Apartment fire damages close to 20 units in Tampa: TFR
The Brief
An apartment fire damaged close to 20 units in Tampa early on Saturday morning, according to Tampa Fire Rescue.
Fire crews responded to the Bay Colony Apartments where heavy smoke and fire was coming from a second floor unit and the roof.
One person was taken to the hospital with minor injuries.
TAMPA - A fire broke out at the Bay Colony Apartments in Tampa early on Saturday morning, damaging close to 20 units, according to Tampa Fire Rescue.
Fire crews responded at 3:24 a.m. to a two-story apartment building with heavy smoke and fire coming from a second floor unit and the roof.
One person was taken to the hospital with minor injuries.
READ: Video: Florida boat captain's 'boat rage' goes viral
TFR says that it took an hour and 15 minutes to get the fire under control, and additional resources were needed, according to fire crews.
What's next
The American Red Cross is working with families displaced by the fire.
The fire is under investigation.
CLICK HERE:>>>Follow FOX 13 on YouTube
The Source
Information for this story was provided by Tampa Fire Rescue.
STAY CONNECTED WITH FOX 13 TAMPA:
Download the FOX Local app for your smart TV
Download FOX Local mobile app: Apple | Android
Download the FOX 13 News app for breaking news alerts, latest headlines
Download the SkyTower Radar app
Sign up for FOX 13's daily newsletter

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
What3Words app helps Brookville Fire Department find lost individuals
Previous coverage on Brookville. DAYTON, Ohio (WDTN) – Finding yourself in an emergency situation without any nearby landmarks can be extremely distressing. The Brookville Fire Department (BFD) would like to remind people the free What3Words app can help them find exactly where they are. 'Street addresses help us find you most of the time. But trees all look the same, and do not have addresses. So, if you are in a park or stadium, or any other large area, What3Words can help. Latitude and Longitude locations are extremely specific, but it is easy to mess up their long string of numbers,' wrote the BFD. If you find yourself needing to use the app while calling 911, there are three steps to remember. Open the app. Wait a few seconds and you will see a blue dot. Locate yourself. Tap the airplane icon (iPhone) or the crosshair icon (Android). You will see three words at the bottom of your screen. Give the three words. Read these words over the phone to emergency services. 'We already have several examples where What3Words has helped us find the exact location of lost people and caller locations,' wrote the BFD. The app itself can be used anytime, free of charge, for any reason – from being lost to finding new locations. Click here to learn more. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Crowley dog saved from house fire by firefighter
CROWLEY, La. () — A Crowley firefighter rescued a small dog from a house fire, authorities said. According to a post on the , fire broke out in a house occupide by Bill Faulk, who was away from home at the time. Firefighter Phobee Spell went into the burning home when she learned that there was a puppy stuck inside. Faulk was not home at the time of the fire, but showed up once he got the news that his home was burning. He was relieved to learn that his small fur friend, Jiggy, made it out unharmed. No other details were released. Close Thanks for signing up! Watch for us in your inbox. Subscribe Now Liquid Glass: What is Apple's new design feature, and when is it available? Federal minimum wage would rise to $15 under Sen. Hawley bill House GOP effort to lock in DOGE cuts faces Republican resistance California Republican pushes back against Trump immigration enforcement Cameron Parish couple killed in house fire Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘Kid rotting': why parents are letting their children go wild this summer
Name: Summer kid rotting. Age: The name is new, but long school summer holidays started spreading in the 1840s, thanks to the US educational reformer Horace Mann. Appearance: Laidback and a little messy. What's this Kid Rot then? Does have a brother? No, it's a 2025 way of describing 'letting your kids do nothing in the summer holidays', also known as a 'wild summer'. American parents are fighting back against (or giving up on) expensive, overscheduled summers of camps and activities for their offspring. 'What if, some are daring to wonder, my kid does nothing?' the New York Times reported. A return to the old ways, huh? When I was young, we were sent out with a penknife, a tin of pipe tobacco and a bottle of dandelion and burdock on the day school broke up. It was strongly suggested we should not return home until 1 September. No, you weren't. No, OK, we weren't. , watching TV and fighting. We'd have loved expensive, overscheduled summers! Well, some US parents are sick of paying through the nose to keep their kids out of trouble – one interviewed by the NYT spent $40,000 (£30,000) on occupying her three children for eight weeks. Inflation is making summer camps unaffordable for many: a survey found 30% of parents go into debt or defer payments. And while the situation isn't as bad in the UK, it's still a struggle for parents: research last year found UK summer childcare costs £1,000 a kid on average. Ouch! And kids don't even seem to enjoy organised summer stuff much: 'It was a fight every day to get them to go,' one parent told the NYT. 'He cried every single day at drop-off,' a journalist at the Cut said of her son's summer camp. Related: Readers reply: Should schools take a long summer break – or does it harm children's learning? Maybe a bit of boredom isn't so bad. Being bored is being rebranded as the better option for pushy parents. 'I tell them their kid will be more 'ahead' with their own experimentation,' a US educational consultant reassures her anxious clients. But 'their experimentation' will be whatever the algorithm decides – kids will be glued to YouTube, won't they? Yes, screen time is a concern, and if the little darlings manage to enable in-app purchases, your iPad could prove a more expensive babysitter than the fanciest camp. If they're going to be screen rotting all day every day, parents could at least put them to work - give them a bitcoin and a day-trading account and see how much money they can make by September. A bitcoin is currently worth 81 grand – you'd get a lot of fancy summer camps for that. Do say: 'We're having a wild summer.' Don't say: 'Yeah, we're going large at Glasto, microdosing in Mykonos, then an ayahuasca retreat in Peru. What are the kids doing? No idea.'