May 26, 2024
Huge fire at Indiana plastics warehouse forces hundreds from homes | CBC News

Huge fire at Indiana plastics warehouse forces hundreds from homes | CBC News

An evacuation order affecting up to 2,000 people was expected to remain in place through Wednesday around a large industrial fire in an Indiana city near the Ohio border where crews worked through the night to douse piles of burning plastics, authorities said.

Multiple fires, which began burning Tuesday afternoon, continued burning Wednesday morning within about 14 acres of various types of plastics stored both inside and outside buildings at the former factory site in Richmond, 113 kilometres east of Indianapolis, Richmond fire Chief Tim Brown said.

“There’s plastics inside buildings, there’s plastics outside buildings, there’s plastics in semi-trailers that are throughout the grounds here at the complex, so we’re dealing with many type of plastics. It’s very much a mess,” Brown said.

Brown said a plume of smoke continued rising Wednesday from the site and about 15 firefighters had remained in place overnight working to fight the flames, which he said are contained within the old factory site.

He said those fires are “not under control by any means” but he is optimistic crews will make progress Wednesday. “We were waiting for daylight so we could start aggressively extinguishing the fire,” he said.

Two firefighters in yellow uniforms and helmets walk in front of the charred rubble of a building.
Firefighters walk out of the site of an industrial fire at the My Way Trading warehouse complex in Richmond, Ind., on Wednesday. City officials say the fire was contained within the complex and did not spread into the surrounding residential neighbourhood. (Michael Conroy/The Associated Press)

Between 1,500 and 2,000 people who live within a 0.8-kilometre radius of the plant were told to leave after the fire began, said David Hosick, spokesperson for the Indiana Department of Homeland Security. Brown, the fire chief, said it’s unclear how many people have evacuated the area around the site.

People outside that radius who live downwind of the fire were advised to keep windows closed and pets inside.

Brown said the evacuation order would remain in place through Wednesday and perhaps into Wednesday night, depending on how much progress crews make in putting out the flames.

He said the fire’s cause remains under investigation.

Sun blocked by smoke

Aaron Stevens, a Richmond police officer who lives six blocks from the plant, said he first heard the sirens Tuesday before he saw the pillar of smoke from his backyard that blocked the afternoon sun.

The smoke came with an acrid odour and he said ash then fell on his deck and backyard.

“It was blocking out the sun completely,” he said. “The birds were going crazy.” Despite the evacuation warning, Stevens said he plans on staying put after recently suffering an injury.

His sister who lives at their childhood home, which is closer to the plant and in eyesight of the flames, came to stay with her brother to escape the smoke. Stevens said he plans on keeping an eye on the changing updates around the smoke.

“If there is an increased concern for toxic safety, I do have a contingency plan,” he said. State and federal regulators were at the scene to assess air quality and other environmental impacts at the site, which local officials said has been used to store plastics and other materials for recycling or resale.

Red and white emergency vehicles parked in front of a small building as a large plume of black smoke rises into the blue sky.
Smoke rises from the fire on Tuesday. Authorities urged people to evacuate if they live near the fire. The former factory site was used to store plastics and other materials for recycling or resale. (Zach Piatt/The Palladium-Item/The Associated Press)

Jason Sewell, the on-scene co-ordinator for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, said the agency has been doing roving air sampling outside the evacuation area and into part of nearby Ohio, but no toxic compounds have been detected.

He stressed, however, that smoke is harmful to inhale because it contains particulate matter of different sizes and can contain toxins, and residents should avoid the smoke.

Sewell said air sampling was continuing Wednesday in Richmond, a city of 35,000 residents.

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Residents of East Palestine, Ohio, aren’t convinced the community is safe despite assurances there wasn’t any contamination from a train derailment several weeks ago.

‘Definitely toxic’

Indiana’s state fire marshal, Steve Jones, said Tuesday “the smoke is definitely toxic” and residents need to get away from the smoke plumes, especially elderly people with respiratory problems. He said that if the wind changes, officials may alter the evacuation order.

“There’s a host of different chemicals that plastics give off when they’re on fire. And so it’s concerning,” Jones said.

Brown said the only injury has been a firefighter who suffered an ankle injury overnight Tuesday while fighting the flames, but was treated and released.

Bethesda Worship Center in Richmond housed several families, about 20 people total, Tuesday night after evacuation orders were issued, pastor Ken Harris told The Associated Press.

Those families were later moved to a separate, larger facility about 8 kilometres away, he said.

“We gave them a safe space to breathe and collect their thoughts,” Harris said Wednesday as dark grey smoke billowed in the distance through the clear-blue sky beyond the church’s windows.

Richmond Mayor Dave Snow said Wednesday that the plastics recycling site had been under a city order to clean up and remediate the complex, but said the business owner had ignored that order. Snow called that person “a negligent business owner.”

Heavy equipment and a truck parked in front of a destroyed building with black smoke rising above it.
Workers in Richmond on Wednesday knock down a section of the site where the fire broke out. (Michael Conroy/The Associated Press)

EPA monitoring fire

President Joe Biden, who has been visiting Northern Ireland and Ireland, spoke by phone to Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb and offered his support and any additional federal assistance needed to respond to the fire, the White House said.

EPA Administrator Michael Regan said the federal agency was working closely with its state and local partners in responding to and monitoring the fire.

He said an EPA team would be collecting samples of debris in the area Wednesday “to determine whether asbestos-containing materials may have left the site.”

“So we’re following the situation very closely and will continue to provide the community with any assistance that they need,” he said in the nation’s capitol before speaking about tough new automobile pollution control limits.

Because of smoke still wafting from the fire, Indiana’s environmental agency issued an air quality advisory Wednesday for two eastern Indiana counties, Wayne and Randolph, warning that forecasts call for elevated levels of fine soot particles in the air.

LISTEN | Long-term concerns after Ohio derailment:

Front Burner27:50Fear lingers after Ohio’s toxic train disaster

Weeks after a train derailed and crews released and burned toxic chemicals, officials are reassuring residents of East Palestine, Ohio that the air and water are safe. Many residents, however, remain wary of the long-term effects of materials like vinyl chloride, with some reporting symptoms like skin and eye irritation and hoarseness. Simultaneously, a political conversation is unfolding about who or what to blame for the crash, with critics pointing to a lack of regulation and cost-cutting from rail giants as they post record profits. Today, a look at what’s happening on the ground as residents return to East Palestine, and a look at why rail disasters like this continue to happen more than a decade after the fatal catastrophe in Lac-Mégantic, Quebec.

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