Milwaukee apartment fire kills four people, displaces hundreds

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At least four people are dead after a major fire engulfed a Milwaukee apartment complex on Sunday.

The fire broke out at a four-story, 85-unit apartment complex in Milwaukee’s Concordia neighborhood just before 8 a.m. Sunday, CNN reports. Investigators say at least four people are dead and dozens more are hurt, including four who were critically injured, local outlet WISN reports.

More than 30 fire trucks responded, and fire crews rescued at least 30 people from the building. Some residents were even forced to jump out of second-floor windows to escape. The Red Cross is now assisting the hundreds who have been displaced from their homes.

The cause of the fire is still under investigation, but officials believe the blaze may have started on one of the upper floors. The local fire and police departments are investigating the cause, along with the state fire marshal.

Firefighters gather outside a Milwaukee apartment building that was engulfed in flames Sunday, killing four people and injuring dozens more

Firefighters gather outside a Milwaukee apartment building that was engulfed in flames Sunday, killing four people and injuring dozens more (WISN)

The apartment complex did not have working sprinklers. That’s because it was built in 1974, before sprinklers were legally required, according to WTMJ.

Milwaukee Fire Chief Aaron Lipski said the deadly fire could’ve been prevented if the building had sprinklers.

“The Builders ​Association ​in ​the ​United ​States, ​in ​the ​state ​of ​Wisconsin, ​and ​the ​city ​of ​Milwaukee ​has ​way ​more ​money ​to ​spend ​on ​such ​issues ​than ​does ​your ​local ​fire ​chief,” Lipski said, according to WTMJ.

“In ​1974 ​when ​it ​became ​law ​to ​sprinkler ​a ​building ​like ​this, ​folks, ​it’s ​called ​the ​grandfather ​clause. ​Nobody ​was ​required ​to ​go ​back ​and ​make ​that ​building ​fire-​safe. ​And ​you ​result ​with ​this ​today,” he added.

“​We ​have ​fought ​this ​fight ​for ​many, ​many ​years ​across ​the ​United ​States. Of ​course, it ​would ​be ​an ​expensive ​proposition, ​but ​I ​have ​four ​fatalities ​here ​today. ​I’m ​not ​sure ​what ​people ​think ​is ​more ​expensive, ​right now.”

Lipski said the fire even began “blowing down” a stairwell at his firefighters.

"Our firefighters, ascending from the second floor to the third floor, were fighting fire blowing down the stairwell at them. If you know anything about fire, you know it doesn't normally travel downward," he explained.

Resident Tony Panosian recounted knocking on neighbors’ doors to alert them once he realized there was a blaze.

"I went up to the third floor, I smelled smoke. I grabbed the fire extinguisher. I attempted to put it out, but it was totally engulfed," Panosian told Fox 6. "[I] started knocking on doors to get people out."

Reisdent James Rubinstein said he escaped the blaze with his cat.

"There was so much smoke. I climbed out the courtyard with my cat in my backpack," he told Fox 6. "[I] jumped to the ground floor and ran out."

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