Fire Safety Means Being Proactive This Dry Season  

With the dry season in full effect, Belizeans are already starting to feel the heat. And with heat, comes the threat of potential wildfires. Earlier this week, a wild fire destroyed the home of Hattieville resident Wallace Rubio, who claimed that the incident was avoidable. We spoke with Kenneth Mortis of the National Fire Service to hear how we can prevent incidents like these from occurring, News Five’s Britney Gordon reports.

 

Britney Gordon, Reporting

As the temperatures continue to rise amid the height of the dry season, the threat of wildfires imposing on properties in rural areas becomes a greater cause for concern. The National Fire Service asserts that the impact of these fires can be minimized by implementing preventative measures. We sat down with Fire Station Supervisor, Kenneth Mortis for some advice.

 

                                Kenneth Mortis

Kenneth Mortis, Fire Station Supervisor, National Fire Service

“It’s that time of the year indeed. And  we try to stay in close dialogue with the Met Office, i believe like everyone should and the heat is here, the dry is here and if you drive around your area, you, you’ll feel the heat combined with a lot of wind, so to speak, a lot of breeze. Factors that we should take into consideration regardless of where you’re at, whether you’re in the city or you’re in these rural areas, especially more so the rural areas. Your vegetation is important. Not only yours, but your neighbor’s vegetation, your surroundings. If you find yourself living amongst overgrown vegetation, either take the extra effort to clear a five feet minimum perimeter around your building, thus eliminating the chance of a wild land fire consuming those areas, and then putting your house at risk.”

 

Mortis explained that there are three major reasons why homes are destroyed by wildfires and that being cognizant of these factors is a key step in ensuring your safety.

 

 

 

 

 

Kenneth Mortis
“History have shown time and time again, and most recently, whereby structures have been consumed by fires as a result of an open brush or wild land fires and all because  of, one, where we’re located. We live in these rural areas. Your closest fire station, your closest fire truck is nothing less than thirty minutes away, which would put you at a fifteen miles gap. Two, your area is so heavily overgrown by these wild land bushes that you put yourself at risk within those elements. Three, most of the time, unfortunately, these fires occur during the day. That’s when everybody’s either at home or at school. . So the few neighbors that are at home, they are busy with their own day lives. They don’t always have the time to be monitoring your house.  So with these factors in mind, it is something that we must take the initial initiative, how to best protect and preserve what is ours,”

 

He further explained that, although the fire department attempts to respond to these fires in a timely manner, they rely on the assistance of the community to report and promptly respond to these fires before the situation becomes dire.

 

Kenneth Mortis

“Fire service, the Belize National Fire Service is committed to responding to all fires within a reasonable jurisdiction. However, do not expect that the Belize National Fire Service will be at your beck and call the minute there’s a wild land fires. Unfortunately, the one that happened most recently, neighbors are saying that the fire was apparently burning for some days and nobody did anything. Nobody called us. When it went from afar to the nearby structure, that’s when all alarms went off. It was too late.”

 

According to Mortis, a major contributor to these disasters is a buildup of trash and overgrown brush within the area, as these tend to be highly flammable.

 

Kenneth Mortis

“So again, like I said, its fire safety measure, so to speak, and where does fire safety actually starts? And with who does fire safety start? Fire safety starts with us. Not with you, nor my neighbor, nor my friend, nor my brother, but it starts with us, the individual. That’s where fire safety starts. Those are the measures that we should take in place to ensure that wherever we live, our vegetation is kept to the minimal. We do not have all these excessive garbage buildup, those themselves pose as a fire load. We are entrapping ourselves and we’re setting ourselves up for loss.”

 

Britney Gordon for News Five.

Abandoned House Burns Down On Jane Usher Boulevard

An early morning fire gutted a house on Jane Usher Boulevard today. The incident occurred around four thirty a.m. and while no one was injured, the small wooden structure was completely lost to the flames. Residents in the area claim that, while the house belongs to a Mister Belisle, it remained abandoned as far as they knew. For more information, we spoke with Kenneth Mortis from the National Fire Service.

 

                          Kenneth Mortis

Kenneth Mortis, Fire Station Supervisor, National Fire Service

“The information is still forthcoming in the sense that, we haven’t really gotten a chance to speak to the owners yet. We know that the Jane Usher Boulevard and what they call the Mudd Street here. The structure was a twenty by twenty four wooden structure, zinc roofing.  Unconfirmed reports is that it was abandoned, which again we need confirmation from mister Belisle. As we know that abandoned and unoccupied is basically two different categories. We can definitely say that the building had no electricity. But, like I said, the hours the fire was detected, it didn’t prove or didn’t give us much assistance from neighbors who could have pointed out whether they saw something out of the ordinary or anything to that effect, whether it was a malicious act, that is yet to be determined from the investigators and I am hoping that we can have something before the end of today.”

 

Britney Gordon

“What was the response time on the fire and how long did it blaze for?”

 

Kenneth Mortis

“We got the call approximately 5:01. I would say within seven minutes we were on the scene. We managed to control the fire after twenty  minutes of firefighting, I would say, and then another thirty-five minutes, more or less, that was when total extinguishment took place.”

 

Britney Gordon

“So being that you have not been in contact with Mr. Belisle, who contacted the fire department?”

 

Kenneth Mortis

“We received a call from the police department this morning.  After such, as per norm, we dispatched two trucks to the scene with a total of six firefighters and they were the ones responsible per se to bring this fire under control. Minimizing the damage to that one particular structure, versus whereby any other nearby structure were at risk. So we managed to control it before that happened.”

An Early Morning Fire In Belmopan  

A Belmopan resident is left in a state of despair after a fire broke out in her home around four-thirty a.m., today. She is single mother of four, Alisha Latchman who awoke to the smell of smoke surrounding her house. Fortunately, Latchman and her four children were unharmed, but have suffered great financial loss. We visited the scene of the fire today, to hear how this unfortunate event occurred.

 

Britney Gordon, Reporting

This morning, around four thirty a.m. it was up to Alisha Latchman, to gather her four children and get them to safety, as a fire blazed inside her home. Luckily, the single mother was able to get her eight-month-old twins, five-year-old daughter, and her fourteen-year-old son out of the house unharmed but was forced to watch as the flames consumed a portion of her rented home until the fire department arrived.

 

                              Alisha Latchman

Alisha Latchman, Fire Victim

“This morning we dih sleep, I dih sleeping inna  living room with the two babies I noh sleep inna dih room. And then  my next two kids, they’re in their room  and  I smell smoke. So, at first I never really paid no mind.  But then I smell the smoke starting to get stronger, you know, so I get up and when I get up,  I realize that the inner of the house the smoke they come from and I look up and I see the thick smoke inner the ceiling. So I grab my two eight month baby from off the ground and I run to the next room with my next two bigger kids there, and there and I try to get them out.”

 

Latchman stated that, in the midst of the chaos, she was concerned for her children as it was difficult to get some of them out of the house.

 

Alisha Latchman

“For a minute, I think my daughter, something happened to her because she never wanted to get up.  She never mih dih move to get up, but we managed to get her up. And we come out by the time we go for exit back to the to the living room area I just see the current gone off and everywhere dark and a lot of smoke and everything. And I see, you know, the front room.  In my room just a lot of fire, a lot of smoke, everything, and I managed to get open the front door and me and my kids. I exit out through the front door with them and they come out through the gate and my son come and halla fih dih neighbors them to help.”

 

She estimates a loss of approximately twenty-three thousand dollars in damages, which includes, furniture, appliances, schools supplies, clothes and documents.

 

Marion Ali

“So you managed to save much of what you own?”

 

Alisha Latchman

“Well, I tried going back inside. Let me see what I could get. I never managed to get much. I only grabbed like  two bags. And I couldn’t do nothing else more because then the whole place full of fire and smoke, thick smoke.”

 

Marion Ali

“So, I see that it’s not burnt down, but it’s scorched  severely, is it still livable?”

 

Alisha Latchman

“Inside damage. Yeah. So, I mean I can’t go back in and go live now, and that’s where I was renting, that’s not my place.”

 

We sought further information at the National Fire Service where Fire Station Supervisor, Kenneth Mortis updated us further. According to Mortis, the fire was due to an electrical malfunction.

 

                            Kenneth Mortis

 

 

Kenneth Mortis, Fire Station Supervisor, National Fire Service

“We conduct investigation. We will learn that the fire was as a result of a electrical flaw and that stemmed from the electrical circuit part of it in the room.  Again, we were fortunate to contain this fire and suppress it before it managed to expel itself from the building, creating more damage to other nearby structures.”

 

Latchman is at a loss for what do next and is asking the public to extend assistance to her and her family.

 

Marion Ali

“You have a number where people can reach you?”

 

 

Alisha Latchman

“Yes, 675-4504.”

 

Marion Ali

“And that’s for Alisha?”

 

 

Alisha Latchman

“Yes, Alicia.”

 

Marion AlI

”So, now that you say it’s not habitable, where are you staying? Who will you be with?”

 

Alisha Latchman

“Well for right now, one of my auntie she have my kids them but from there, I don’t know.  I don’t know what happened. Where we’re going from there.”

Procurement of Funds for New Court Complex in Final Stages

In January, we heard the Chief Engineer Evondale Moody describe how much infrastructural work the court building that once housed the Treasury Department underwent. Moody also spoke of the level of intervention that the other court building that faces the Battlefield Park also needs to undergo. Well, the construction of a brand new court complex will get underway next to the Eleanor Hall Finance Building on Chetumal Street, as soon as the procurement of funds and the design of the building are done.

 

                                Chris Coye

Chris Coye, Minister of State, Finance

“I think that’s in its final stages with the Social Security Board. So far as I understand, the transaction documents as it relates to the equity subscription by Social Security. Those have been approved by the board and so the next, I believe the next step is towards concluding those. I believe if I recall correctly was around $50 million. It was contemplated [that] two additional structures similar to the existing one – the existing finance building – so it would be about a hundred thousand square feet additional space that would then consolidate, the government offices. One building would be used for the judiciary, so the judiciary will have a new home that includes the different levels of the judiciary. So that would have to be more customized. And then the second building would be for other government facilities.”

Garifuna Language Embraced By the Education Sector

Trying to salvage a dying culture or language can sometimes be easier said than done, particularly because youths are often adapting to other more modernized ways of communicating and interacting. So when we heard that the introduction of Garifuna language in government schools in the south has not only drawn the interest of the students who are Garinagu, but also those of other ethnicities, it showed that teaching that language in those schools may be the way to retrieve that part of the rich Garifuna culture that we all celebrate. C.E.O. in the Ministry of Education, Dian Maheia told News Five today that there is good news to report in that regard.

 

Dian Maheia, C.E.O., Ministry of Education

“This is a program that they are piloting with nine schools between Stann Creek and Toledo District – primary schools, correct. And the idea is to, of course – this initiative is intended to save the Garifuna language, to ensure the continued use of the Garifuna language. Language is living when you use it, right, so they want to make sure that happens. They have a full program that includes support for teachers. It’s a planned program for rollout in the schools, and the work that has been happening over the past few months shows that it’s been successfully received. It’s being well implemented, even in students who are not Garinagu students. So that’s been an interesting component to look at, right? So we were really happy to learn more about it, to engage. What we see suggests that have we every reason, every confidence that this can be well rolled out, implemented. And yeah, we’re looking forward to seeing this bring more holistic development to the students who are impacted.”

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