Category: – North Carolina

State of NC investigating after complaints of elevated carbon monoxide in Durham County Human Services building

North Carolina –
“The county said in a letter sent to employees that two employees ‘became ill and were transported to the hospital’…Other employees told WRAL Investigates they and their coworkers have been suffering for weeks, if not months, from nausea, headaches, fatigue and even fainting in the office. They learned in mid-January of the possible elevated level of carbon monoxide in their workplace, and believe that may be to blame. They fear the issue may have started months prior.”

State investigating after complaints of elevated carbon monoxide in Durham County Human Services building (wral.com)

Autopsies reveal how carbon monoxide killed three marines found dead in car in Pender County

PENDER COUNTY, N.C. (WECT) – Autopsies obtained by WECT reveal new details about how carbon monoxide poisoning killed three marines found dead in a car in Pender County earlier this year.

Tanner J. Kaltenberg, Merax C. Dockery and Ivan R. Garcia were found on Sunday, July 23, at the Speedway in Hampstead.

Per the autopsies, there was no obvious sign of suicide, foul play or drug use.

“The car was noted to be “lowered” and it was noted that the exhaust pipes were not connected and were rusted. It appeared that exhaust from the vehicle would have been released under the passenger cabin of the vehicle and not at the rear bumper. The vehicles [sic] key was noted to be in the on position. It was also determined the air conditioning was on at the time fuel ran out,” Garcia’s autopsy states.

The autopsy also notes that gas station footage showed the vehicle parked at the Speedway at 3 a.m. on Saturday, July 22, and “no one got in or out of the vehicle for the duration.”

Autopsies reveal how carbon monoxide killed three marines found dead in car in Pender County (wect.com)

Wake Veterinary Hospital & Urgent Care evacuated due to carbon monoxide scare

KNIGHTDALE, N.C. (WTVD) — Workers and animals at Wake Veterinary Hospital & Urgent Care had to evacuate the building Monday due to a carbon monoxide poisoning scare.

It happened around 2 p.m. at the building located on Tandal Place in Knightdale near the intersection of Interstate 540 and Business 64.

ABC11 crews learned a generator associated with construction happening near the building was operating near the back door of the hospital. Exhaust smell from the generator caused someone to call the fire department.

First responders arrived and help evacuate the building out of an abundance of caution.

No humans or animals were seriously harmed, but they all could be seen gathering in the parking lot outside the building as first responders worked the scene.

Wake Veterinary Hospital & Urgent Care evacuated due to carbon monoxide scare – ABC11 Raleigh-Durham

 

60 students evaluated, dorm evacuated after gas leak at Catawba College, officials say

North Carolina –
“…the leak was identified after some residents of Barger-Zartman Residence Hall said they were experiencing symptoms aligned with increasing levels of carbon (monoxide). The leak was later confirmed in the boiler room of the building.”

All-clear after gas leak reported at Catawba College | wcnc.com

 

Marines found dead at NC gas station died of carbon monoxide poisoning, officials say

“Three U.S. Marines found unresponsive in a car at a North Carolina gas station died of carbon monoxide poisoning, the local sheriff’s office said Wednesday.

Deputies from the Pender County Sheriff’s Office found the three men Sunday morning in a privately owned Lexus sedan parked outside a Speedway gas station in the coastal community of Hampstead. Autopsies performed Wednesday by the North Carolina medical examiner’s office determined that all three deaths were the result of carbon monoxide poisoning, according to the sheriff’s office.”

 

https://www.13newsnow.com/article/news/national/military-news/marines-found-dead-north-carolina-gas-station-carbon-monoxide-poisoning/291-17a64fa4-3378-4d63-a936-41f00a423497

 

NFPA Journal: General Negligence

“A new Fire Protection Research Foundation report highlights the nation’s enduring CO problem”

https://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/nfpa/journal_2021spring/index.php?startid=20#/p/20

CO Detection: What It Is and Why We Need It

Amazon facility evacuated after employee passes out due to carbon monoxide leak

North Carolina – “At about 7:30 p.m., Kannapolis Fire responded to a call to the facility, and upon arrival, found one person who had passed out due to exposure to carbon monoxide…”

https://independenttribune.com/news/local/amazon-facility-evacuated-after-employee-passes-out-due-to-carbon-monoxide-leak/article_743f0dce-5033-11eb-992a-8315f3b55789.html?utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook&utm_campaign=user-share&fbclid=IwAR2UwC4W6AtfKr3EI6ZQszdMU6QdSQk60shllZDYhM45ofXvdVVcnCGuqDU

 

Hotel Carbon Monoxide Poisoning in Jacksonville, NC

Hotel evacuated and 16 guests, including a child, hospitalized due to carbon monoxide poisoning…no information yet on whether hotel had CO alarms…another example of why it’s so important to pack your own alarm when you travel… https://www.wnct.com/news/local-news/jacksonville/16-taken-to-hospital-after-carbon-monoxide-exposure-at-jacksonville-hotel/1569012387

Should carbon monoxide detectors be mandatory in restaurants?

Diners at a Clemmons restaurant last weekend became sick because of a carbon-monoxide leak. Thanks to some quick action from an off-duty firefighter, the restaurant was evacuated and those who experienced illness were treated.

Fortunately, such incidents are rare. But one is too many. We urge legislators to make carbon monoxide detectors mandatory in restaurants, just as they are in hotels and motels.

The Clemmons incident occurred during a birthday party in the special events room of the River Ridge Taphouse, the Journal’s Jenny Drabble reported. One of the participants, off-duty firefighter Lonnie Wimmer, noticed that people were starting to feel sick. Some had headaches and some felt nauseous. There was some vomiting.

Wimmer also began to feel ill. Fortunately, he recognized the symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning and notified the fire department and emergency personnel. The restaurant was evacuated.

Thirty-one diners were treated on the scene and 14 went to the hospital.

The leak was eventually traced to a heating unit, Lewisville Fire Department Assistant Chief Steve Williams told the Journal.

“We are extremely confident that was the main source of the leak,” Williams told the Journal. “The heating unit for that room malfunctioned and stopped burning cleanly, which can happen to any of those units.”

The restaurant quickly had the leak fixed and opened for business last Sunday morning, restaurant manager Dawn Vanorden told the Journal.

“Everything’s good, we fixed it that night,” she said. “Everyone’s safe.”

It doesn’t appear the restaurant did anything wrong. The restaurant did not have a carbon monoxide detector. They’re required in hotels and motels, but they’re not required in restaurants.

We’re grateful for the presence and quick thinking of the off-duty firefighter, Wimmer. This could have been much worse.

Carbon monoxide is very dangerous. It disrupts blood cells’ ability to carry oxygen through the body, and inhaling too much can be lethal. The level in the restaurant spiked to six times the normal amount, officials told the Journal.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that between 1999 and 2010, an average of 430 people died from accidental carbon monoxide poisoning in the United States.

There have been some deadly incidents of carbon monoxide poisoning in our area, like in 2013 when a couple from Longview, Wash., Daryl and Shirley Jenkins, died in a room in the Best Western hotel in Boone. Jeffrey Lee Williams, an 11-year-old boy, died later that year in the same room before a police investigation revealed that deadly levels of carbon monoxide had seeped in from a corroded exhaust pipe. After that tragedy, the legislature moved quickly to toughen laws for carbon monoxide detectors in hotel and motel rooms.

Legislators should make carbon monoxide detectors mandatory in restaurants. The gas is difficult to detect, sometimes until it’s too late.

We’re glad Wimmer was there, and appreciate the quick response from the restaurant. But more needs to be done. This is serious business.

wsjeditorial@wsjournal.comor send letters to the editor at letters @wsjournal.com.

© © Copyright 2016, Winston-Salem Journal, Winston-Salem, NC

https://firefightingnews.com/carbon-monoxide-detectors-mandatory-restaurants/

30 People Treated for Carbon Monoxide Poisoning at Clemmons Restaurant

“…Assistant Chief Steve Williams with the Lewisville Fire Department said the gas started leaking because of a malfunction in the restaurant’s heating system.

The carbon monoxide made it’s way through the restaurant’s ventilation system and into a private dining room where a birthday party with kids was taking place…a firefighter who happened to be with the party group noticed people in the room were feeling dizzy, nauseated, and experiencing headaches, so he called the fire department.”

https://www.wfmynews2.com/article/news/local/30-people-treated-for-carbon-monoxide-poisoning-at-clemmons-restaurant/83-367804953

 

“An off-duty firefighter saved the lives of many dinner party guests when he realized something was amiss during the gathering of friends in North Carolina. When Lonnie Wimmer began to notice guests were nauseous and complaining of headaches at the River Ridge Tap House, he jumped into action…”

https://www.insideedition.com/headlines/20474-off-duty-firefighter-saves-lives-when-he-detects-carbon-monoxide-during-restaurant-dinner-party

 

CO leak causes evacuation of O’Charley’s in Greensboro, NC

Greensboro, NC –

“Emergency personnel were called after employees complained of feeling sick. Four employees went home throughout the day and 11 employees were taken to the hospital…Fire Department personnel are trying to locate the source of the carbon monoxide leak and believe it may have originated somewhere in the kitchen…Fire officials told FOX8 when carbon monoxide levels get to 35 it is “alarming.” The carbon monoxide levels in O’Charley’s on Friday were up to 400.”

https://myfox8.com/news/carbon-monoxide-leak-causes-evacuation-of-ocharleys-in-greensboro/