- Opinion
- 23 Feb 06
It was the early hours of Valentine’s Day in 1981 when the fire started in the Stardust nightclub in Artane on the north side of Dublin. It quickly went out of control, and in the ensuing holocaust 48 people died and 214 were injured.
Soon afterwards, Christy Moore released a song ‘They Never Came Home’ on his Ordinary Man album which became the subject of High Court proceedings, with the court ruling hat the song was libellous and forcing its removal from the album. A specially appointed inquiry followed, conducted by the recently retired Chief Justice Ronan Keane, who was then a judge of the High Court. He found, controversially, that the fire had probably been caused by arson. It is a verdict with which the families of those who died and local people have never been happy. To mark the 25th anniversary of the tragedy, RTE broadcast both a drama based on the events of the night and a Prime Time special, which uncovered new evidence about the location of a store room that contained flammable material – suggesting that the arson verdict may indeed have been wrong. Meanwhile, the opening of the Silver Swan pub on the site of the Stardust had been planned for last week – but following protests by locals, as we go to press, the bar remains unopened. This is the report originally published by hotpress in the wake of the fire. Written by the late Bill Graham, it captures both the horror of the events that engulfed the north side community and deals with the key issues in a remarkably clear sighted manner. This is what we said...
**************************
Last Saturday morning between 1:45 and 2:00, 48 disco-goers were killed in a fire at the Stardust Club in Artane, in Dublin. It was the most fatal fire in an Irish public place within living memory; it was also the greatest catastrophe in the entertainment industry in these islands.
The Stardust was presenting its normal Friday night disco with the added attraction of a special K-Tel disco dance contest. Approximately 800 attended in the hall that had been specially partitioned off to cut down its normal capacity of 1500.
The night was drawing to a close when the fire broke out at about 1:45, apparently in the partitioned area, and engulfed the hall so quickly that it was beyond control when the Dublin Fire Brigade arrived ten minutes later. In the panic, the flames, and not least the killing poisonous fumes the 48 died and over one hundred and thirty were taken to hospital for treatment to burns and wounds of varying degrees of seriousness. Some were still critical at the time of going to press.
With few exceptions, the victims came from the immediate neighbourhood which is also part of the constituency of the Taoiseach, Charles Haughey. On Sunday he announced that a fully sworn tribunal under a High Court judge would examine the controversial circumstances of the fire (see below).
Few believe the Stardust will escape severe criticism, both for its design and fire precautions.
All available evidence indicates that the Stardust was a fire-trap, despite the fact that it had been passed by Dublin Corporation – and presumably insurance inspectors – as safe and therefore as fit for an entertainment license. Controversy about how the fire happened and its terrible consequence essentially centres on two matters – the combustibility of the plastic-based materials in the seats and the ceiling and the availability, or otherwise, of emergency exits.
Assistant manager Walsh asserted to The Sunday Independent that the club’s management were assured that the recently-installed ceiling tiles were fireproof but he is contradicted by all eye-witness reports, which agree that the fire became uncontrollable once it reached the roof. The survivors’ declarations that molten material began to rain upon them indicate that there must have been plastic-based substances in the false ceiling. Furthermore the toxic, suffocating fumes certainly derived from the foam in the seating which expert evidence also suggests had the capacity to raise the temperature ferociously.
The Stardust management don’t seem to have been breaking any laws; apparently such materials are permissible according to Irish fire regulations, though one wonders at the governmental negligence which allowed such to be the case. Already there are allegations that Department of the Environment recommendations in this respect were ignored.
Then there is the matter of emergency exits. Besides the official entrance, there are five other doors out of the Stardust. Three of these – on the left as seen from the stage – lead into the other areas of the building but because they were on the side where the fire began, they seem too soon to have been beyond the reach of would-be escapers. The real controversy concerns the other two exits to the outside.
Initially panic appears to have driven the audience towards the main entrance and the stage. The only other available exit was down a corridor parallel to the main entrance and lobby and adjoining the toilets, where many of the victims died. The other exit is to the right of the stage and the issue is whether either or both of these were padlocked or chained?
Socialist Labour Deputy for the area, Dr Noel Browne T.D. has gathered statements from survivors declaring that they were. He says the doors had to be kicked down and in one case speaks of a door having to be “bashed down” by a car from the outside. Furthermore all windows were barred.
If the doors were locked, it is possible they could only have been opened from the outside. hotpress further understands that any chains would have been so tightly bound that a shoulder-charge by one or more heavies at the moment of crisis could only have been successful if the hinges were broken off the steel doors. Moreover, there was no connecting passage between the lobby and the other corridor. Thus there was no access for a bouncer to this corridor unless he braved the fumes and the cauldron.
Also members of the hotpress staff at previous Stardust presentations have noticed that the exits were indeed padlocked. Finally a source who was involved in promotion at the Stardust has admitted to hotpress that it was a matter of policy to keep those doors padlocked on the part of the Stardust management. It appears incontrovertible that the security emphasis was to prevent vandals and other entering rather than to allow speedy recovery in case of fire. Whatever the exact accuracy of the claims and counter-claims, the fire escapes were proven catastrophically inadequate.
This leads into issues of fire drill and the deployment of security staff. For instance, who had the keys to the doors? The inquiry must investigate whether any members of the security staff were charged to monitor the two primary fire exits and whether they had individual keys. Or did – as happens so often in such establishments – only one person have the key ring, thus making any intervention impossible? Also, what was the fire drill? Were any security staff delegated to cover the far right of the stage and if so why do all reports only mention the disc-jockey Colm O’Brien as trying to instill calm?
hotpress also understands that the Stardust possessed a wall-hung interphone system for communication through the hall. In none of the reports is there any mention of its use. Any inquiry must discover whether it still existed, whether or not it was integrated into any fire drill or if the sheer speed of the fire’s onset prevented the execution of any fire plan?
The electrical system must also be investigated. The Stardust possessed an electrical network that involved six separate power points. Stage lights, house lights and the main amplification system were powered separately. Was their simultaneous failure due to the ravages of the fire which began adjacent to the control room – for instance the fuse box could have been blown – or were there other inadequacies in the circuitry? Had it been serviced recently or overhauled since the building was constructed?
On the non-technical front, the Stardust management will also face accusations concerning illegal under-age attendance at a disco where alcohol was served. Among the casualties both dead and injured were many under the legal age of eighteen. Did alcohol assist in engendering the panic?
Yet even if the Stardust management is indicted, they were no more than following common shoddy practice in innumerable discos, dance-halls and marquees throughout Ireland. Inevitably now stricter fire and safety regulations will be enforced at all places of entertainment throughout Dublin and the country. What will be their consequences for a business that values punts above perfectionism?
The implications of the holocaust cannot be foreseen but stringent codes could simultaneously increase the cost and limit the scope of entertainment as the investment of club-owners and other entrepreneurs flows up-market to attract the employed, prosperous mid-20’s of the singles society. The necessary new, safe and above all uncostly, types of venue and entertainment may not be established to cater for teenagers and early twenties. There may in the future be places the survivors of the Stardust holocaust can go to dance without nervously looking over their shoulders to the fire exit – but will they be able to regularly afford the cost?
The tribunal must consider the terms of both safety and entertainment. And if its legal limitations prevent it investigating the full terms of the Irish entertainment industry, that duty falls on society and the media. We hear so much from politicians and commentators of all persuasions about youth and employment.
After Stardust, they must think of youth and leisure.