Residential Fires in New York City
The Jan 2022 Bronx Fire and Racial Disparities
Created by Tableau Lead Solution Engineer Julia Biedry Gonzalez
The data
Data used for this visualization was collected from the US Census - NYC Demographics 2020 and the NYC Open Data Portal Fire Incident Dispatch data, Heat/Hot Water Complaints, and the Use of Supplemental Heat.
The visualization
This story points-style dashboard shows why the January 2022 Bronx fire was not an isolated incident, and how historically Black/Latinx residents in the Bronx have been disproportionately affected by residential fires. The dashboard also compares Black/Latinx residents and fires in the Bronx to heat and hot water complaints, which can lead to the use of a supplemental heat source such as a space heater. This visualization uses data from 2020, the most recent full year of available data for fires, and 2017, the most recent available data year for supplemental heat.
The historical context
Fires have disproportionately affected Black and Latinx communities, especially in the Bronx borough of NYC. Fires do not start on their own, and the data shows how landlord negligence in public or low-income housing in primarily Black and Brown communities can lead to tragedies such as this one. Many articles published in the wake of this tragedy outline the experience of residents in buildings like the one at 333 E 181st, where heat and hot water complaints go ignored.
The current implications
Advocates can use the tool to visually show the historical context contributing to the tragic January 2022 Bronx fire. This tragedy gained media attention, but Bronx residents have historically suffered from residential fires at a higher rate than other parts of NYC. Black and Latinx people live in the Bronx in greater concentrations than in other borough, and heat/hot water complaints and space heater usage are also concentrated in the Bronx. All of this data paints a picture of inequity: poorly maintained buildings, landlord negligence, and higher levels of fire hazard for people who live in the Bronx.
Data Deep-Dive
Key takeaways to guide analysis