American Red Cross
Be Red Cross Ready!
-
The Modesto Bee

 

Bee carrier saves the day with news of fire in house

By Jeff Jardine
last updated: July 07, 2009 03:58:14 AM

(BRIAN RAMSAY/bramsay@modbee.com) Early Tuesday morning, June 30, 2009, a fire broke out at this home on Rosemont Ave. in west Modesto, Calif. A Modesto Bee newspaper carrier, June Brown, 54, was delivering newspapers on Rosemont Ave. when she noticed smoke billowing out from the home. Brown's loud knocking on the front door awoke 4 inhabitants inside the home, who all escaped unhurt from the fire. The Modesto Fire Department responded to the scene shortly after 5:30 a.m. to extinguish the fire. The cause of the fire is under investigation, a damage estimate was not immediately available. Penelope Lopez (left), 41, gives June Brown, 54, an emotional hug of gratitude. - Modesto Bee - Brian Ramsay

SPECIAL DELIVERY - Longtime Bee carrier June Brown really delivered a week ago as she tossed newspapers along Rosemont Avenue in west Modesto.

As usual, she came upon the home rented by Agustin Barajas, Penelope Lopez and her two teenage children about 5:25 a.m. Most days, Brown simply flings the paper into the driveway and heads on to the next stop. This time, though, she saw a wafting haze in the pale light, noticing it even though there's a sizable tree in front of the home.

Let's see, it's June 30, with the temperature expected to reach 103 later that day. It sure didn't seem like weather to burn wood.

"I saw smoke coming out -- not out of a chimney, but out of the eaves," said Brown, who has delivered the paper since 1987, with most of her routes on the west side of town.

She called 911 and then ran up to the front door.

"She was knocking on our steel security door," Lopez said. "She was hitting it so hard it sounded like a gun going off."

After about 20 seconds, they came to the door and Brown told them the house was on fire.

The family quickly ran outside after Lopez's 17-year-old daughter, Michelle Davis, and 16-year-old son, Lavell Davis, rounded up their two Chihuahuas (one of them pregnant), terrier and cat.

Barajas and a next-door neighbor turned their garden hoses on the roof until fire crews arrived.

Inspectors later determined that electrical problems in the attic started the fire. By the way the wood charred, it appeared the fire had been smoldering for a few hours before turning into flames, said Hugo Patino, a Modesto Fire Department battalion chief.

The family received temporary housing from the American Red Cross and from Community Housing and Shelter Services, but they will soon be out on the streets because repairs to the home will be extensive.

Lopez is recovering from gall bladder surgery and Barajas recently lost his job as a Spanish-language telemarketer. They have established a family fire fund in Penelope Lopez's name at Bank of America.

Rebecca Ciszek, executive director of the Stanislaus County chapter of the Red Cross, said her agency doesn't accept donations for a specific family or person. But general donations to the Red Cross can be mean more motel nights for fire victims.

Lopez and Barajas said they plan to nominate Brown for a Red Cross Heroes Award. It would be presented at an event next spring.

"I want to thank her personally," Barajas said.

"I want to give her a hug," Lopez said. "Without her, no way would we have all gotten out."