[blind-democracy] Cold Wave, House Fires Prove Lethal for U.S. Homeless, Poor

  • From: "Roger Loran Bailey" <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> (Redacted sender "rogerbailey81" for DMARC)
  • To: blind-democracy <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sat, 30 Dec 2017 21:30:07 -0500

https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2017/12/29/cold-d29.html


Cold wave, house fires prove lethal for US homeless, poor

By Patrick Martin
 29 December 2017

A record cold wave extending from the Upper Midwest through the Great Lakes and into New England contributed to numerous deaths across the United States Christmas week. Homeless people and the elderly were particularly at risk, but the greater stress imposed by severe weather has yet again laid bare the social crisis affecting all sections of the working class.

Deaths due to hypothermia (exposure to extreme cold) were reported in Chicago; Cincinnati, Ohio; Rapid City, South Dakota; and Ogden, Utah over the Christmas holiday period.

The victim in Chicago was a 62-year-old man, whose name has not been released, found unresponsive in his car the day after Christmas. His was the fourth death in Chicago attributed to exposure since the current cold season began in late October. The other victims were all men suffering from multiple health problems aggravated by alcoholism.

The man found dead Tuesday at a bus stop in downtown Cincinnati, 55-year-old Kenneth Martin, was homeless. In Rapid City, Alan Jack, aged 69, was found dead outdoors early Christmas morning. The 79-year-old woman, Verna Marriott, found dead the morning of December 23 in Ogden was suffering from dementia and had wandered from the home she shared with her daughter’s family in the middle of the night.

An even greater death toll comes from the rising number of house fires, frequently triggered by space heaters or other precarious methods of keeping warm in severe weather. These fires for the most part represent the intersection of the cold wave with the bad housing conditions endured by impoverished layers of the working class.

Twelve people died Thursday night, including a one-year-old child, as the result of a fire which ripped through an apartment building in the Bronx, New York City's poorest borough. While a cause of the fire has yet to be officially determined, initial reports indicate that the fire may have been triggered by a small child playing with a stove. The fire comes less than two weeks after a house fire in Brooklyn killed a mother and her three children.

Two fires in eastern Iowa over the weekend killed nine people, including four children, bringing the total number of fire deaths in 2017 in Iowa to 51, the highest level in more than a decade.

Four members of one family died in a house fire early Christmas Day in Blue Grass, just west of Davenport. One of the four residents escaped but later died in the hospital. The other three died inside their home.

A second fire in a Davenport mobile home December 21 killed a mother and her four children. The mobile home had no working smoke detectors and, because it was owner-occupied, was not subject to fire department inspection.

Kelsey Clain, 23, and two of her children, Jayden Smead, five, and Carson Smead, two, died at the scene. Isabella Smead, nine months, died in hospital December 24, and Skylar Smead, four, died similarly on Tuesday, December 26.

In the neighboring state of Minnesota, a house fire Tuesday in Hibbing killed four people, including two grandparents, Steven and Patricia Gillitzer, and two grandsons, Todd Gillitzer, nine, and Anteus Adams, three. A third grandson, Jonathan Gillitzer, eight, was rescued by his grandfather and survived, but Steven, a retired firefighter, died trying to save other members of his family.

Firefighters from five departments fought the blaze in temperatures of around 20 below zero Fahrenheit, with wind chills as low as 35 below. The house had smoke detectors which were sounding when firefighters arrived at the scene. There were two other fire deaths in Minnesota since Christmas Day, bringing the total for the year to 63, the most since 2002.

Two children were killed in a house fire in East Franklin, Pennsylvania, northeast of Pittsburgh, on Thursday morning, December 28. The 13-year-old girl and 10-year-old boy were caught by a fast-moving fire, but five other residents—the children’s mother, her boyfriend, and three siblings escaped by jumping out second-floor windows. The day before, a 16-year-old boy was killed in a house fire in nearby South Bend, Pennsylvania.

Cold weather stretching into the southern portion of the Plains states created treacherous driving conditions. Four women—two teenagers, a 20-year-old and a 47-year-old—died Tuesday in a car crash near Abilene, Kansas caused by icy roads. The car hit a guardrail on a bridge and went over, landing 25 feet below on its roof, according to the state highway patrol.

The cold shattered records throughout the affected area, home to half the population of the United States. International Falls, Minnesota, proverbially the coldest spot in the continental US, set a record low of minus 36 degrees Fahrenheit Wednesday morning, four degrees below the 1924 record. Detroit tied its previous record of minus 4 degrees Fahrenheit the same day.

The National Weather Service issued extreme-cold advisories for New England, the Northeast, the Midwest and parts of the West. The forecast for New Year’s Eve in New York City was a wind chill in negative numbers, some 40 degrees colder than normal. City officials said that emergency shelter space was being opened for thousands of homeless people who might otherwise be on the streets this week.

As the cold wave set in, city after city across the United States has reported record annual death tolls among the homeless. Memorial services were held in several hundred cities on December 21—the shortest day and longest night of the year—to mark these tragic events.

The cities involved include many that might not be thought of as centers of homelessness and premature death—Charlotte, North Carolina, with 28 deaths, triple the previous high; Nashville, Tennessee, with 118 deaths; Denver, Colorado, with 232 deaths.

These grim totals were dwarfed by the figure from Los Angeles, a staggering 805 deaths among the homeless, up from 719 in 2016. The city is the center of US homelessness, and particularly of those living on the streets rather than in shelters or doubled-up with relatives and friends.

By one estimate, documented in a three-minute clip posted on Instagram on Christmas Day, there are 20,000 people living on the streets in downtown LA’s Skid Row alone. The UN Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty visited this area as part of his recent tour of high-poverty areas in the United States, and cited it as part of his report, which concluded that for many millions of people, “The American Dream is the American Illusion.”

The author also recommends:

Drug deaths drive down US life expectancy for second year
[22 December 2017]

UN rapporteur “shocked” by deep poverty in US
[18 December 2017]





Fight Google's censorship!

Google is blocking the World Socialist Web Site from search results.

To fight this blacklisting:

Share this article with friends and coworkers
  Facebook
   Twitter
   E-Mail
   Reddit




Commenting Discussion Rules »






New Today

Deadly Bronx fire: A tragic product of inequality and social crisis in America


Final reflections on the centennial year of the October Revolution


New York prepares military-style occupation for New Year’s celebration in Times Square


Protests erupt in Morocco after two die working in abandoned mine


US president accuses China of illegal oil transfer to North Korea


more articles »


The Social Crisis in America

Deadly Bronx fire: A tragic product of inequality and social crisis in America


Cold wave, house fires prove lethal for US homeless, poor


No decline in Michigan poverty since the Great Recession


Health care threatened for nine million low-income US children


Nashville, Tennessee: Homelessness at record levels despite pledges from politicians and business leaders


more articles »


United States

Deadly Bronx fire: A tragic product of inequality and social crisis in America


New York prepares military-style occupation for New Year’s celebration in Times Square


Drexel University professor resigns amid death threats from right-wing forces


Trump administration rolls back fines against nursing homes as violations mount


It’s the most exhausting time of the year: Amazon, UPS workers denounce grueling holiday conditions


more articles »


The Environment

Cold wave, house fires prove lethal for US homeless, poor


Erie, Pennsylvania buried by more than five feet of snow


Toxic contamination zone expanded around Australia’s Williamtown air force base


Southern California wildfires continue into third week


Puerto Rico governor orders review of official hurricane death toll


more articles »


Mehring Books

A Quarter Century of War: The US Drive for Global Hegemony 1990 - 2016

undefined

By David North





Get Involved!

Join the SEP


Join the IYSSE


About the ICFI


Donate to the WSWS





Follow the WSWS

Facebook


Twitter


Youtube


RSS Feed


Daily Podcast


WSWS Newsletter









Google Censorship

Evidence of Google blacklisting of left and progressive sites continues to mount (08/08/2017)


Google blocked every one of the WSWS’s 45 top search terms (04/08/2017)


RT interviews Andre Damon: Google becoming “censorship engine” (01/08/2017)


Google’s chief search engineer legitimizes new censorship algorithm (31/07/2017)


Does the WSWS write about Leon Trotsky? Not according to Google (29/07/2017)



Recent Perspectives

Final reflections on the centennial year of the October Revolution (30/12/2017)


Macron turns France’s labor decrees on auto workers (29/12/2017)


The oligarchy versus society (28/12/2017)


The US government and the Russian election (27/12/2017)


Democratic Party witch-hunters target Green Party candidate Jill Stein (23/12/2017)



Most Read Over the Past 7 Days

1.The oligarchy versus society (28/12/2017)


2.The petition against Matt Damon and the “erasing” of Kevin Spacey: The fiercely antidemocratic character of the sexual misconduct campaign (28/12/2017)


3.Democratic Party witch-hunters target Green Party candidate Jill Stein (23/12/2017)


4.The US government and the Russian election (27/12/2017)


5.Wildcat strike stops production as workers eject union leaders at Ford Romania (23/12/2017)



The Editor recommends

America’s latest “Scarlet Letter” moment (09/12/2017)


Jeff Bezos’ $100 billion: The case for expropriation (02/10/2017)


Net neutrality and the drive to censor the internet (25/11/2017)


The Socialist Equality Party in Germany demands new elections (23/11/2017)


US brands RT a “foreign agent:” A chilling move against free speech (11/11/2017)


Tom Henehan: A revolutionary life (16/10/2017)


An independent class strategy for the Spanish and Catalan working class! (05/10/2017)


Hillary Clinton’s What Happened: A conspiracy theory of the 2016 election (20/09/2017)


Palace coup or class struggle: The political crisis in Washington and the strategy of the working class (13/06/2017)




14 October 2017
Lenin’s The State and Revolution
Barry Grey
21 October 2017
On the Eve of Revolution: The Bolshevik Party, Factory Committees, and the Mass Movement of the Working Class
Tom Carter
28 October 2017
Lessons of October: The Political Crisis within the Bolshevik Party on the Eve of the Seizure of Power
Chris Marsden
11 November 2017
The Place of the October Revolution in World History and Contemporary Politics
David North
Socialism and the centenary of the Russian Revolution: 1917-2017
Why Study the Russian Revolution: A lecture by David North
All lectures in the first series


Lectures and Essays by David North

Socialism and the centenary of the Russian Revolution: 1917-2017 (01/03/2017)


Georgi Valentinovich Plekhanov (1856–1918): His Place in the History of Marxism (12/05/2016)


Philosophy and Politics in an Age of War and Revolution (10/25/2016)


A Quarter Century of War: The US Drive for Global Hegemony 1990–2016 (07/11/2016)



Socialism and the Struggle Against War

ICFI Resolution: Socialism and the fight against war (02/18/2016)


SEP (US) Resolution: The fight against war and the political tasks of the SEP (08/25/2014)


SEP (Australia) Resolution: The Socialist Equality Party and the fight to build an international anti-war movement (07/27/2016)


SEP (Sri Lanka) Resolution: The political struggle against war and the tasks of the Socialist Equality Party (04/30/2016)


PSG(Germany) Resolution: The struggle against war and the tasks of the PSG (11/14/2014)

  .

About the WSWS | Contact Us | Privacy Statement | Top of page

Copyright © 1998-2017 World Socialist Web Site - All rights reserved


Other related posts: