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Compulsive Hoarding
Is A Family Problem
Together, we hope to find some solutions.
This is a community for all adult family members
and friends of people who hoard.
What you will find here
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There are currently, 28 guest(s) and
3 member(s) that are online.
You are a guest. You can register by clicking here. |
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| Thanks for your support that keeps us online! |
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| Donat-o-Meter Stats |
| July´s Goal: |
$100.00 |
| Due Date: |
Jul 31 |
| Amount in: |
$60.00 |
| Balance: |
$57.36 |
| Left to go: |
$42.64 |
| Donations | | | Lisa $20 Jul-18 | | Anonymous $20 Jul-15 | | stericlean $20 Jul-3 |
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| Get a web address(URL) for a photo or avatar...easy! |
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Blaze victim was a 'recluse'
Officials working to identify man known only as 'Abu,' thought to live at burned-out shop
Apr 14, 2008 04:30 AM
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Mother tried to save her kids
By Russ Krebs/Tribune StaffTuesday, Feb 26, 2008
Quotes from article...
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Fire crew rescues woman, 7 pets
Cat perishes in cluttered, barred Visalia home
BY HILLARY MEEKS
hmeeks@visalia.gannett.com
Chairs, a broken refrigerator and other items filled the woman's garage from top to bottom — and Battalion Chief Doyle Sewell said the scene wasn't much different inside the house. This, along with metal bars on the front door, made it more difficult for the woman to escape the smoke and flames. It also made it hard for firefighters to reach her, he said.
When she attempted to get out the front door, she slipped and fell in the hallway, where she was later found unconscious, Hughes said.
Hampton said the woman was a known recluse, and tended to hoard — evident by the stacks of things in her garage...
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2 Die in Fire; Door Nailed Shut
Thursday, January 03, 2008
By JIM FITZGERALD, Associated Press Writer
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. — The elderly couple's windows were barred, and their front door was nailed shut, apparently because the two feared for their safety. Inside, their home was filled with 5-foot-tall heaps of debris.
The clutter and makeshift security measures turned the home into a death trap Wednesday when a fast-moving fire killed them both, officials said.
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Two Articles re: Cedarhurst blaze kills couple BY COLLIN NASH collin.nash@ newsday.com
Newsday May 12, 2007, 8:44 PM EDTe
"exorbitant amount of combustible material inside the house" was likely the source of the blast, Nassau County police Sgt. Anthony Repalone said.
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Bill would offer loans to install fire sprinklers
Small care homes are not required to have devices By Michael Gardner COPLEY NEWS SERVICE April 8, 2007
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LA Residents looking for resources: Hoarding is a serious problem that can effect those in any segment of our society. Thankfully, there are factors that can often be addressed through the combined effort of municipal employees (such as those working in LAFD Fire Marshal's Office) and Mental Health Professionals.
City of Los Angeles residents can contact the Legal Liaison Unit easily and toll-free through 3-1-1, or should they wish to call directly:(213) 978-3560.
Additionally, those also within the *County* of Los Angeles can call the Department of Mental Health at (800) 854-7771, Adult Protective Services at (877)477-3646, or 211-LA (aka Infoline) by dialing 2-1-1 or (800) 339-6993 at any hour for personal assistance. Source.
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July 5, 2006
A "Collyer Mansion" Situation
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1994 - Dennis started a media awareness campaign in an attempt to bring the issues into the public view. With public awareness came more and more research into the Hoarding Disorder....
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During the fire fight, firefighters encountered severe pack-rat conditions which made operating within the structure extremely difficult.
The sole occupant, an 83 year-old female, was using both units, upstairs and downstairs, to store head high piles of objects and materials including stacks of newspapers over 50 years old. Firefighters had to crawl and navigate their way into the units to conduct search and rescue operations as well as locate the seat of the fire....
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Elizabeth writes "[The homeowner] got out safely, but firefighters had trouble getting in. Crews quickly learned the home was filled with pile after pile of books, magazines and clothes even in the hallways, which made it tough to get to the fire in the attic from inside."
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Elizabeth writes "The Final Chapter: George Butcher's books and papers fill his life... but municipal officials say it's dangerous hoarding"
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Elizabeth writes "Los Angeles Fire Dept. News and Information (Fire in duplex, 1/16/07)
During the fire fight, firefighters encountered severe pack-rat conditions which made operating within the structure extremely difficult. ... "
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Clutter in house hampers firefighters
Posted on Mon, Dec. 11, 2006- Kansas City Star
A house filled with wood and newspaper made it difficult for firefighters to extinguish a fire Sunday morning at a house in Kansas City, Kan.
The blaze caused $55,000 damage to a two-story wood frame house at 1858 Saint Paul Street. It took two hours to extinguish the flames after the fire was reported about 9:30 a.m. Fire officials say the blaze started in the basement where stacks of wood and newspaper were stored. The material also filled much of the first floor. The cause of the fire is under investigation. No one was home. No injuries were reported.
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Does your hoarding loved one live in a fire hazard?
Take the new survey posted to the left.
Feel free to post your comments or experiences attached to this survey about the very real dangers of fire in hoarded environments.
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Posted by Donna on Thursday, October 26, 2006 @ 06:06:50 ICT (180 reads)
(comments? | Need Opinions | Score: 0) |
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Stockpiling Run Rampant By Timothy Dwyer
Washington Post Staff Writer Thursday, December 8, 2005; Page VA20
Over the course of 17 years, a married couple living in a mid-unit, three-bedroom, three-story townhouse in Burke had hoarded so much stuff that their home was overflowing. The weight of the debris was threatening to cause the floors to cave in.
The situation might have gone unnoticed were it not for a windy day in January 2000, when a gust blew open the front door while both were at work. A neighbor peeked in and was alarmed enough to call 911.
When a county engine company arrived, firefighters took one look at the house and called for a fire inspector, who notified the county environmental health division. Inspectors got a warrant and found that the flooring was failing, and when the couple returned from work, they were not allowed to enter because the home was deemed unsafe.
It took 15 dumpsters, each with a capacity of 40 cubic yards, to clean out the rat-infested house, and the owners were ordered to reimburse the county $28,900 for the cleanup. John Yetman, chairman of the county Hoarding Task Force, called it one of the worst cases of hoarding in Fairfax County. It was also a textbook example of how the task force, made up of representatives from 10 agencies, works to solve a problem.
Hoarders accumulate a large amount of goods, cluttering their homes to the point where entire rooms cannot be used for anything else. There are 60 to 90 cases of hoarding reported each year in the county, Yetman said. Rarer are cases of animal hoarding, such as the 82-year-old Mount Vernon woman who was found to have 488 cats -- 222 of them dead -- in her home in July.
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Beach aims to help hoarders get out from under piles of problems
By SUSAN E. WHITE, The Virginian-Pilot © September 23, 2006
VIRGINIA BEACH - Fire Battalion Chief David Hutcheson still recalls the cases in fairly vivid detail.
An elderly couple died when the home caught fire. An investigation showed the cause was an overloaded extension cord, but fire officials say the home's overload of contents fueled the fire's intensity...
"It definitely was a contributing factor to their death," Hutcheson said.
These cases all involved hoarders - people who hold on to items that they think are invaluable....
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Newspapers may have fueled fire
BEN KENDALL 23 September 2006 06:45
A fire which claimed the life of an elderly widow may have been fuelled by piles of old newspapers hoarded inside the house, a coroner's inquest heard yesterday.
Daphne Williamson, 69, died of smoke inhalation when the blaze engulfed her home at Newton Road, Hainford, near Norwich, at about 1.30pm on February 8. Neighbours had alerted the fire service after seeing flames explode through a side window.
Investigators believe Mrs Williamson died before the fire reached its peak...
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Clean up, cut your fire risk
BY KRISTY GRANT Albury fire station commander, Greg Lynch, with a selection of some of the chemicals that can prove hazardous in the home and garage. Picture: PETER MERKESTEYN
BORDER residents are being asked by the fire brigade to “spring clean” their homes and sheds to help prevent fires. Homeowners should clear clutter, check power sources and lock away chemicals as part of their annual spring cleaning.
The Spring Clean for a Safer Home campaign was launched this week and aims to increase awareness about the link between good housekeeping and fire prevention.
Albury fire station commander Greg Lynch said a blaze in the home could have devastating effects on residents putting lives at risk and causing serious damage...
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Aug. 31, 2006, 1:21AM Clutter blamed in fatal home fire HFD says piles of paper helped the blaze quickly spread, hindering a woman's rescue
By MIKE GLENN Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle
Family members had regularly offered to help make order out of the chaos of books, magazines and papers that filled Marilyn Berzeny's modest northwest Houston home.
But the 64-year-old woman always refused any assistance, they said. Relatives now believe that resistance may have cost the woman her life early Wednesday when a fast-moving fire burned through the clutter she refused to move.
"I'm so mad at myself. I should have just done it anyway," said a tearful Elaine Dubec, the victim's daughter. "I was trying to respect her and not touch her stuff."
The blaze was reported about 4 a.m. at Berzeny's home in the 2200 block of Hialeah. Stacks of paper and other debris — at least waist-high throughout the home — hindered firefighters' efforts to rescue the victim, the Houston Fire Department said.
"They tried to go in the front door, encountered (the debris), and went in the back door," HFD District Chief Tommy Dowdy said. "That's where they found her — just inside the back door."
Firefighters crawled over piles of books and magazines to locate the narrow pathways that were the only means to navigate through the house.
The stacks of books and magazines quickly ignited as the flames raced through the home, adding to the deadly conflagration. "There were just piles of stuff. It burns faster and makes more smoke," Dowdy said. "Between the darkness and the smoke, it makes it real difficult to find those paths."
Berzeny apparently tried to escape but was overcome by the thick, choking clouds. Paramedics struggled to revive her, but she was pronounced dead at Memorial Hermann Hospital. Relatives said she had burns over 30 percent of her body.
"I just feel terrible. I didn't even know she was at home," said neighbor Tony Cirillo, who called Berzeny "a nice lady who didn't bother anybody."
Billy Boy, the victim's beloved German shepherd, apparently tried to make his way inside the home when the fire broke out, family members said. The dog suffered some minor burns and is being cared for by a neighbor. (Read more....)
mike.glenn@chron.com
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At the lethal fire in Eldersburg where Richard Hamilton Stewart, 78, and his son Richard Jr., 51, died in the early morning of July 23, firefighters had trouble searching for the men because of the amount of clutter in the house.
Sykesville firefighters said they also had trouble getting into the same home last winter when they went on a medical call for another family member.
Hoarding is a recognized obsessive/compulsive disorder and to help people understand it better, Gail Jones, Carroll County Bureau of Aging's Guardianship Program Coordinator, has been making the rounds at senior centers to talk about the problem.
Read more: http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/carroll/bal-ca.hoarding13aug13,0,3124183.story?coll=bal-local-carroll
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Fort Wayne Home Burns to the Ground
(Fort Wayne - WANE) Firefighters thought they'd extinguished a house fire Saturday afternoon at 5508 Wapiti Drive, but early Sunday, the fire re-ignited, and burned the home to the ground.
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From Firehouse.com/Firefighters Discussion Forums
July 5, 2006 -- On the West Coast, some firefighters call it a "Habitrail house." In the Midwest, it is often a "packer house." In parts of Nevada, it is a "multiple waiting to happen," meaning a multiple-alarm fire. But in New York City, and along much of the East Coast, a dwelling jammed rafter-high with junk is referred to by rescue personnel, with dismay and no small degree of respect, as a "Collyers' Mansion." -------------- A Colliers Mansion is a Dwelling (Private Dwelling, Apartment etc.) That is filled with filth, Trash and General Refuse. It is common to find hermits and Junk Collectors with these conditions in thier places of residence. The term was coined after two brothers who came from a wealthy family in Harlem (Harlem was a wealthy neighborhood in the Late 1880s to early 1900s) Inherited the Brownstone from their parents. They were recluces. One of the Brothers was blind and the other cared for him. Only leaving at night the brother would leave to gather only essentials and return home. Well Since both of the Colliers Brothers were very suspicious of the outside world the one who left created booby traps in the pathways created by reams of papers and Trash. ------ Several years ago, I had a couple of incidents in a house like that. I've been to many homes of pack-rats, but this one takes the cake. First incident, the elderly female occupant fell and could not get up. The woman from "Meals on Wheels" heard her when she went to deliver her food and called 911. I entered through the back door and had a couple of fishing poles that were over the door fall on me and saw piles of junk everwhere. She was easy to find, there were only a few paths in the house through all the debris. She was alert, lucid, not injured and refused all medical assistance. (read more of what they are saying at:http://tinyurl.com/e72ht)
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July 03, 2006 Twelve firefighters and five building resident were injured when a three-alarm blaze broke out inside an apartment in Queens Monday afternoon.
The FDNY says the blaze broke out early this afternoon in the second floor apartment of a six-story building in Sunnyside. According to investigators, the apartment was littered with trash and debris.
“As soon as our first units got there they tried to open the door and they couldn’t get it open because of all the debris that was behind the door,” said FDNY Deputy Assistant Chief John Acerno. “There was debris from the floor to the ceiling throughout the entire department.”...
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More than 60 firefighters respond to Eldersburg house fire
By Laura McCandlish
Sun Reporter
Originally published July 24, 2006
The former longtime owner of a Pikesville auto shop and his son died in a fire that ravaged their cluttered Eldersburg home early yesterday, fire officials said.
Firefighters found the body of Richard Hamilton Stewart, 78, in his bedroom, and that of his son, Richard Hamilton Stewart II, 51, in the downstairs bathroom, said Bill Rehkopf, spokesman for the Sykesville Freedom District Fire Department. The brick split-level house in the 6200 block of Long Meadow Drive had no working smoke detector, Rehkopf said...(click "Read More" below to continue with story whenever you see...dot/dot/dot)
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