Supporters have three ways and counting to help the people harmed by the White Horse Pike apartment explosion.
Local efforts to help those hurt and displaced by the Feb. 23 Haddon Heights apartment explosion continue to take shape. The explosion, thought to be caused by a natural gas leak, flattened a Victorian home transformed into five apartments. One woman, Raquel Nunn, was severely burned and remains hospitalized from her injuries. Another woman suffered more minor injuries, and all residents were left homeless. The only thing standing after the powerful explosion, felt several towns away, was a section of wall. Haddon Heights Good Neighbors, a registered nonprofit that bills itself as “a group of neighbors helping neighbors,” is taking donations for all of the apartment building’s residents who were displaced in the explosion. Checks should be…
Two people were sent to a nearby hospital, at least one of whom was badly burned. Preliminary reports blame a natural gas leak.
In his decades-long firefighting career, Haddon Heights Mayor Edward S. Forte Jr. said the home that exploded Saturday afternoon is among the biggest incidents he can recall. "This is pretty big for us," Forte told Patch from the scene of the incident that sent at least two people to the hospital. One woman was "burned pretty bad," said Haddon Heights Public Safety Director Jack Merryfield. By about 5 p.m. Saturday, authorities had been working to control the fire for about 90 minutes. Residents from several neighboring towns poured into side streets near the White Horse Pike and Green Street in four directions. Emergency crews from Mt. Ephraim to Bellmawr were on the scene, diverting traffic along the thoroughfare from Station Avenue to …
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101 White Horse Pike, Haddon Heights, NJ
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Jaconda Bell
1:06 pm on Friday, March 1, 2013
thanks for the information   more ›