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SPOKANE VALLEY COUPLE DISPLACED AFTER COOKING FIRE IN HOME
For Immediate Release:
December 19, 2020
Contact:
Jeff Smetzler
Public Information Officer
Spokane Valley Fire
509-319-6078
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SPOKANE VALLEY COUPLE DISPLACED AFTER COOKING FIRE IN HOME
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Spokane Valley Fire Department (SVFD) units were dispatched at 4 p.m. for a report of a possible kitchen fire 11918 East Boone Avenue. Valley Ladder 8 responding from the nearest Valley Fire station confirmed an active smoke column as they left the station and upgraded the response to a confirmed working house fire. Initial dispatched reports stated all occupants were outside of the structure but as apparatus responded updated information could not confirm all occupants were out of the structure. First arriving Valley Fire units confirmed the back side of the residence where the kitchen was located was completely on fire and made an aggressive quick attack with hose lines to slow down and control the fires growth. The initial aggressive quick attack successfully controlled the fire allowing additional Valley Fire crews to enter the structure on the first floor through the living room and perform a rapid search of the home to confirm there were no occupants inside. The fire was quickly contained, and search completed but there was still fire damage to the back of the home extending to the back-porch deck, down the main hallway and into the main floor living room with smoke damage extending into the basement of the home. The home is currently unoccupiable. The rapid response and quick actions by Spokane Valley Fire Department saved the home from being a total loss and burning up completely. The owner and his wife had successfully exited the structure prior to Fire Department arrival and were uninjured. The occupants will be staying with other family members for the present time.
Response included two Battalion Chiefs (V21 and V22), 1 Safety Officer (V31), 1 Fire Investigator (V46), Valley Ladders 8 & 1, Valley Engines 1, 2, 5, 7, and 9, 1 PIO (V16) and auto aid from City of Spokane Fire Ladder 1, AMR, and Modern utilities.
The investigation and confirmation from the owner showed the cause to be a pan left unattended cooking on the stove. The owner stated he was heating a pan on the stove and stepped outside of the back of the house to finish cooking food on the grill and in what seemed only a few minutes looked over to see his kitchen fully involved in flames inside the home. Items left unattended cooking on the stove is one of the leading causes of residential house fires and in some years is the leading cause of residential house fires. Spokane Valley Fire Department reminds citizens to never leave items unattended cooking on the stove.
About SVFD
Spokane Valley Fire Department serves the cities of Spokane Valley, Liberty Lake, Millwood and the surrounding unincorporated areas of Spokane County with a combined population of 125,000 across 75 square miles. SVFD firefighter crews which include paramedics and EMT’s, responded to more than 17,487 emergency calls in 2018.
Established in 1940, SVFD is an Accredited Agency by the Commission on Fire Accreditation International; and has a class 2 WSRB rating as given by the Washington Survey and Ratings Bureau (WSRB). SVFD is one of four accredited departments in the state and the only accredited department with distinction as a WSRB class 2.
For more information about Spokane Valley Fire Department, visit www.spokanevalleyfire.com.
Follow us @spokanevalleyfire on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube.
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Did you Know?
- You can sign up for a station tour. Great for small groups.
- You should replace the batteries in your smoke alarms twice a year.
- Creating a defensible space with regards to wildfires could just save your home or property.
- We have Friends & Family CPR classes every month.