Hoarding Hellfire In Fort Worth As Roof Teeters On Collapse

This morning’s house fire in southeast Fort Worth turned into a high-stakes scramble for firefighters, as heavy flames tore through a home in the 4200 block of Frazier Avenue and raised real fears the roof could come crashing down.

Crews rolled up around 8 a.m. to find a one-story wood-frame house already burning hard, with one side of the roof unstable enough that firefighters warned it might collapse. Inside, hoarding-like conditions created a maze of clutter that slowed searches and made already risky interior operations even more dangerous. By midmorning, officials confirmed three adults had been displaced.

Emergency callers initially reported that some residents were reluctant to leave, and crews had to work to get everyone out safely, according to WFAA. The Fort Worth Fire Department told the outlet that firefighters arrived to find heavy fire and immediately flagged the risk of a partial roof collapse. Fire investigators remained on scene working to determine how the blaze started, the station reported.

Hoarding Turns A House Into A Hazard Zone

Hoarding-like clutter is more than an eyesore during a fire. Piled belongings can block exits, add a huge fuel load and slow firefighters who are trying to search rooms in zero visibility. All of that boosts the danger of entrapment and structural failure once flames get going…

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