Elderly Couple die from using oven as source of heat

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Hi everyone,

Please read the below article. It is such a needless shame and everyone should be outraged.

We have had an early fall here in the Northeast so remind your patients and family members that live in apartments that leaving their natural gas oven is not a safe way to heat their apartment.

Also, is it just me or is the attitude of the housing authority a bit laissez faire? What exactly do they expect people on limited incomes and especially elderly people who are prone to cold and chills to do?

:(

Pittsburgh Post Gazette

Elderly McKeesport couple die after using oven for heat

Wednesday, October 08, 2003

By Mike Bucsko, Post-Gazette Staff Writer

To cope with the unseasonably chilly nights the past couple of weeks, Carolyn Weber and many of her neighbors in a McKeesport elderly high-rise opened the doors of their ovens and turned them on because the building's heating system was not operational.

James and Edna Saylor were no different.

But the couple's use of the stove to heat their fifth-floor apartment in the Steel View Manor high-rise had fatal consequences.

The Saylors -- he was 79 and she 74 -- who had lived in the 88-unit building since 2001, were found dead shortly after noon yesterday. An autopsy is scheduled today to determine the exact causes of death.

Police offered a preliminarily conclusion yesterday that the couple had died when their apartment filled with natural gas after the pilot light of their oven went out.

The bodies were found after their son alerted the McKeesport Housing Authority yesterday that he had tried unsuccessfully to reach his parents by telephone for the past few days.

Beatrice Larkins, who lives in the apartment next door to the Saylors, said she did not smell any gas until housing authority workers arrived and opened the door to 5A, the couple's apartment.

On Monday, residents of the sixth floor reported a gas odor to the building's maintenance workers. The source of the odor was not detected, said Allegheny County police Detective Scott Scherer.

The Saylors apparently died sometime in the middle of the day Saturday, Scherer said. The morning newspaper was inside the couple's apartment, but the day's mail was still outside, he said.

Inside the apartment, police found the oven door open, the heat set to 350 degrees and the pilot light out. The overnight temperature Friday was in the mid-40s.

The Saylors were among dozens of residents in the high-rise who resorted to an alternative source of heat because the authority had not yet gotten the building's new boilers on line.

The lack of heat has been a source of irritation to many residents recently.

"I told them [last week] that I'm not paying my rent until I get some heat in the building," said Gloria Bauerschmidt, who has lived in the high-rise for two years. "I paid it anyway and I'm still cold."

Bauerschmidt, Weber and other residents complained that the boiler project, which began in May, has taken too long and the residents' needs have been disregarded by the authority management.

"They could have gotten those little [space] heaters for us or something," Weber said.

Officially, the authority was not planning to turn on the heat in the high-rise until Oct. 20, a date which, under normal weather conditions, should have been sufficient for the residents, said John Kooser Jr., the housing authority's executive director.

Installation of the new boilers is part of a $650,000 contract to replace boilers in Steel View Manor and Eisbir Manor, Kooser said. The boilers in Steel View Manor were examined yesterday by a state inspector and are ready to be fired up, he said.

Housing authority officials are well aware that residents resort to using their ovens for heat when they are cold, though the use of ovens for that purpose is unauthorized under tenant regulations, Kooser said.

"We've known about it forever, and it's illegal for families to use the stove for heat," Kooser said. "But it doesn't make any difference ... the poor souls are gone."

Kooser said the Saylors' deaths should serve as an example to others who are considering the use of their ovens for heat.

"It's not the cold or the lack of heat or anything else that killed this family," he said. "It was the terrible mistake to use the oven to heat their apartment."

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.

CRIMINAL...

I feelhorrible for these folks and their family.

Specializes in Stroke Rehab, Elderly, Rehab. Ortho.

Thats terrible.....

I think it is very inconsiderate of the weather not to wait till Oct. 20th when the housing authority expected to have heat available. (NOT)

What a tragedy. If I owned that bldg. would I be liable for neglect????

:eek: THAT IS HORRIBLE!!!
Specializes in Medical and general practice now LTC.

such a shame that they died, even worse that the heating wouldn't be available until 20th October. Don't they realise that the older generation feel the cold differently to the younger generation

Since the cold snap that hit towards the end of September I have had my heat on

1) in my office at work

2) at home in the evenings

3) I have a king size down comforter on my bed

4) I have an electrical heating unit, as described in the article, that looks like a base board unit in my bedroom and I turn that on when I'm getting ready to go to bed, turn it off while I sleep, but then turn it on again when I wake up in the AM and am getting ready for work. I have a 75 year old house so it is hard to keep the upstairs warm. If I was home all day that unit would be on all day.

I live in the same city as this couple and I am a healthy 28 year old. There is no way an elderly person could remain comfortable in their home without heat on in these temperatures.

Specializes in Geriatrics, LTC.

I don't care if it was August, they should have had the right to turn the heat on as needed. What a shame......

Gosh, I live in the south, and I've already run my heat on two occasions. I think the housing authority there should be charged with negligence. I agree with greer128 that they should have had the right to turn on their heat any time they needed to. Nobody is going to care about whether it is illegal to use the kitchen stove for heat if they are cold. I would have done the same thing. This is sad.

Specializes in ORTHOPAEDICS-CERTIFIED SINCE 89.

Dam* I'm in SC and we've had the heat on several nights this week. That company at least has depraved indifference to the wellbeing of its tenants.

Just another terrible example of profits before people. God, when will it end?

Specializes in Hemodialysis, Home Health.
Originally posted by greer128

I don't care if it was August, they should have had the right to turn the heat on as needed. What a shame......

Ditto. Big FAT ditto. This IS criminal, in my opinion... and inconsiderate, heartless, negligent and unthinkable ! Would the building owner have had HIS parents in there without heat? :(

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