ANDERSON – Authorities have ordered the 29 residents of a central Indiana apartment complex to leave their homes until gas leaks found in all five of its buildings can be repaired.
Residents were briefly evacuated from their Arbor Village Apartments homes on Tuesday after leaks were found in three of the complexs five buildings. Those who live in those buildings were given the option of being housed elsewhere or staying put with no gas.
On Wednesday, workers found leaks in the other two buildings and the mayor and city officials declared the complex uninhabitable and ordered everyone out while repairs could be made, Building Commissioner Frank Owens said. A local church was designated as a temporary shelter for the displaced residents, The Herald Bulletin reported.
Arbor Village owner Tom Stanley had offered space heaters to those who chose to remain on Tuesday, before everyone was ordered to leave. He said the apartments would have been safe with the gas shut off while repairs were being made, and that he thinks city and utility officials were being paranoid because of the Nov. 10 explosion in Indianapolis that destroyed or damaged dozens of homes and killed a married couple.
Theyre not allowing the proper time for us to do our job, Stanley said. Theyre demanding things that arent realistic.
Owens, though, said he was worried about space heaters taxing the buildings older electrical wiring systems.
The electrical inspector felt it was unsafe, Owens said. The mayor and I felt it was in everyones best interest to evacuate. I couldnt live with the chance that anyone here would be hurt.