 People who live in a high-rise apartment say they're afraid for their safety. The changes they say are putting tenants at risk and what happened when we tried asking managers about this. People living in a Dayton high-rise apartment believe new management is putting them in danger by cutting back on security. Five firefighters were hurt battling a fire at Park Lane Apartments in May and residents tell News Center 7's Kate Bartley if another fire ever happens overnight, it could be deadly. Kate's live in Dayton with the changes, those tenants are asking for Kate. If you just look up a few stories, you can still see damage on the outside of this building from that fire in late May. The people who live here say they are not protected should another fire happen, according to a complaint filed with the local civil rights agency. At 100 years old, Alonzo Moore has trouble getting around. There we go. The fire broke out in the middle of the day in May. A maintenance worker helped carry him down. Moore says, had he not? I had stay up there and burn over the burn. He says his home of a decade has changed since F&W properties bought it last September. We had a good time here. Now it's all gone. Everything is gone. Moore says the new owners reduced security from a doorman 24 hours a day to working just a little longer than regular business hours. He's thankful security was working during the fire. And actually made a list and told the firemen where to go. There's nobody like that at night. Franelia Randall spent 30 years teaching law at the University of Dayton. She filed a fair housing complaint with the Dayton Human Relations Council. I feel like we are a waiting disaster. I looked up the property owners in Columbus and they referred me to local managers. So I went inside to ask for a response and came out just as quickly with a no comment. Randall says this building is exempt from the Americans with Disabilities Act because it was constructed before 1993. But Randall says so many of the tenants here have limited mobility and they signed their leases thinking they'd have help getting in and out in case of emergency. Whether or not they accept new people in, they already have a building full of disabled people that they can't just ignore. I left a message for the Dayton Human Relations Council asking them whether or not they plan to respond to this complaint. I have not yet heard back. Live in Dayton, Kate Bartley, News Center 7.