“They got it started and they got it untied from the dock and they stalled,” Brothers said.
The boaters tried to restart the boat using a portable charger.
Brothers heard an explosion.
“I looked out the window from the booth. I called 9-1-1 and then ran out there,” she said. “I saw the boat maybe 10 feet from the dock and there were flames on it.”
With no formal emergency training, Brothers said her instincts kicked in.
“I knew that boat was on fire, and I knew there was gas in there and I knew gas and fire don’t mix,” she said. “The woman was screaming that she couldn’t swim, and I was screaming for them to jump in the water.”
All the people on the boat had life jackets, but not all the boaters had a chance to get them on before the fire ignited. Three of the boaters could swim. The remaining two who couldn’t had already donned their life jackets.
“It happened so quick,” one of the boaters said.
The boaters jumped into the water at the urging of those on shore. Brothers threw a life jacket toward them to help pull the woman back to the safety of the dock.
“All five passengers on the boat escaped injury,” said Traci Sincock, DNR park supervisor for Maybury State Park and the Belleville Lake boating access sites.
A couple of the boaters had singed clothing items.
Response
A pontoon boat from the yacht club getting ready for the fireworks show was in the area.
“They came over and put a hose on the boat,” Brothers said. “They stayed there until the fire department showed up.”
With the help of the yacht club watercraft, the boat was returned to the dock, but it continued to burn with a full tank of gasoline.
The burning boat began to drift toward the second dock, where two personal watercrafts were parked. One of the watercrafts was damaged by the fire, and both by smoke.
Brothers said she worked to keep spectators back.
A fire engine from the Van Buren Fire Department arrived with a crew. Firefighters used a handline and an ABC fire extinguisher to put the fire out. A second engine arrived to supply the first with its water to battle the blaze.
At 2:25 p.m., the boat was still smoldering.
One of the boaters said once the firefighters used the ABC fire extinguisher, which sprays dry powder to fight gasoline – and several other types – of fires, the flames were quickly put out.
The boaters had bought a brand-new fire extinguisher for the boat but did not have it mounted in the front of the boat yet. Instead, the extinguisher was located out of reach where the fire was burning.
Firefighters stood by until the boat was pumped out and placed on a flatbed towing vehicle.
Sincock speculated that the cause of the explosion may have been the boat operator not remembering to turn on the engine blower motors to provide ventilation before starting the boat. She said a similar incident occurred previously at the lake.
One of the boaters, who was not the owner, said the boat was not equipped with engine blower motors. He said he would now never recommend owning this type of boat if it didn’t have them.
The boat had just gotten out of the repair shop after having had the carburetor rebuilt. New carpeting had also been installed because sparking the engine ignitor had caused a previous fire, he said.
The boat was a complete loss and was uninsured.
Aftermath
In retrospect, the boater said actions could have been taken to prevent some of the results of the fire, including starting the boat while it was still tied to the dock and insuring the watercraft.
He recommended boaters take boating safety classes.
Brothers acted quickly and effectively in the face of the emergency.
“It was quite an experience. I just hope nothing else like that happens anymore this summer,” Brothers said. “My heart was going a million miles an hour.”
At 3:30 p.m., with her shift over with, Brothers left work.
“I came home, took a shower and just sat,” she said. “I took it all in and tried to let it all go.”
Reflecting on the experience, she said, “I wasn’t really thinking. My actions just happened.”
One of the boaters was also complimentary of the actions Brothers took.
“She did a great job,” he said.
Later that night, a small break in the day’s rainy weather allowed the yacht club’s fireworks show to go on as planned. Videos on social media showed dozens of boats bobbing on the water with beautiful fireworks bursting overhead.
The following day, Sincock wrote a memo to Ron Olson, chief of the DNR Parks and Recreation Division, recommending that Brothers be recognized for her quick and responsive actions.
“I am very proud of her,” Sincock said. “She’s a great employee.”
Find out more on boating and boating safety in Michigan, the boating access sites located on Belleville Lake or how to become a seasonal park ranger.
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