The windows on the 14th floor of 630 Cedar Av. in Minneapolis are still boarded up, a constant reminder for Mohamud Noor of the Thanksgiving Eve blaze that killed five community members in 2019.
Now, more than a year and a half after the fire, Minnesota lawmakers have passed a new law requiring sprinkler systems in public high-rise buildings like the Cedar High Apartments. Proponents are celebrating the move as a first step in making sure no other community faces a similar tragedy.
"This was closure for some of the family members that came to testify to make sure that this does not happen again," said Noor, a two-term Democrat who carried the legislation in the House. "This is a really significant first step."
Tucked into a broader jobs and economy budget bill signed by Gov. Tim Walz, the requirement means out-of-date public housing buildings built before the 1970s and 1980s now must be retrofitted with sprinklers by 2033, bringing them in line with current state requirements.
It affects public buildings across the state that have people living in spaces above 75 feet, the highest reach of many fire department vehicles. A large number of those buildings are in Minneapolis, but there are others across the state, said Sen. Kari Dziedzic, DFL-Minneapolis, who worked on the proposal. No comprehensive data exists on how many buildings need to comply with the new law.
The half-century-old Cedar High Apartments had sprinklers on the main floor and in a mechanical equipment room, but not in residential units.
"Every time I hear about a fire now, I look at how many stories it is and did it have sprinklers," said Dziedzic. "It will save lives, plain and simple."
An 18-page report from the Minnesota Department of Public Safety's Fire Marshal Division one year after the fire blamed the lack of sprinklers and outdated stairwells for the fatalities. The report recommended multiple changes, including the installation of sprinklers in all high-rise buildings.