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Efforts aimed at improving fire safety for renting students

Daily Planet wire services
Friday February 16, 2001

The first steps in an action plan to improve fire safety for University of California, Berkeley, students living in rental houses were taken last week by UC Berkeley Chancellor Robert M. Berdahl and officials from Berkeley and Oakland.  

"A significant portion of Berkeley students live in private rental housing. We need to work together to find ways to educate our students about fire safety and intensify inspections and monitoring of these rentals," said Berdahl.  

Berdahl called the special meeting on Feb. 9 following last month's Oakland house fire that claimed the life of Bradley Evans, 23. The Jan. 28 fire was the second fire of the school year in which a UC Berkeley student died. Both fires occurred in single-family homes rented by students. "Safety is the number one concern in all of our cities. We need cooperation between property owners and tenants," said Berkeley Mayor Shirley Dean. "One of the most effective ways we can act is through a strong program of education - knowing what to look for and contacting us when something is wrong."  

Others attending the meeting were Berkeley City Manager Weldon Rucker, Berkeley Fire Chief Reginald Garcia, Oakland Fire Marshal Leroy Griffin, UC Berkeley Fire Marshal Dennis Mueting and campus housing and student affairs officials.  

Among the actions agreed upon Friday were:  

• The campus, working with its housing office and student groups, will undertake a comprehensive fire safety education campaign aimed at ensuring that no student moves into a house that does not have a working smoke detector and working windows or other ways to easily exit in the event of a fire.  

• Students will be educated on where to place smoke detectors and which kinds are most effective. For example, those that have a 10-year battery that can not be raided for other uses are preferable, said the fire officials.  

• Students will be directed on how to contact local fire departments to seek inspections if they do not believe their rentals meet fire safety requirements.  

• City and campus fire officials also agreed to explore forming a joint effort with other nearby cities akin to the multi-agency fire safety committee formed after the Oakland Hills fire. It would be one way, they said, to keep fire safety in rental homes in the forefront of public attention.  

 

Also in attendance at the meeting was Jonas Jusay, a student at UC Irvine. He has been working to improve fire safety for students since August when a fire in a rented Berkeley house claimed the lives of his sister, Azalea, who was a Berkeley student, and his parents, Francisco and Florita Jusay, who were helping her move in. “When I learned of the latest fire, everything came back. I did not want to have that happen to anyone again,” he said.  

“There is a simple solution. The first thing I do now when I walk into a house is look for a smoke detector and an exit, a way to get out,” said Jusay.  

Fire officials said that in multi-family units, such as apartments and rooming houses, smoke detectors are required in every sleeping room and in the hallways, and that regular inspections are required. Single-family homes also require smoke detectors, but fire officials are not free to enter homes to inspect them unless requested to or when there is a complaint, they said.  

“We need to work more closely with the student population and the public to get out information on how to get assistance. If you call our office, we will come out and inspect for you,” said Garcia, the Berkeley fire chief.  

Smoke detectors were present in the recent Oakland fire, said officials, but investigators could not find them in the Berkeley house where some of the windows could not be opened, trapping the Jusay family inside.