PROVIDENCE, R.I. - Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee said Monday he was open to using eminent domain to seize the site of a 2003 nightclub fire that killed 100 people so families of the victims and survivors could build a memorial on it.
The blaze at The Station nightclub in West Warwick on Feb. 20, 2003, was set off when pyrotechnics for the band Great White set fire to flammable foam that lined the club's walls. Three people were convicted in the blaze: club owners Jeffrey and Michael Derderian and Great White tour manager Daniel Biechele, who lit the pyrotechnics.
The Station Fire Memorial Foundation has been working for years to build a permanent memorial on the land, which has hosted a makeshift memorial with homemade crosses and other items, since shortly after the fire. But the land is owned by a private company, and efforts by the foundation to get the owner to donate or sell the land have gone nowhere.
On Sunday, Dave Kane, father of the youngest fire victim, Nicholas O'Neill, called on the state to take the property by eminent domain, after plans were announced to build a "satellite" memorial in neighboring Warwick. Kane said the Warwick memorial will deflect attention from efforts to build a memorial at the fire site.
When asked about Kane's comments, Chafee said he was open to the idea if families unite behind it. Several family members and survivors of the fire told The Associated Press they would support such an effort, although some questioned whether it would be successful.
Chris Fontaine, former head of the memorial foundation, whose 22-year-old son, Mark, died in the fire, said that years ago, she would have opposed such a move by the state because of fears that the families would lose control over what is built there. Now, with the 10-year anniversary of the fire approaching, she is for it "100 percent."
"At this point, after 10 years, I want to see the memorial there," she said. "Whether I have a say in exactly what the plan is or not, I just want it there."
Victoria Eagan, a survivor of the fire and vice president of the memorial foundation, said she had been told that taking the land by eminent domain might not be legally viable. Several families previously asked the town of West Warwick to take it by eminent domain, a request that went nowhere.