OKLAHOMA CITY -
Firefighters had to evacuate guests at the Holiday Inn hotel
near Southwest 15th Street and Meridian, Sunday night, after
discovering elevated levels of carbon monoxide throughout the building.
Guests
said they heard an alarm go off and firefighter confirmed a carbon-monoxide
detecting system alerted the guests.
"We can in and the alarm went off," said Derwin Jackson, who
was staying at the hotel with a co-worker. "They just told us to come out."
Jackson, along with dozens of other guests, were forced to
stay in the lobby, which firefighters deemed safe for people to be in, while
they investigated the source of the carbon monoxide.
"A gasoline engine that was being
operated too close to an open exit door on the first floor, next to a stairway,
the fumes were coming in, going up the stairs, filling the building with CO,"
explained OCFD Acting Chief Phil Burgess.
His crews went door-to-door making
sure all of the hotel guests got out of the danger zone and avoided being
over-exposed to the deadly gas. Firefighters ventilated the hotel immediately
upon arrival by opening up doors and roof hatches.
"We'll use our electric positive
fans, we'll set them up at the door and we'll pressurize the whole hotel and it
will force the air out," said Burgess.
While
this incident happened at a hotel, Burgess issued a warning to everyone since
CO leaks happen many times inside homes. All too often there are no
carbon-monoxide detectors installed.
"If you
have gas, gas-operated machines, heaters, dryers, ovens, they can cause things
like that, so it is important to have CO detectors around because it is the
silent killer," he said.
Burgess added that during the winter they see an increase in carbon monoxide
incidents with more people using heating devices.
Luckily
nobody suffered any serious injuries during the hotel incident Sunday night.