Restaurant employee injured in kitchen fire

A Columbus restaurant employee was taken to Columbus Regional Hospital with burn injuries following a kitchen fire Saturday.

Columbus firefighters were sent at 12:58 p.m. Saturday to El Nopal restaurant, 3114 N. National Road, said Capt. Mike Wilson, Columbus Fire Department spokesman.

The fire was marked under control upon arrival after another restaurant employee extinguished the flames with portable fire extinguishers, Wilson said.

Columbus Police Department officers arrived first, seeing flames coming from the commercial kitchen hood-vents on the building’s roof. When Columbus firefighters arrived, the restaurant was being evacuated and the flames had been extinguished.

When firefighters reached the kitchen area, they found smoldering materials located near the food prep area that were quickly extinguished firefighters. One male employee who was working in the kitchen when the fire occurred had a serious burn injury to his arm. EMTs with CRH ambulance service treated and transported him to the hospital. One additional El Nopal employee was assessed at the scene for a minor burn, but that employee declined transport.

Firefighters learned from management that the fire occurred when water was inadvertently added to a cooking pot containing hot cooking oil. This created flames that injured the employee while also igniting combustible materials nearby.

Another El Nopal employee, who was outside of the kitchen area at the time of the fire, told fire investigators that he used several portable fire extinguishers to extinguished the flames. Investigators said that the kitchen was equipped with a fire suppression system but the system did not appear to activate. Investigators have classified the fire as accidental, Wilson said

Damage within the kitchen was moderate. The fire did not extend to any of the building’s structural components. Firefighters used large ventilation fans to remove residual smoke. The restaurant will remain closed until repairs and additional inspections are completed, Wilson said. Damage caused by fire is estimated at about $25,000.