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History Repeats 2

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A maintenance employee at the Alpine Motel Apartments is credited with saving many lives Saturday, running through smoke- and flame-filled hallways, banging on doors, urging everyone to wake up and get out.


Residents of the Alpine described the maintenance employee, whom they knew only as “Don,” as a hero. One resident anonymously identified the man as Don Bennett, and the co-owner of the building, Malinda Mier, said she knew the maintenance man as military veteran Don Bennett.

“The guy … who saved everybody’s life? His name is Don,” said Anthony Meadows Jr., 35, a resident of apartment #41 at the Alpine.

The witnesses said they believed Bennett may have been seriously injured or killed in the fire. His condition could not be independently confirmed through official sources


Meadows said that if not for Don, he and his girlfriend likely wouldn’t have survived. Bennett knocked on Meadows’ door and was then observed racing through halls thick with smoke, banging on doors, urging people to get out just after 4 a.m., he said.

Most of the residents of the complex were sleeping.

“He was the maintenance man,” Meadows said. “He was a veteran. He stayed on the second floor in Apartment #25. Don knocked on everyone’s door and said, ‘Fire! Fire! Fire!’”


Meadows and his girlfriend told of a chaotic scene.

“Smoke!” Meadows said. “People running and jumping out of windows. A pregnant woman jumped out of a window.”

Meadows and his girlfriend eventually got out when firefighters rescued them from their apartment using a ladder.

Resident Floyd Guenther, 46, said he lives on the third floor of the Alpine. He was awake at the time of the blaze and was planning to walk to a nearby store to get a soda and some cereal. He walked to the first floor and saw the blaze burning. Guenther joined Bennett in trying to wake people up.

“I saw a glow, like a fire, so I ran back up the stairs on every floor, hitting the doors, pulling the alarm systems, and none of them went off and none of the smoke detectors went off,” Guenther said. “The maintenance guy, Don, he was trying to kick the back stairway doors open, and he couldn’t get them open. The back door to the apartment complex was bolted shut, locked up. Couldn’t get out of it.”

Guenther said he and “Don” pulled “a couple babies out of the front of the door, as many as I could, with adults, and the fire got too intense. I couldn’t do more. So we went around to the side of the building where we was catching the baby girls” from windows.

The Las Vegas Fire Department arrived and started rescuing people. Guenther said he witnessed Bennett struggling to get a back door of the building open only to find it locked.


“Don was trying to get people out of that back door and he couldn’t get it open,” Guenther said.

Calvin Salyers has been a resident of the Alpine for three years. He heard a commotion in the hallway of the complex sometime around 4 a.m.

“Honestly I thought it was somebody fighting in our hallway so I opened up the door and there’s smoke all over the place,” he said. “Nothing but smoke.”

Salyers said he heard someone “going around, knocking on doors and trying to get everyone out. ‘Fire! Get out!’”

Salyers said firefighters saved many lives by pulling people out of the burning building, and that “Don” deserved a lot of credit.

Salyers grabbed a flashlight and he and his roommate felt their way through smoky hallways but couldn’t get out. They eventually returned back to their room and waited for firefighters to rescue them.

Resident Tommy Calderilla said he heard someone he believed to be a maintenance man knocking on his door after the fire broke out.

“Decent fellow,” Calderilla said. “Helpful.”

Mier broke down in tears when asked about Bennett’s heroic actions.

“Don has a military background,” she said. “He’s a veteran. Very nice man. Always helpful.”


Of reports that Bennett didn’t survive she said, “That’s what people are speculating … he might be somewhere, hopefully. We just have to hope for the best.”
 
The city’s deadliest fire broke out early Saturday in a hot spot for fatal blazes, according to a Review-Journal investigation published last year.

However, it’s likely that the motel, built in 1972, was not required to have current safety measures such as sprinklers and interconnected smoke alarms. That’s because Nevada law does not require existing residential buildings to adhere to new safety upgrades required under fire codes adopted after the building is constructed.

Rife with aging residential buildings equipped with outdated fire safety equipment, city Ward 5 saw six people die in residential fires from 2013 through 2018 – more than any other city ward during that time. Saturday’s fire at the Alpine Motel in downtown Las Vegas claimed another six lives and injured 13 more people.

The building did not have a sprinkler system, city Fire Department spokesman Tim Szymanski said.

Multiple tenants also said the building’s fire alarm did not work when they pulled it.

However, it’s likely that the motel, built in 1972, was not required to have current safety measures such as sprinklers and interconnected smoke alarms. That’s because Nevada law does not require existing residential buildings to adhere to new safety upgrades required under fire codes adopted after the building is constructed.


Whenever the building was built, that’s the code that applies,” Szymanski said.

Valley Of Fires,” the Review-Journal investigation published in November 2018, found a slew of deadly fires had occurred in recent years at homes and apartments in older parts of the Las Vegas Valley’s urban core.

All but six of the 41 fatal residential fires that occurred inside the city between 2009 and 2018 were in Ward 5 and neighboring Wards 1 and 3.


The investigation also found that city officials have had problems making sure high-density residential complexes adhere to the fire safety standards they are required to meet. Last year Las Vegas had only 15 fire inspectors to check more than 21,000 commercial and residential buildings.

During a five-year period starting in April 2013, city fire inspectors failed nearly 39 percent of the commercial and residential buildings they assessed. The vast majority were in Wards 1, 3 and 5.

City records show the Alpine Motel was the subject of at least eight code enforcement complaints from 2016 through 2018. Twice in early 2016 residents complained about the building lacking fire safety equipment, including smoke detectors, smoke alarms and fire extinguishers. The records do not show how the complaints were resolved.

One resident who survived Saturday’s fire said none of the fire alarms he pulled inside the building worked. Floyd Guenther, 46, also said the smoke detector in his third-floor unit wasn’t working.

But the Alpine Motel was up to code, according to a woman at the scene of the fire who claimed to be one of the hotel’s owners. Malinda Mier said each of the motel’s rooms had a smoke detector and that the building had a fire escape.

“We have the fire inspection people come out and test the fire alarm systems, we have code enforcement come and go through the buildings,” Mier said. “We do everything we can to make sure everyone is safe.”

Szymanski said the city’s Dangerous Buildings Task Force will begin investigating Monday whether the motel had a history of code violations. Government and law enforcement officials were already investigating the fire at the scene.


“This will probably take at least a month or two,” he said. “This is the worst fatal fire in the department’s history, so we’ll be extremely comprehensive.”
 
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