It was a picture-perfect weekend away - a family trip to upstate New York to introduce a baby girl to her grandmother for the first time.
Elementary school teacher Shannon Hubbard, her husband John, and their two young children, Jack and Maggie, ventured from Cape Cod to Salt Point, New York, with Shannonâs parents, Tim and Nancy Waldron, to stay at a restored farmhouse theyâd booked through Airbnb.
Together, they picked apples, toured pumpkin patches, visited local breweries and celebrated Shannonâs parentsâ wedding anniversary with a home-cooked meal. Maggie, who had just turned one, also met her paternal grandmother for the first time.
But tragedy struck on the final night of the trip, Oct. 12, 2024, when a fire broke out in the living room while the children were sleeping upstairs, and Shannon and John were outside in the hot tub.Â
With no working smoke or carbon monoxide alarms in the rental home, the blaze quickly spread through the property without any alert to the danger.Â
Shannon and John raced inside to rescue their children - but only John and Jack made it out alive.Â
Nine months later, Shannon's father, Tim, told the Daily Mail he is still struggling to come to terms with losing his daughter and granddaughter in such an 'easily preventable' tragedy.
'If that home had working smoke and carbon monoxide detectors, then my daughter and granddaughter would still be alive today,' he said.
Shannon Hubbard, 35, and her one-year-old daughter, Maggie, (pictured) died in a house fire in October 2024 while staying at an Airbnb in Salt Point, New York
The home wasn't fitted with any working smoke or fire alarms. Had it been, Shannon and Maggie would likely still be alive today, Shannon's dad Tim Waldron told the Daily Mail
'The beeping would have told them something was wrong. They wouldâve heard it. They wouldâve gone in. They wouldâve gotten the kids and gotten out. They wouldâve had time... it's unconscionable.'
Tim said everything about the family weekend away had been perfect - 'until it wasn't.'
He and Nancy left to return home to Massachusetts hours before the deadly blaze broke out.Â
It sparked after John put a log into the wood stove, which ignited a fire in the chimney flue.
The couple smelled smoke around 20 minutes later, and John, then 39, ran inside and found the living room filling up fast with thick fumes.
Shannon, 35, bolted upstairs to get the children. Maggieâs room was closest to the source of the fire, and, like the living room, was quickly being consumed by hot smoke.
âShe opened the door to get her baby, and the door slammed shut behind her,â Tim said. âIâm not sure if it was a backdraft caused by the fire, or what happened⌠but they couldnât get out.â
John tried desperately to force the door to Maggieâs room open. As he clawed at the handle and attempted to barge the door down, he suffered burns on his hands and face.
Eventually overwhelmed by smoke, he grabbed Jack from his bedroom, raced outside, and called 911, helplessly watching while the flames and smoke slowly engulfed the farmhouse.
Emergency personnel arrived within minutes but struggled to reach Shannon and Maggie because of the intense heat.
By the time firefighters got to them, it was too late. Within hours, they were both pronounced dead in the hospital.
John and Jack, then 3, were both injured but survived.
Tim said Maggie (pictured) lit up every room and radiated such a warm, loving personality
Shannon (left, holding Maggie) and John (right) raced inside to rescue their children - but only John and Jack (center) made it out alive
Tim (seen left with Shannon on her wedding day) is lobbying for legal changes to mandate checks for smoke detectors in rental properties
The family would later learn that the rental home had no functioning smoke or carbon monoxide detectors - despite the Airbnb listing for the property allegedly claiming that it did.
âTheyâd spent thousands renovating this home,â said Tim. âThey had three different fire extinguishers in the house, fire blankets - all these things to protect the property.
âBut the only thing that wouldâve actually protected lives in this case - a really simple thing - was overlooked.'
Five months later, the owners of the Airbnb property, Dennis Darcy, 57, and Meredith Darcy, 55, were each charged with two counts of manslaughter in the second degree.
Their arrests came after the New York State Police conducted an investigation and found the home was not properly equipped with functioning smoke detectors, and was also in violation of the stateâs fire and building safety codes.
Like Tim, Dutchess County District Attorney Anthony Parisi said while announcing the Darcysâ charges that the deaths of Shannon and Maggie couldâve easily been prevented.
â[Their deaths] in this senseless fire serve as a tragic reminder of the critical role smoke detectors play in safeguarding lives,â he said.
The Darcys pleaded not guilty and the case remains ongoing. The couple is currently out on bond.
Tim said nothing in his life has been the same since losing Shannon and Maggie.
But he is channeling his grief into activism to ensure that no other family has to endure the same unimaginable heartbreak he and his loved ones have been forced to contend with over the last nine months and counting.
The owners of the Airbnb property, Dennis Darcy, 57, and Meredith Darcy, 55, were both charged with two counts of manslaughter in the second degree in March
Tim said nothing in his life has been the same since losing Shannon and Maggie (pictured)
He is channeling his grief into activism to ensure that no other family has to endure the same unimaginable heartbreak he and his loved ones have been forced to contend with
Tim is lobbying for legislation to be passed in his home state of Massachusetts that would require owners to prove the presence of working smoke alarms before listing their properties as short-term rentals on sites like Airbnb and VRBO.
Currently, the platforms rely on a self-reporting model and donât typically verify safety features like detectors.
The bill is named the Maggie Hubbard Rental Safety Act in tribute to his late granddaughter.
âIt wouldâve cost the homeowners less than $1,000 to have these detectors properly installed,â said Tim.
âBut they didnât, and this kind of oversight is just unconscionable⌠How can you be so concerned with your personal property and then just be so inattentive to something that can actually save a life?â
Tim is determined to see something good come out of his daughter and granddaughterâs deaths.
The Maggie Hubbard Rental Safety Act is currently moving through the Massachusetts State House. It has bipartisan sponsorship in both chambers and recently passed its first committee hearing, where Tim and his family testified.
The response was positive, Tim said, and while acknowledging there may be hurdles ahead, heâs been encouraged by the momentum gathered so far and the grassroots support the legislation has garnered.
One day, he hopes to see the legislation adopted nationwide.
âThere will be some satisfaction, some sense of relief that we were able to do something and help my granddaughterâs name and legacy endure if this one gets over the finish line,â said Tim.
âIf some positive changes come out of this that protect other families, that will help me with my grieving process.
âThis work is one of the ways that Iâm able to deal with the sorrow I feel every day.â
Shannon Hubbard (pictured with her two kids) was a preschool teacher at Chatham Elementary School in Cape Cod and loved her job, Tim said
Nine months after the fire, Tim and his family are still struggling to come to terms with the scale of their loss. Maggie is pictured above on the beach
Tim (pictured holding Jack) received the devastating call as he was driving back to New York to visit Shannon and Maggie (both right) in the hospital
Tim recalled what happened when he learned of the fire.
He first got a call from John around 11:30 p.m. that night, but he could hear only garbled noises and voices before the line went dead.
Attempts to call John back were unsuccessful, and Tim recalled a foreboding sense of worry slowly grow.
When his phone finally rang again, it was Johnâs number - but the voice on the other end was unfamiliar. A nurse from a hospital in Poughkeepsie told him there had been a fire, and that he and Nancy needed to come back immediately.
âWe got back in the car and headed back. And along the way, we got some more calls, just kind of confirming that my granddaughter and daughter werenât going to survive,â recounted Tim.
âSo it was a tough ride.â
Tim says heâs still learning how to cope with his grief.
Shannon and Maggie are the first thing he thinks of when he wakes up, and the last thing on his mind before he goes to sleep.
âI can still feel happiness on any given day, but underneath all that, losing Shannon and Maggie is never far from my thoughts,â said Tim.
âThere are good moments and bad moments - good days and bad days. Weâre learning to live with that while we learn to live without Shannon and Maggie.
âI donât know if itâll get easier, but weâre taking it day by day.â
Shannon Hubbard was a preschool teacher at Chatham Elementary School in Cape Cod and loved her job, Tim said.
She was also a loving, doting mother who was just entering the âbest stage of her lifeâ when she was killed, he said.
âAnd Maggie had her whole life ahead of her. She was such a happy little girl who radiated such personality right from the start.
âThey lived down the road from us, and I just so enjoyed being near them and watching them grow as a family.
âWe were all going to grow up together, and thatâs what was taken away from us.â
Airbnb has not returned the Daily Mail's request for comment.Â
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