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Harvard Workers Respond As a Team to Peabody Terrace Emergency
By Alvin Powell
Gazette Staff
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| Graduate
students and their families who were evacuated from Peabody Terrace
on Sunday morning were helped by Harvard workers from about a dozen
departments, including Dining Services, which served 300 to 400 meals.
Peabody Terrace, which has 495 units of graduate student housing,
was evacuated at around 11:30 a.m. Sunday after Cambridge firefighters
responding to a report of the smell of smoke found elevated carbon
monoxide levels. Officials now know that a slow-burning fire had started
in underground wiring owned by Cambridge Electric, which supplies
the complex with electrical power. The building was cleared for re-entry
on Sunday night. Photo by Joe Wrinn |
Cambridge Emergency Management Director David OConnor was on the
scene as an underground electrical fire forced hundreds of Harvard graduate
students and their families to evacuate from Peabody Terrace on Sunday.
But OConnor, whose job it is to oversee such incidents for the city,
had an advantage he doesnt have with most of Cambridges other
private landlords.
"I knew we could rely much more heavily on Harvards resources
in this case than we can otherwise," OConnor said. "The
city and Harvard have been working together for 364 years." Harvards
response to the underground fire at Peabody Terrace involved personnel from
about a dozen University agencies and departments. Joining Harvard people
on the scene were Cambridge Fire Department and Inspection Services personnel
as well as workers from Cambridge Electric, which provides power to the
complex. Benefiting from the cooperation among the many groups were
several hundred graduate students, their spouses, and children, who were
thrust into the bitter Sunday morning air by an electrical fire that leaked
smoke and carbon monoxide into the complex. "The University
has this infrastructure for support in operations like this. We didnt
have to call an outside environmental unit to help. We didnt have
to call an outside bus company," said Susan Keller, director of residential
real estate for Harvard Planning and Real Estate. "Those relationships
were key in making things work." On the scene Sunday were personnel
from the Harvard University Police Department and several University Operations
Services units, including shuttle bus drivers, fire group and university
operations center personnel, electrical engineering and utilities workers,
and building operations staff. Public Affairs staff were also on hand to
manage media interest in the incident.Harvard Planning and Real Estate
(HPRE), which manages Peabody Terrace for the University, took a lead role
in managing the situation. HPRE had its own managers on the scene providing
critical assistance to those who were evacuated and important information
about the buildings physical setup. Dining Services also
pitched in, creating meals for the 300 to 400 Peabody Terrace residents
who were temporarily housed at the Gordon Track. University Health Services
Director David Rosenthal helped obtain medication for those whose prescription
drugs were left behind. And Kathy Bray, manager of freshman dormitories
for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, had extra mattresses and bedding trucked
over to Gordon Track in case an overnight stay was needed. Environmental
Health and Safety personnel were also at Peabody Terrace, working side-by-side
with Cambridge firefighters to test the air for carbon monoxide. University
Information Services also offered help, providing cell phones to workers
and residents to help keep communication lines open. Peabody Terrace,
which has 495 units of graduate student housing, was evacuated at around
11:30 a.m. Sunday after Cambridge firefighters responding to a report of
the smell of smoke found elevated carbon monoxide levels. Officials
now know that a slow-burning fire had started in underground wiring
owned by Cambridge Electric, which supplies the complex with electrical
power. The smoldering fire was in an underground conduit in the courtyard
between buildings, forcing smoke and some carbon monoxide gas into the buildings. Though
Peabody Terrace provides housing to roughly 1,300 graduate students and
their families, Keller said many fewer than that were evacuated because
many were away. Peabody Terrace Property Manager Pamela Cornell arranged
shelter for the evacuees, first, with the help of the city, in Cambridges
Martin Luther King School, and also in nearby Mather House. University shuttle
buses were then called in to transfer the Peabody Terrace residents to the
Palmer-Dixon Tennis Courts. They were later moved to the Gordon Indoor
Track and Tennis Facility after a track meet there concluded.Residents
were allowed back into the building at about 9:30 p.m., after extensive
air quality testing showed that the complex was safe. Even though University
officials believe the incident was handled well, theyre analyzing
their response to see how it could have been handled better. A debriefing
Tuesday afternoon pointed out areas where communications could be improved
and where certain supplies that had to be purchased Sunday, such as infant
formula and diapers, could be stockpiled as emergency supplies.
Admitting residents back into the complex was not the last of it, however.
The original damage remains to be repaired. Because the power will again
have to be shut off to effect the repairs, the work will likely be done
midnight to 3 a.m. one night this week. Since fire systems will be down
while the work is done, backup fire safety personnel will be on site that
whole night. "Im very pleased with the way that [response]
came together," said Thomas Vautin, associate vice president for facilities
and environmental services. "People did what they had to do and worked
together as a team."
Copyright
2000 President and Fellows of Harvard College
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