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Monday November 20, 2000

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Fire breaks out at Colo. resort hotel

By The Associated Press

VAIL, Colo. - A fire that burned more than five hours was contained early yesterday after forcing the evacuation of scores of guests at a 350-room ski resort hotel, authorities said.

Two firefighters were treated for smoke inhalation or exhaustion, but no other injuries were reported. The cause of the blaze was not immediately known. Fire Chief John Gulick estimated damage at $20 million.

Guests complained of confusion during the evacuation.

An alarm went off at Marriott's Vail Mountain Resort hotel at about 8:45 p.m. Saturday, said Suzanne Silverthorn, a spokeswoman for the city.

Authorities immediately evacuated 83 guests from the burning building and 33 from a neighboring building, she said. The hotel is composed of three separate structures.

Firefighters declared the fire controlled by 2:40 a.m. yesterday.

Silverthorn said everyone had been accounted for. The hotel, which had opened for the ski season on Wednesday, was about 50 percent full, and the guests who were evacuated were relocated to rooms in other buildings.

Gulick said the fire consumed exterior balconies and siding on the fifth and sixth floors, though much of the interior was intact. Water caused damage on the fifth and six floors and collapsed parts of the fourth-floor ceiling, he said.

Some guests, like Jim Gaddis of Atlanta, were not happy with the way the hotel handled the situation.

"I was a firefighter for years, and this was an absolute farce," he said. "They had no idea what was going on. Not a single employee knew what they were doing."

Gaddis and his wife, Tricia, said they were in their rooms watching TV when smoke alarms went off. They went to the first floor, where they said they were told by hotel employees that a guest had left his fireplace flue open and it was safe to go back to their rooms.

But Tricia Gaddis said that they decided to stay on the first floor.

"Then all the guests started coming down, and they shifted us to the lobby (in another adjacent building) and then to the basement," she said.

Then, she said, police told everyone to go outside while hotel employees told guests to go to a second-floor restaurant.

Sara Beth Hill of Kingsport, Tenn., and her friend, Ashlee Mayne of Denver, said they were shuffled from place to place, eventually ending up in the smoke-filled restaurant on the second floor.

"They told us we couldn't leave," Hill said. "The hotel manager said, 'nobody's going outside. It's too cold.'"

At about 10:15, they said they sneaked outside, Mayne with only a pair of slippers to cover her feet.

Marriott General Manager David Shahriari said hotel employees handled the situation as best they could, and that police, fire and hotel officials were consistent in directing guests to the restaurant.

Meanwhile, a wine auction in the smoky ballroom on the first floor proceeded without distraction. Auction handlers reportedly closed the drapes midway through the event to block out the flashing lights outside.

On Oct. 19, 1998, a series of arson fires caused $12 million in damage at the Vail ski resort. A group called the Earth Liberation Front claimed responsibility for the fires, saying they were protesting Vail's expansion into lynx habitat.