Thursday, April 25

Students evacuate as fire breaks out in De Neve Plaza


(Justin Jung/Daily Bruin senior staff)

A fire allegedly started in a De Neve Plaza laundry room Thursday night, leading to students being evacuated. (Justin Jung/Daily Bruin senior staff)


This post was updated Oct. 3 at 11:32 p.m.

Students in De Neve Plaza were evacuated Thursday night after a fire started in a building. 

There was at least one Los Angeles Fire Department truck and a UCLA maintenance truck in the De Neve courtyard around 11 p.m. The surrounding area was cleared out around 10 p.m. and individuals were let back into the buildings at around midnight.

The UCLA Fire Department and the LAFD responded to a small fire in a clothes dryer in a first-floor laundry room in De Neve Plaza at 9:51 p.m., UCLA spokesperson Bill Kisliuk said in an emailed statement.

“The fire, which activated the building’s fire alarm and the fire sprinkler system in the immediate vicinity of the dryer, was quickly extinguished. There were no reported injuries and there was no structural damage to the building,” said Kisliuk. “The cause of the fire is unknown at this time and remains under investigation.”

UCLA Residential Life supervisor Karina Valdez and Community Service Officer Eric Marquez refused to allow a credentialed Daily Bruin reporter access to the emergency response area.

According to California Penal Code sections 409.5 and 409.6, any authorized representative from a media organization should not be barred from accessing areas closed to the public because of a fire, flood, accident, riot or other public safety hazard. 

“Nothing in this section shall prevent a duly authorized representative of any news service, newspaper, or radio or television station or network from entering the areas closed pursuant to this section,” the penal code reads. 

The reporter from The Bruin was in possession of a valid media identification document issued by UCPD.

UCLA Fire Department Deputy Marshal Glen Gibson declined to comment. Additionally, UCLA Bruin Safe Online, the university’s emergency alert network, has not provided any updates as of 1:47 a.m. “Currently, there are no emergencies or emergency communications in effect for the UCLA campus,” the BSO website reads.

 

 

News editor

Chakrabarti is currently the 2021-2022 News editor. She was previously the 2020-2021 assistant News editor for the science and health beat, and she was a former contributor for online. She is also a third-year mathematics and economics student at UCLA.

News senior staff

Jung is a senior staff reporter and a photographer for the Bruin. He was a 2021-2022 assistant News editor for the campus politics and city and crime beats. Jung was also the 2020-2021 assistant Enterprise editor. Jung is a fourth-year global studies student.


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