Complex fire still burning at Thorncliffe Park buildings days after residents evacuated

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Displaced residents of two towers at a Thorncliffe Park highrise are still waiting to hear when they’ll be able to return home, as fire crews continue to battle a complex fire days after the buildings were evacuated.
Insulation within the walls of two connected apartment buildings at Thorncliffe Park Drive and Overlea Boulevard has been burning since Thursday afternoon, with Toronto’s fire chief calling the five-alarm blaze one of the “more complex” the service has ever seen.
Toronto Fire is still on the scene and is expected to provide an update at noon Monday.
Many residents are now staying in hotel rooms while they wait for a time frame on when they can return. One of them says residents have been staying in touch through text and email, looking after each other while they wait.
“I’m more than thankful for the community that I live in. Everyone came together in order to support [each other],” May, whom CBC Toronto is only identifying by her first name because she is concerned for her safety should her residence be made public, told CBC Radio’s Metro Morning Monday.
May also works for the Neighbourhood Organization, which is helping co-ordinate support for evacuees during the fire along with Toronto Emergency Management and the Canadian Red Cross. She said they’ve been helping to do wellness checks on residents, many of whom are older.
“The building does have a lot of people who require additional support,” she said.
She said many residents have also been able to pick up some belongings from their units since the fire started, with shuttle buses arranged from their hotels.
‘It is unusual,’ councillor says of fire’s nature
Local councillor Rachel Chernos Lin said the collaboration between city agencies and support groups has been “truly exceptional” as they help residents.
“People are living in a bit of the unknown and waiting for updates, but they’re getting lots of communication,” she told Metro Morning Monday.
Chernos Lin said fire crews have told her the location of the fire — inside the walls between the two buildings — has complicated the firefighting effort.
“It is unusual. If you were to walk by the building, you wouldn’t know anything is amiss, except the fact that there’s a command station outside,” she said, adding that flames and smoke aren’t visible from the street.
“Obviously, [residents] didn’t necessarily expect that this would go on for days, because it’s not the normal trajectory that we think about when we think of a fire.”




