The owner of a senior housing facility on Chicago's North Side where three women earlier this year died amid a brief May heat wave that caused temperatures in the building to soar into the low 90s has been fined $1,500 by the city's buildings department.

Citing city records, the Chicago Sun-Times reported that the fine was levied after an inspection by the buildings department found 11 code violations — two of which were the result of a rooftop air conditioning "chiller" that did not appear to be suitable for use on the exterior of the building.

Records show, according to the newspaper, that the department determined that issues noted in the city's first inspection had been addressed and that a second inspection determined there were "no dangerous and hazardous conditions."

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By that time, the Hispanic Housing Development Corporation — a non-profit organization that owns and manages the James Sneider Apartment — had, among other things, provided individual air conditioning units to every tenant.

Illinois news, Peoria news

The owner of a senior living facility in Chicago's North side has been fined after three people died during a brief heat wave.

Mike Puccinelli, a buildings department spokesman, said the fine was levied before city officials had access to autopsy records that showed the deaths of the three women whose bodies were discovered May 14 were linked to the heat. He said the fine was based completely on the violations found during the inspection.

On Aug. 11, a week after the fine was levied, the Cook County Medical Examiner's office concluded that the primary cause of death for Janice Reed, 68, Gwendolyn Osborne, 72, and Delores McNeely, 76, was "environmental heat exposure due to hot residential building during heat-related weather event," according to spokeswoman Brittany Hill.

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Puccinelli declined to discuss the case further, referring questions to the Chicago Police Department. When reached by the newspaper, a department spokesperson would only say the investigation into the deaths of the women "was concluded as non-criminal."

Hipolito "Paul" Roldan, the nonprofit’s president and chief executive, said he did not know about the autopsy results until the Sun-Times asked about them and he declined to comment further, citing lawsuits that filed by the families of the women.

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The deaths of the women prompted the City Council to pass new cooling requirements for larger residential buildings — including a requirement that buildings must run their air conditioning systems any time the heat index climbs above 80 degrees.