Firefighters save mobile home


Aug 25 2004

A motorist who noticed smoke and fast-acting firefighters prevented a house fire near Freeland from harming the occupants or taking the mobile home down completely.

Paul Busch, an assistant chief with Fire District 3, said firefighters responded to a report of a garage fire on Highway 525 north of Freeland Sunday afternoon. The crews got to the scene within minutes, but already the garage was fully involved in flames and the fire had spread to the side of the house. A large plume of black smoke could be seen from miles away.

Busch said the firefighters concentrated on saving the house and were able to minimize the damage to the side of the double-wide mobile, but the garage was a total loss.

“The mobile home had broken windows and one side was burned,” he said. He estimated the damage to house as up to $10,000.

Fortunately, the couple living in the house were unharmed, as were the firefighters. The couple, a man and a pregnant woman, weren’t aware of the blaze until the motorist notified them.

“Someone was driving by on the road and banged on the door,” said Don Sumlin, the south end disaster coordinator for the Island County Chapter of the American Red Cross.

“There was a pretty fast response from the south end fire district,” he added.

The Red Cross put up the couple in a local hotel. Sumlin said the couple are “doing pretty well” right now, but the experience was pretty traumatic for them.

“She said she was as frightened as she had been in her entire life,” he said. A Red Cross counselor has met with them to help them handle the trauma.

While their house can be rebuilt, Sumlin said the man lost all the equipment for his tile-setting business.

Assistant Chief Busch said the fire may have started after the resident heated up a metal tool to bend it, then put the still-hot tool back in the garage near some wood.

Firefighters with trucks and equipment from the Freeland, Bayview and Saratoga stations responded, with mutual aid from Central Whidbey Fire and Rescue.

Busch said firefighters extinguished the flames in about 10 to 15 minutes but “mop up” took about an hour longer. He said the residents were lucky that their house was a newer mobile home.

“The older ones had wood paneling on the inside,” he said. “They would go up in a heartbeat.”

COMMENTING RULES: We encourage an open exchange of ideas in the PNWLocalNews.com community, but we ask you to follow our guidelines for respecting community standards. In a nutshell, don't say anything you wouldn't want your mother to read.

So keep your comments:

  • Civil
  • Smart
  • On-topic
  • Free of profanity

We ask that all participants own their words by registering for an account. It's a simple process that will take seconds and helps keep our comments free of trolls, cranks, and drive-by commenters.

As a community site, we ask that the community help by using the "Flag" button on each comment if they feel the comment has violated the rules. You can also use the up and down arrows on each comment to voice your opinion about that particular comment.

Want to tell us something but you don't want it to be public? Talk to us privately.

Our comment tool changed! As of March 1, we have a new commenting tool available that works with some all-new social tools on our site to let you post photos, video, make friends, connect to Facebook, post calendar items, and create and join discussion groups. One effect of this change is that your existing commenting account with Disqus.com no longer works on our site. We wish it wasn't so, but it's a necessary step.

To leave a comment, you will need to register an account with our site (or use your Facebook login).

We'll be gathering feedback on this process, so please give the new features a try and let us know how we can improve.