Abdi Warsame had hoped to rest at home on New Year's Day. Then his phone rang at 8:30 in the morning.
"Cedar is on fire!" said a man in Somali.
Minutes later, the new City Council member for Minneapolis' Sixth Ward was standing in front of a century-old building ablaze in Cedar-Riverside, where he would soon learn that 14 people were injured and an immigrant-owned grocery store had been destroyed.
Authorities continue to investigate the cause of the blast that killed three people, and have officially identified two of the dead men.
On the frigid Wednesday morning of the fire, Warsame experienced conflicting emotions: shock at the damage and injuries, but also relief that the fire had struck a smaller area and not spread to Riverside Plaza, where thousands of East African immigrants live.
He raced over so quickly that he forgot his gloves and hat in the subzero cold. Luckily, outgoing Mayor R.T. Rybak was also on the scene and lent him ear muffs.
For a council member who had not yet even been inaugurated, it was trial by fire — literally.
Before so much as attending a City Council meeting, Warsame has visited victims in the hospital, posted updates on Facebook, helped assuage concerned citizens in Somali and English, faced TV cameras, and worked with other Minneapolis leaders on solutions.