LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Did malfunctioning hydrant cause loss of Rome home?
by EARL WIGGINS, Rome
Jul 03, 2012 | 1115 views | 1 1 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
WE WERE out of town on June 16, and we received a telephone call around 8:30 a.m. informing us that the house across the street from us had burned to the ground. Our immediate thoughts were if anyone was injured.

The good news was that our neighbors were out of town also, having left home a short time before the fire broke out. Our hearts went out to our neighbors, who lost everything but the clothes on their backs. My wife and I had planned to come back to Rome on Sunday, but we decided to come home Saturday afternoon to see the damage to the house. We both had fond memories of the house because one of our daughters and sons- in-law had lived there some 18 years, and we had shared many good times together in the house. Our daughter and her family had sold the house only two months ago.

As we were driving home we wondered how the house could burn completely down in such a short time. The fire chief in charge that day was at the site within four minutes of the call. I am sure the trucks were there also.

Our street is a cul-de-sac with a little rise to the end. There are two fire hydrants — one hydrant is less than 100 yards from the house.

We saw our neighbors at the site on Sunday morning and went to offer whatever help we could. From this meeting there developed additional stories that were interesting. The firemen were here to do their job, and they went to hook up their hoses, and the hydrant did not work. That is a mild statement. It was not even hooked up to the water supply. It fell to the ground. The hoses had to be diverted to another hydrant down the street.

How much time was lost? I do not know. Would it have mattered in saving the house? I do not know. I do know that all the houses on this street have been in harm’s way for at least the 20 years we have lived here because this hydrant has not been inspected. What a shame. At least the firemen would have had more time to address the fire. Work crews were here Monday morning to fix the hydrant. It took less than two hours

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tacomafan06
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July 04, 2012
This is what i cant understand, you have all these SPLOST's right? We vote for em and dont get nothing but a tax increase. My mother and father pay alot in property taxes (fire protection is one of them). They live in the subdivision rice springs estates. Now there is only ONE firehydrant for the entire neighborhood. The 6" main that it is on stops at the intersection of N Kenora and Emerson Drive. Why in the heck is the County so frikin cheap that they dont want to run a 6" main to support fire hydrants through the ditches. The closest other hydrant is way over on albion drive. This is a MAJOR hassle for firefighters and needs to be fixed. Quit spending our money on crap we dont need and spend it on fire protection for this subdivision and many others that dont have adequate protection.
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