarah Clymer, is a smoker who was alone in her room at the Sunset Hotel.

    "She was burned from the waist up. She's very critical," said San Bernardino police Detective Dave Dillon. "It looks like she was possibly smoking in bed. There's no evidence of foul play at this point."

    CheckWidthImage(1,850,300); Stan Lim / The Press-Enterprise Members of the San Bernardino City Fire Department responded to a fire at Sunset Hotel in which a woman was critically burned.

    The blaze at 8:18 a.m. drew every firefighter, fire engine and ladder truck in San Bernardino to North G Street, just north of the Carousel Mall. Fire crews contained the flames to Clymer's second-floor room.

    Two other hotel residents were overcome by smoke. A 50-year-old woman was taken to Community Hospital of San Bernardino for treatment, fire officials said. A 57-year-old woman refused medical attention. Their names were not available.

    Although burned wiring and heat and water damage are likely to keep the hotel closed for several days until repairs can be made, officials said a working smoke alarm system helped prevent a catastrophe like the one that killed four people and injured about 18 others at the same hotel in December 2002.

    "The fire alarm system was completely upgraded," said Fire Marshal Doug Dupree. "It was going off - horns and strobes - when our guys first got here."

    Residents react

    The fire was eerily similar to the 2002 disaster, said Norma Adair, who occupied the same second-floor room during both blazes. Among the differences: The way she reacted.

    Adair recalledrunning from door to door to make sure her neighbors got out safely during the first fire. This time, she didn't see a reason to even roll out of bed.

    "No smoke came in my room," she reasoned. "I have a window to jump out of if I have to."

    But ground-floor resident Alles Lund, 78, wasn't as stoic.

    "Ijust moved in yesterday," she said after escaping with only her red housecoat and a pack of Liggett cigarettes. "I was getting ready to take my shower and (the fire alarms) went off ... and the firemencame flying through my door!"

    Others weren't sure whether to stay or flee.

    "Certain (residents) will pull the alarms, so you get a lot of falsealarms," said first-floor resident Dawn Crawford, 33. "This (alarm) is maybe the third one in the last few months."

    When she noticed the horns and flashing lights, Crawford got dressed, ambled outdoors - and saw the smoke, she said.

    She also saw the burn victim.

    "As I was leaving, I saw her sitting on a brick wall in front of the hotel," said Crawford.

    "Her hair was singed. You could see burns on her arms."

    Despite the two fires, Crawford said she wants city officials to recognize that significant improvements have been made at the hotel by new owners.

    "So I hope the city doesn't come down hard on them. Not everyone here is mentally ill," said Crawford, who said she is a college student and knows of many residents who are retirees.

    "People come here because it's very low rent."

    CheckWidthImage(2,850,216);

    Signs around the building warn that alcohol, drugs, coffee makers, hot plates - and lit cigarettes - are not allowed in the rooms, residents said.

    Some residents ignore the rules, said Lillie Miranda, 57, who moved into her third-floor room two weeks ago, undeterred by stories of the 2002 fire.

    "It doesn't matter where people live - in an apartment (or) in a house. They're still going to be faced with the same danger," she said. "Look at all those people in the mountains who lost their homes last year."

    Support for hotel

    Even before firefighters rolled up their hoses Wednesday, some Fire Department and city officials were expressing cautious support for the renovated hotel.

    "Obviously, itwill get a good inspection again," said City Attorney James Penman.

    "But since everybody got out (alive), I think that's a good sign."

    Since the hotel's renovation after the last fire, the Sunset has been one of the safer places in the city, especially for the mentally ill and other people with limited money and housing options, said Penman.

    "And nobody wants to see 55 families, many with mental challenges, sleeping on the street and in the parks," he said.

    City officials still would like the hotel to be retrofitted with fire sprinklers, said Penman.

    State law does not require retrofitting for the 86-unit hotel that was built in 1968. Under more stringent city codes, sprinklers would have been required if it had remained closed for more than a year after the previous fire. Instead, it reopened last November - just short of a year.

    But there are plans to install sprinklers, said Veno Natraj, who said he and his wife bought the building in January.

    "At all our (five) hotels, we try to have fire sprinklers," he said. "That's a must."

    There also are plans to install a pool and spa, said Natraj, and to reopen the hotel's restaurant so a continental breakfast can be served several times a week.

    "If guests feel they are respected, they take care of things better," he said.

    If he reopens the restaurant, some churches and the Salvation Army are likely to be willing to provide and serve the food, he said.

    Some Sunset Hotel residents already eat meals at the nearby Salvation Army kitchen, officials there said.

    Salvation Army Maj. Russell Fritz said he visited the Sunset about a month ago and agrees that such hotels fill an important niche for people on limited incomes.

    "It's no Hilton, but obviously it's safe," said Fritz, who also is a police chaplain.

    "All the people got out of there. And the fire was contained to one room."

     


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