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mahatmakanejeeves

(57,472 posts)
Tue Sep 18, 2018, 10:39 AM Sep 2018

Inquiry Hears London Fire Board Personnel Testify About Grenfell Fire

Inquiry Hears LFB Personnel Testify About Grenfell Fire

"To see a flame growing like that, I'd say that is unusual," Firefighter Michael Wood says in his statement. "In the fires I have seen, and I've been to loads, normally you'd get a lot more smoke. It was like the fire was overtaking the smoke almost. I have never seen anything like it before. I have been to a lot of fires, big buildings alight, but none that moved as quick as this."

Sep 18, 2018

Several employees of the London Fire Brigade are testifying this week before the Grenfell Tower Inquiry about what they experienced the night of the fire, which gutted most of the London high-rise tower and killed 71 people. The LFB witnesses have included Control Room Officers -- dispatchers -- and a firefighter named Michael Wood who responded to the June 14, 2017, fire.

In his statement, Wood says the initial call to his station was a "forty pump" call, meaning a fire so large that 40 fire engines are needed on scene. When they reached the tower, he describes the fire itself as "bright orange, big and violent which is unusual because when you turn up to a lot of fires, there is usually more smoke than flame. . . . To see a flame growing like that, I'd say that is unusual," he continues. "In the fires I have seen, and I've been to loads, normally you'd get a lot more smoke. It was like the fire was overtaking the smoke almost. I have never seen anything like it before. I have been to a lot of fires, big buildings alight, but none that moved as quick as this."

Wood says before the Grenfell fire, he was unaware of the risk presented by cladding panels, but since then, LFB firefighters have had training about them. Combustible cladding used on the tower has been a key issue in the inquiry. Lawyers for the company that made the cladding told the inquiry that its panels were not responsible for spreading the fire and were "at most, a contributing factor." One of the inquiry's fire safety experts had said the cladding system contributed to the fire's rapid spread and bears much of the blame for the tragedy.

Control Room Officer Angie Gotts explains in her statement that normal advice to fire calls to high-rise buildings always has been to shelter in place. She says she had never heard of the Grenfell Tower before the night of the fire, and she took about 80 calls during her shift that night. "Initially the advice to give residents was to remain," she says. "I remember at some point in the night, someone shouts that the advice was to get out. I do not know what time this was said.
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