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Local police chief, wife displaced after house fire

By Alyssa Choiniere achoiniere@heraldstandard.Com 3 min read
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Kelly Tunney | ĢƵ

Southwest Regional Police Chief John HartmanĢƵ home in Jeannette burned last month. Through the fire, Hartman says, he has been given a new way to connect to the families he helps at fires.

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Kelly Tunney | ĢƵ

The Jeannette home of Southwest Regional Police Chief John HartmanĢƵ home burned last month, along with two neighbors’ homes. Through the fire, Hartman says, he has been given a new way to connect to the families he helps at fires.

A local police chief and his wife have been displaced for nearly a month after their house in Jeannette, Westmoreland County was severely damaged in a fire.

Southwest Regional Police Chief John Hartman said he said he woke up at 2:30 a.m. Aug. 17 when a propane tank vented at a neighboring house where the fire began.

“It sounded like a pop and a roar. It woke everyone out of a dead sleep,” he said. “Everything is bathed in yellow and gold.”

The fire spread quickly, igniting a house on the other side of HartmanĢƵ. He said he attempted to fight the fire, but quickly determined it could not be stopped without additional manpower and equipment.

Hartman, his wife and their dog escaped uninjured.

“Literally sitting in a field across from your home and watching your belongings burn is tough,” he said. “You get a sense of what people go through when they are victims.”

Hartman, who heads the department that covers areas in Washington, Westmoreland, Fayette and Greene counties, and his wife are living in a hotel. He said they are hoping to move into a rental property this week. About $100,000 in damage to their townhouse will be repaired between Thanksgiving and March, he said.

“You figure this is a month on, and itĢƵ still impacting us. We aren’t settled. Living in a hotel is wonderful for the first 11 minutes,” he said.

Hartman said becoming a victim of a fire gave him a new perspective on what victims endure.

“We’re trained to go through this stuff. But we’re trained to go through it with the perspective of a responder,” he said. “ThereĢƵ no training for anyone on having to watch your house burn.”

He said that he has always been sympathetic to victims, but now he has a deeper understanding of their feelings.

“ItĢƵ not that I will do something differently or feel something differently, itĢƵ the intensity of those feelings,” he said.

The police chief also said he further understands the importance of firefighters and the American Red Cross.

“Not that I’d never seen firefighters fight a fire before, but they were fighting my house fire. And the Red Cross, they’re angels,” he said.

He said the Red Cross was there immediately to provide assistance and support. Even days later, he said they would call regularly to see if the Hartmans needed help.

“We are coming upon a season where people give,” he said. “And the Red Cross, they were incredible.”

The cause of the fire remains under investigation. No injuries were reported.

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