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New Year’s Eve fire in DC leaves 2 hospitalized, several people displaced

[connatix_element_embed script_id=c6bda8c5276f40d3b6622628b8645a1e player_id=7bc491b4-922b-4e8d-b1b1-150648e80442 video_id=490c460b-b46f-4b4b-aa1a-ae6f504f9e0f align=right] Two women are badly injured and several residents are displaced following an early morning two-alarm fire in the 1400 block of Chapin Street in Northwest D.C. The New Year’s Eve fire started at the apartment complex around 1 a.m., D.C. Fire and EMS said. Flames eventually burned through the four-story building’s top floor and attic. The fire department said about 20 units and 100 first responders arrived at the scene. Two women were pulled from the building and transported to a hospital. Fire officials described one of the women as being in serious condition while the other woman was in critical condition. The Red Cross said it was helping the nine families, and assistance may increase as more residents seek help.

The complex, which included 20 apartments, is no longer habitable, according to fire officials. D.C. Fire and EMS spokesperson Vito Maggiolo told NBC Washington that the fire displaced 35 residents in total. A temporary shelter has been opened at the Columbia Heights Recreation Center. The cause of the fire has not yet been determined. Investigators are on the scene.

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