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Pittsfield Police: Reports Of Luring Attempts At Reid Proved False
Fire Damages Pittsfield Apartment Kitchen
Pittsfield Firefighters Snuff Out Attic Fire On Dawes Ave.
Pittsfield Firefighters Quickly Knock Down Fires in Two Apartments
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — City firefighters were busy Wednesday morning with two fires.
Crews were called to Worthington Street for a structure fire. While there, another call came in about a fire on Fenn Street.
Deputy Fire Chief Matthew Noyes said the call came in shortly after 11 a.m. Wednesday about a fire at three-family building on Worthingston Street. Upon arrival, smoke could be seen coming out of a second floor window, and crews found a small fire in a bedroom of the second-floor apartment.
Noyes said they were able to get the fire under control within about 10 minutes.
"We're just waiting for the investigators," he said.
The Red Cross has been called to assist the four people who live in the second floor, which is currently unusable, as well as the eight people in the first-floor apartment, which sustained water damage, Noyes said. The third floor was not affected.
While crews were assessing the Worthington situation, a call came in about a fire on Fenn Street.
Chief Robert Czerwinski, on the scene of that fire, said firefighters responded to 458 Fenn St. for a fire on the stove of the second floor apartment in the multi-family home. By the time they arrived, the occupant had extinguished the fire.
"Everybody's out, everybody's safe," Czerwinski said, adding that the damage was "mostly cosmetic" and the occupants - a man and his daughter - would not be displaced for long, if at all.
Czerwinski and Noyes said the Fire Department was able to successfully manage the back-to-back calls.
"We had to split up some crews," Czerwinski said, adding that two engine companies had still been in service when the second call came.
Noyes said there was a minor delay for a company to get to Fenn Street because it was at Worthington but it didn't have any impact.
"Luckily we were able to knock both fires down quickly," he said.
Pittsfield Fire Damages Montgomery Avenue Duplex
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Several pets were killed when a fire erupted on the first floor of a duplex on Montgomery Avenue shortly after noontime on Tuesday.
The cause of the fire is still being investigated but appears to be limited mostly to 7 Montgomery Ave. The 9 Montgomery Ave. side suffered "significant smoke damage."
Deputy Fire Chief Matthew Noyes said the department responded to the report of a structure fire and firefighters arriving on scene could see smoke coming out the building.
A least three windows were blown out by the blaze. Next door neighbor Tony Paredes said the fire expanded quickly. He said he heard a scream and in moments flames burst through the smoke-filled structure's windows.
The fire was contained fairly swiftly with the flames extinguished well before 1 p.m. but there were worries it might have spread through the structure.
"We were a little concerned when we saw smoke coming out of a vent from the basement area," Noyes said.
"Shortly after we had a line to the main body, we sent a crew to the basement. ... That's always a challenge if you have a possible basement fire ... but it turned out to be a little fire."
Everyone was out of the building by the time firefighters arrived. There were a number of pets, however, that apparently succumbed to the fire, including cats, although a snake was saved.
The building and health inspectors are currently evaluating the structure.
"The left side of the duplex has got heavy fire damage in the front room and in the basement," Noyes said. "There is heavy smoke damage throughout the building and some water damage.
"The right side has significant smoke damage, not any water damage, no fire damage that I can see."
According to land records, the home is owned by Melissa Gallagher and Sara Hollander.