Warehouse Facilities Inspected After Weeklong Fire

Multiple warehouse facilities belonging to a group of companies that owned the West Virginia warehouse that burned for more than a week have been inspected.

West Virginia Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety spokesman Lawrence Messina told The Parkersburg News and Sentinel that the facilities owned by the Naik group were among 12 properties inspected Thursday by two teams of representatives from the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection and the State Fire Marshal’s Office.

Messina says some of the sites were unrelated to the Naik group’s Intercontinental Export-Import Plastics company, which owns the 420,000-square-foot (39,000-square-meter) Parkersburg property that burned last week. The inspection sites included facilities in Parkersburg and Washington.

Parkersburg Fire Chief Jason Matthews says warehouses would ideally be inspected annually, but budget constraints inhibit that possibility.

Fire Crews Respond to Parkersburg Warehouse Flare Up

Fire crews in Wood County responded Wednesday evening to smoke rising from the site of an industrial fire that was deemed extinguished this past weekend.

Around 7 p.m., three fire crews responded to the site in South Parkersburg and doused the spot with about 1,000 gallons of water from a pumper truck.

Lubeck Volunteer Fire Department Chief and Incident Commander Mark Stewart said the same woman who initially reported the smoke called back a few hours later to complain of the smell of burnt plastic — one that’s lingered in the area since the fire began on October 21.

“You’re going to smell it until it is removed from the site. Depending on which way the wind blows, you’re going to smell it until it’s gone,” said Stewart, referring to the materials burnt in the fire.

Stewart said representatives of property owner Intercontinental Export Import, Inc. were on site during last night’s response. IEI says 24-hour security is expected to begin Thursday.

IEI has yet to provide state officials with a detailed inventory of the warehouse at the time of the fire.  

Parkersburg Fire: Records Handed Over By IEI 'Do Not Sufficiently Satisfy' Request for Inventory

Ten days since an industrial fire began in Parkersburg, public officials have yet to be provided an accurate inventory of what was on the property when the fire began. The fire at an old Ames plant — now a recycled plastics warehouse owned by Intercontinental Export Import, Inc. — was declared extinguished around noon Sunday.

On Thursday, October 26, the West Department of Environmental Protection handed down an Order for Compliance to property owner Intercontinental Export Import, Inc. In addition to calling for an immediate inventory of the warehouse’s contents when the fire began, that document requires IEI to submit an approved Plan of Corrective Action, which includes proof of proper disposal of burned material.

As previously reported, IEI company representatives submitted information via email on Sunday and other documentation during an in-person meeting Monday with state, county and local officials who have been responding to the incident.

State Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety spokesman Larry Messina wrote in a Tuesday evening email that the DEP has concluded that records submitted Sunday and Monday “do not sufficiently satisfy the Order for Compliance, and specifically its directive requiring detailed inventory of all materials that were burned at the site.”

Because of the lack of verified inventory, Messina acknowledged ongoing concern for public safety in the email.

“The local, county and state officials involved in the response absolutely recognize that the public has legitimate and understandable questions regarding the contents of the site (nature and quantity) at the time of the fire,” wrote Messina.

 

“Mindful of the speculation spurred by inaccurate and incomplete information, Incident Command can release the detailed inventory or the warehouse’s contents once IEI provides a list that meets the requirement stated in the Order for Compliance,” he added.

Incident Command is expected to release information regarding the warehouse’s inventory in coordination with the Wood County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office when it is deemed “accurate and sufficiently complete,” according to Messina.

Emergency response teams from DEP conducted air monitoring through Monday morning. Privately contracted environmental consultants, Center for Toxicology & Environmental Health, finished up air monitoring on Sunday. Results from DEP, the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency and CTEH indicate no threat to air quality, according to the DEP.

Water test results continue to be received by the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources, the Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission, West Virginia American Water Co., the Ohio EPA and Cincinnati Water.  The Ohio River results “are encouraging that downstream water systems will not be impacted by the fire,” according to Messina.

As was also previously reported, the State Fire Marshal’s office found potential fire code violations while inspecting other IEI-owned properties late last week. Officials are expected to release final results from these inspections when they are completed and assessed. They assured that these inspections have so far yielded no signs of imminent danger.

With a “cool down” period completed since the fire being extinguished, the property is being turned back over to the owner. Specialized Professional Services, Inc. has concluded the work it has conducted for Wood County officials. It is unknown if the company will be retained by IEI for compliance with the DEP order.

According to officials, an investigation into the incident by the State Fire Marshal remains ongoing and will not be affected by turning over the property to the owner.

 

DEP Reviewing Parkersburg Warehouse Inventory, Other IEI Facilities Cited with Violations

An industrial fire that burned for more than eight days in Parkersburg has been extinguished, but questions remain as state officials investigate the incident.

The State Department of Environmental Protection says company representatives of Intercontinental Export Import, Inc. provided information via email regarding the contents of the warehouse when it caught fire on Saturday, October 21. That email, sent Sunday — as well as additional documentation provided by the company on Monday — is currently under review to identify the warehouse’s inventory, as well as confirm that the documentation complies with an order issued Thursday of last week.

Environmental consultants have wrapped up air monitoring in the area, but DEP officials will continue to monitor the site during a 36-48 hour cool-down period after the fire was put out. The fire was deemed extinguished around noon Sunday.

Wood County commissioners say the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention contacted them to offer additional help to other responding agencies, including the local health department.

Incident commander Mark Stewart said the West Virginia Fire Marshal’s Office found violations at other IEI-owned warehouses late last week but could not provide specifics at this time. They continue to investigate the cause of the fire.

 

Parkersburg Fire Is Out, But Questions Remain

Officials in Parkersburg say a fire at a warehouse storing recycled plastics has been extinguished after burning for eight-and-a-half days. 

The exact contents of the warehouse have yet to be released. Officials say materials data that was initially handed over by the property owner is outdated and other documentation was destroyed in the fire. 

On Thursday, state environmental regulators told Intercontinental Export Import Inc. to immediately provide the inventory of the burned warehouse. The Parkersburg News and Sentinel reports that IEI handed over information to the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection on Sunday.

“They received information this afternoon and the DEP is in the process of determining if it fits the information that was required,” Larry Messina, spokesman for the state Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety, told the newspaper.

Local fire crews and other responders will remain on site for at least two days to make sure no flare ups occur, according to Messina.

State environmental regulators and contracted consultants continue to monitor the area’s air quality.

The West Virginia Fire Marshal’s Office is investigating the incident and has yet to determine a cause.

The Wood County Commission will meet at 9:30 a.m. Monday. 

West Virginia Warehouse Fire Almost Extinguished

West Virginia emergency officials say a warehouse fire that began last week is nearly out.

Lubeck Fire Chief Mark Stewart estimates that the fire in South Parkersburg is “90 percent” extinguished from ongoing efforts by firefighters.

The goal is to finish overnight Friday and Saturday, then monitor it for up to two days for possible flare-ups.

The 420,000-foot (130,000-meter) warehouse property where the fire broke out Saturday is owned by Columbia, Maryland-based Intercontinental Export Import Inc., which says on its website that it buys and sells an array of recycled plastics worldwide.

The Department of Environmental Protection has been measuring air quality around the site and was expected to post more results later.

The DEP ordered the company to provide a detailed inventory and properly dispose of debris.

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