Girl saves neighbor’s house from fire
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Stefanie Frith
COSTA MESA -- Kyndall Long wasn’t too happy when her mother, Kellie,
told her to put the computer away in the kitchen Friday night.
But the 10-year-old fourth grader said now she is glad her mom made
her do the chore.
“I was putting away the computer and I looked out across the street
and saw that our neighbor’s [front porch] was on fire,” Kyndall said. “I
looked out, and the flames were huge. It was really, really high.”
Immediately, Kyndall ran to tell Kellie and got her dad, Michael, from
his office in the back garage. Michael Long ran across the street with a
fire extinguisher that didn’t work and Kellie Long called the fire
department. Then Kyndall ran to take a new fire extinguisher to her dad.
Before the fire department came, the fire was out.
“If she hadn’t seen it, another few minutes and the house would have
been on fire,” Michael Long said. “It was really crankin’. It was nuts.
The flames were going over the roof.”
The fire began in a planter underneath a wooden trellis on the front
porch around 7 p.m. when some chemicals, such as paint thinner, ignited,
said Julie Scheinrock, the home’s owner. Scheinrock was not home when the
fire occurred.
Although the flames were roof high, Michael Long was able to douse the
flames with a hose and fire extinguisher.
“It was not a major thing and when [the fire department] got there,
the flames were already out,” said Costa Mesa fire Capt. Fred Seguin.
“Twelve people [from the fire department] responded, and they were only
there about five minutes.”
“I got home that night and they [the Longs] came over and told me what
had happened,” Scheinrock said, looking over the remains of the trellis.
“I keep thinking about it. I am afraid it’s going to reignite. But she
[Kyndall] saved my house. I am so thankful.”
If anything, Scheinrock said, the fire is a lesson in what chemicals
she can keep around the house.
“It really makes you think about what you have around,” she said. “I
had chemicals in there that [the labels] said were safe. But at least
it’s a lesson.”
Kellie Long said that since the fire, she and her family have been
thinking about what they could have done differently to have sped along
the process.
“Next time, I will grab the cordless phone to call [911],” she said
with a laugh. “I had the fire marshall on the phone asking me questions,
and all I wanted to do was run and get Michael and the fire extinguisher.
It’s the things you think about later. It was pretty stressful.”
Kyndall, shy about the attention she has been receiving from her
family and friends, said she was just glad she saw the fire in the first
place.
“It was pretty scary,” she said.
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