







Three people are dead after a four-alarm fire tore through a multi-story building in Flushing, Queens, on Sunday, a blaze so intense it engulfed all three floors and collapsed an interior staircase, briefly trapping two firefighters inside.
The fire was reported just before 12:30 p.m. on March 16 at a building on College Point Boulevard, where apartments sit above a commercial space. By the time FDNY crews arrived, the situation was already desperate.
FDNY Chief of Fire Operations Kevin Woods described what his teams walked into:
"Upon arrival, we had heavy fire on all three floors of this building."
Crews witnessed three people jump from an upper floor. Another person was trapped on the second floor and had to be removed using a portable ladder. Nine people were injured overall, including two adults and one child. Five firefighters were hospitalized in stable condition.
As crews pushed inside the building, the interior staircase gave way. Two firefighters fell through and were briefly trapped in the wreckage. Other firefighters extricated them, and FDNY command issued an additional signal, called a 1066, to bring more resources to the scene.
Woods laid out the full scope of what was unfolding simultaneously, according to Fire Rescue 1:
"With additional help, we were able to extricate those members and we gave an additional signal called a 1066 to get more resources here to the scene. As all that is happening, other members are performing CPR on the victims in the street. There is heavy, heavy damage to this building. This fire is now under control."
Consider what that means operationally. Firefighters were rescuing trapped civilians, pulling their own colleagues from a collapsed stairway, performing CPR on victims in the street, and fighting a three-floor blaze, all at once. That is not a job description. That is a war footing.
The identities of the three people killed have not been released. The cause of the fire remains under investigation. What is known is that this was the kind of fire where everything went wrong at the same time, and the men and women of the FDNY ran toward it anyway.
Five firefighters hospitalized. Two people are trapped in a structural collapse. Victims receiving CPR in the street outside a building that was being consumed floor by floor. These are the moments that never make the political debates about municipal budgets or first-responder staffing levels, but they are the reason those debates matter.
Firefighters don't get to wait for optimal conditions. They don't get to assess whether a staircase will hold before they commit to an interior attack. They go in because someone is trapped on the second floor, and the math is simple: go now or that person dies.
The investigation into the fire's cause is ongoing, and the building on College Point Boulevard sustained what Woods described as "heavy, heavy damage." Beyond the forensic questions, the incident is a stark reminder of what mixed-use buildings, with commercial space below and residential units above, demand of fire crews when things go wrong. Fires in these structures move fast and cut off escape routes even faster.
Three people did not survive Sunday afternoon. Nine more were injured. Five firefighters ended up in hospital beds. The staircase that was supposed to be a way out became a trap.
The FDNY held the line anyway.


