close
close

Community counts their losses after Duke Feuer

San Antonio – Luis Narvaez has just made it to a veteran hospital in San Antonio, he hadn't had his diabetes medication since the Duke Fire on Tuesday.

“I lived with my daughter and sister, that was blind, and I am glad that they took them out, my girlfriend took them out before they were burned,” said Narvaez.

Now you have to stay with family and friends.

“I had some memory in the back, huge memory and they all burned, everything I saved through my life,” said Narvaez.

The residents were not the only ones affected by this fire, and ATA-Bexar County volunteers were also affected.

“We are not improved, we don't have the unusual improved things”

He says that the gears of her only brush defense car died yesterday after the fire.

“We had two firefighters in this thing and the way the duke ran when they saw film material, it was bad, and this thing was in the middle of the middle, you can imagine having a truck with a transmission on you,” said Williamson, Williamson, Williamson.

The department only receives an annual financing of $ 16,000 from the district. You do not receive state or federal financing.

During our interview, a resident thanked you to rescue your house.

“Others were not so happy, the neighbor behind them, their home was wiped out,” said the woman.

“When I was out there and fought this fire, I saw how big this thing got and I didn't want to stop,” said Williamson.

The “Ata-Bexar” volunteer fire brigade will organize a boot trip in two weeks, on the Old Pleasanton Road. Here is a link to your website where you publish the event, and anyone who wants to donate to the Narvaez family can do so here.