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The Forgotten Lessons of the Hamlet Fire
Article

The Forgotten Lessons of the Hamlet Fire

The Assembly, 2021


Editorial Rating

9

Qualities

  • Controversial
  • Eye Opening
  • Eloquent

Recommendation

This concise, well-reported story offers a vivid picture of the negligence and failures that resulted in the deaths of 25 workers in a fire at a North Carolina chicken processing plant in 1991. Surviving workers and community members still struggle with the aftermath. Seasoned journalist John Drescher covered the fire at the time as a local reporter and revisited it recently for this story. He reports that any safety improvements made after the fire were inadequate or have since fallen short or faded away. Those responsible for risk management or workplace health and safety, as well as top executives, policymakers and journalists covering local government and business, should take heed.

Take-Aways

  • A fire in a chicken processing plant killed 25 workers in Hamlet, NC in 1991. Locked exit doors hampered victims’ escape.
  • Reforms made after the Hamlet fire were transient and did not include structural changes.
  • Workers who survived the blaze bore physical and psychological wounds. Their whole community suffered.

About the Author

John Drescher is a contributing editor to The Assembly, former executive editor of The News & Observer in Raleigh, NC, and a former editor at The Washington Post.