Chicago, Illinois Highrise Fire Report Recommends Sprinklers, Unlocked Stairway Doors

Oct. 1, 2004
A taxpayer-funded investigation into last year's deadly Cook County Administration Building fire recommends that all high-rise buildings in the state be required to have sprinkler systems and doors that automatically unlock during emergencies.
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CHICAGO (AP) -- A taxpayer-funded investigation into last year's deadly Cook County Administration Building fire recommends that all high-rise buildings in the state be required to have sprinkler systems and doors that automatically unlock during emergencies.

The James Lee Witt report, released Thursday, concluded that the six deaths could have been prevented if the high-rise had had sprinklers and unlocked stairwell doors and if firefighters had searched those stairwells and not let in smoke and heat. The victims were found more than hour after the fire broke out, trapped in a stairwell that had filled with smoke after firefighters opened a lower door.

``Properly addressing any one of the four key factors would have changed the outcome of this incident and prevented loss of life from occurring,'' the report said.

The investigation spread blame for the Oct. 17 fire among the Chicago Fire Department, Cook County, the state of Illinois, building security and building management.

Most of its major findings echoed a July report by another commission that had been appointed by Cook County to investigate.

Blagojevich had said when he ordered the independent investigation that he wanted Witt, former head of Federal Emergency Management Agency, to investigate because the county's team lacked expertise. The initial cost for Witt's investigation was $1 million, but officials said Thursday it would run the state nearly $2 million.

The report cited inadequate evacuation training of building staff and occupants; ineffective communication among fire and police emergency dispatchers as well as the city's emergency dispatchers and fire commanders on the scene; and the fire department's focus on fighting the blaze instead of searching for victims.

The 35-story county building had no sprinkler system above the ground floor, and its stairwell doors locked automatically when closed.

Even though the fire broke out in a 12th-floor storage room and was contained to that floor, all the victims died on upper floors of the high-rise, trapped inside a smoky stairwell.

The Witt report and the other investigations said fire officials had reports of people missing in the building and 911 calls suggesting people were trapped in the southeast stairwell, but the stairwells weren't immediately searched. The victims weren't found until 90 minutes after the fire broke out, after firefighters had brought it under control.

``Actions on the fireground indicate that the operations were focused on suppressing the fire rather than determining the level of life safety risk in the building,'' the Witt report said. ``Priority at every incident should always be on life safety of the occupants.''

New Chicago Fire Department rules now call for timely searches of all floors during high-rise fires.

The report also cited the state for not effectively communicating changes to the state fire code from 2002.

``The recommendations look solid, they look good, and we're inclined to accept them,'' said Blagojevich spokeswoman Cheryle Jackson. ``We're going to closely review those recommendations and work with the appropriate state and local agencies to act on them.''

The report criticized the building's management for not having a procedure to evacuate the building, failing to conduct quarterly evacuation drills, not appointing a certified deputy fire safety director, not having a fire safety director on the premises and having a fire safety director whose certification had lapsed.

It said security officers and management also did not provide the stairway master keys to the Fire Department; the keys were available in a lock box in the lobby.

Civil lawsuits have been filed by victims' families and survivors of a fire against the city, county and the companies that provided management and security.

Cook County Public Guardian Patrick Murphy, who lost three employees in the fire, said the Witt report goes beyond the county report in criticizing building management and the county.

``I think it's very, very good,'' Murphy said. ``These guys are pros. They're not politicians. They went in, saw what they saw and let the chips fall where they may.''

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