Crews hope to have Kingston crane down by Thursday night - Action News
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Crews hope to have Kingston crane down by Thursday night

Kingston's fire chief says crews are hoping to take down the crane badly damaged by yesterday's intense fire.

Crane operator Adam Jastrezbski suffered minor burn injuries

Kingston fire aftermath

11 years ago
Duration 2:31
The CBC's Tom Parry reports on the aftermath of Tuesday's fire and crane rescue in Kingston, Ont.

The fire chief in Kingston, Ont., says crews are hopingto take down thecrane badly damaged by yesterday afternoon's intense fire at a residential complex under construction.

It is hoped the crane will be dismantled by Thursday night.

The blaze damaged nearby buildings and also led to the dramatic rescue of a crane operator stranded above the flames by a helicopter team from CFB Trenton.

The crane operator, Adam Jastrezbski, suffered burns to his hands, back and legs,but is improving in hospital, according to his wife, Helena.

The site continued to smoulder into early Wednesday evening.Firefighters can't get too close to the siteuntil the crane is taken down, sothey can't douse anyremaining hot spots.

Staff with the Office of the Fire Marshal of Ontario, the Kingston fire department andOntario'sMinistry of Labour are planning how to move forward.

Kingston fire ChiefRhaumeChaputestimated the fire reached temperatures of about 1,000F, and said that steel begins to be compromised at about 600 F.

The crane, charred and structurally damaged by the intense heat, could collapse, officials say. Kingston fire Chief Rhaume Chaput says crews hope to have the crane down by Thursday night. (CBC)

Everyone within a two-block radius of the structurally compromised crane are still waiting to return to their homes.

"Being right in the middle of a populated downtown part of the city of Kingston, there are several buildings that ... the crane could actually collapse onto," Kingston Mayor MarkGerretsensaid Wednesday morning.

Gerretsonsaid later on Wednesday damage to the adjacent Royal Canadian Legion Villa would result in long-term displacement for residents of the seniors home. The building's roof caught fire as the blaze spread on Tuesday.

Mayor had worries

Gerretsentold CBC News he had concerns about the wooden building that caught fire Tuesday leading to the dramatichelicopter rescuewell before flames broke out.

"I'll be the first to admit driving by this building, and I did on a daily basis as I saw the wood structure go up, and having some experience in the construction world outside of my business at city hall, I thought to myself, 'Well, this is a pretty big structure to be made out of wood entirely,'" he said.

"I think that many members of the community shared that concern."

Power had to be shut off in the area around the fire in Kingston, Ont., and residents living within a half-kilometre of the scene were taken to an emergency shelter. (Bruce Cadieux/Twitter)

Gerretsenstressed that the city has no say over materials used in the construction of any building. That's covered by provincial legislation

"What I can tell you is that a proper building permit was taken out, and that according to the design, itadhered to the building code," the mayor said.

Cause still unknown

Power was shut off in the area around the fireand residents living within a half-kilometre weretaken to an emergency shelter at the PortsmouthOlympicHarbour.

Residents who had nowhere else to go were put up in hotels by the city, Gerretsen said.

Police said residents have been asked to stay away from the perimeter of the fire, fromConcession Streetto the north and west, Albert Street to the east andDundasStreet to the south.They saidthey'll be advising residents when they can re-enterthe evacuation zone to collect pets or other items.

Developer issues statement

The above area was blocked off to all traffic Wednesday due to concerns that the damaged crane could collapse. The information for the graphic was obtained on the City of Kingston's website. (CBC)

The developer of the commercial and residential housing complex,PatryInc. Developments, issued a statement Wednesday saying it wasthankful no lives were lost in the fire andthanked Kingston Fire Rescue, Kingston police, Kingston EMS, Trenton Search and Rescue,neighbouringfire departments and all other individuals/organizations who assisted to prevent loss of life.

The company said the cause of the fire is still under investigation, and in its statementdefended its choice to use wood in the construction of the building.

"Regarding the suitability of wood construction for this project, large wood frame construction buildings are built throughout the country and have been since 1990; there are thousands of these buildings located throughout Canada.

"Furthermore, the building has been designed and was constructed to meet all Ontario Building Code and Ontario Fire Code requirements. It is of note that this is a construction site fire, and as with any building material during the construction phase, it is more vulnerable to fire damage in comparison to a completed building where all fire and safety features are in place," the statement read.

Many students were expected to move into the building when it was completed. The company said forpeople who signedleases for September 2014, the company said it wouldbe in touch "in the near future as the situation is assessed."

Construction at the site was being overseen byStelmach Property Management.

'Extremely unusual rescue'

The military rescue team that answered the call from the Kingston fire department on Tuesday afternoon credited their regular training with helping them handle what they called an "unusual rescue."

Sgt. Cory Cisyk, a search and rescue technician for 424 Transport and Rescue Squadron based at 8 Wing Trenton at CFB Trenton, said the crewdidn't know what to expect as they were flying to Kingston, but theyhad a couple of different plans.

Capt.David Agnew said at a news conference Wednesday at CFB Trenton thatas the crew approached the fire they were concerned the blaze or smoke might interfere with the rescue.

"I can't imagine [the crane operator's] perspective," said Agnew. "From miles off in the distance we could see the flames and the smoke.

Sgt. Cory Cisyk was the rescue technician who was lowered from a helicopter to save a crane operator stranded above the massive fire in Kingston, Ont.

Based on the information they received, the crew planned a "double-up" rescue in which Cisyk would be lowered from the chopper on a cable and then use a strap or "horse collar" to wrap around the crane operator to pull him up.

Cisyk said that when he first made contact with Jastrezbski, the crane operator, it was difficult to communicate with him because of the noise from the helicopter.

"I tried to explain what I was going to do. I don't know if he understood," said Cicyk, a native of Regina.

Cisyk said it took time to get the collar around the man because he was lying down at the end of the crane's boom, but he got help from the helicopter flight engineer, Corp. Iain Cleaton, who gently hoisted the two up to help them stand.

Once hegot the crane operator in the chopper, Cisyk said, he had only a brief conversation with him to find out if he was hurt.

The crane operator was taken to hospital with minor injuries.

"For us, this was extremely unusual. But evendiscussing with the crew afterwards we really figured that the training we do every day really came into it and played a big factor in ...the way things ran."

'It's just so surreal,' witness says

John Ashie, who was working at his family's car dealership down thestreet,said the entire episode was like something out of an action film.

"Especially when the helicopter guy was rescuing him from thecrane, everyone was like, 'Oh my god! I can't believe this ishappening, it's just so surreal,"' said Ashie.

David Elias, a civilian public affairs officer with the Canadian military, said the crews are normally not involved in urban rescues.

"The number of times we would have hoisted someone off a crane like this, I imagine we could count that on one hand. Normally we are hoisting people off of boats or mountains," said Elias.

"He wasn't just standing on a tower crane. He was standing on a tower crane surrounded by flames."

All construction workers at the site are believed to be accounted for, according toKingston police.

"We're extremely grateful of the amazing work done by CFB Trenton to rescue that one individual that everybody was worried about,"Gerretsentold CBC'sPower & Politics host Evan SolomonTuesday. "This is a day that the public can be extremely proud of your emergency workers."

With files from The Canadian Press