Wood County Moves Forward with Fire Response After Emergency Declaration

For the latest on the fire in Wood County, see here.

 

Updated: October 24, 2017 at 12:38 a.m.

 

Governor Jim Justice declared a state of emergency in Wood County on Monday afternoon, following an industrial fire that has burned at the former Ames tool plant since early Saturday morning.

 

A large, dark plume of smoke and the smell of burnt plastic continues to linger over Parkersburg and the surrounding area, causing schools, municipal and circuit courts, as well as county government to be closed again Tuesday.

State and county officials said Monday evening they still aren’t sure of the exact makeup of the materials that were stored at the facility but are reviewing documentation the owner of the site has handed over.

Larry Messina, spokesman for state Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety, said the Department of Environmental Protection continues to monitor the site, with help from Arkansas-based environmental consulting firm Center for Toxicological, Environmental & Health.

“The goal is to make sure that the testing is as comprehensive as possible to rule out any potential risk to public health and safety,” said Messina. “I think that’s one reason why the county brought in that outside contractor — to make sure we’re very thorough about what what we think is up in the air and what that poses for the people in the area.”

Specialized Professional Services Inc. of  Washington, Pennsylvania has also been contracted to assist with firefighting and other aspects of the continued response.

According to DEP-issued consent orders, Intercontinental Export Import, Inc. has been cited in the past — at the same location of the fire — for failing to provide monthly water pollution reports to state regulators. According to its website, IEI is a subsidiary of Sirnaik. The West Virginia Secretary of State’s office has a “Warehousing and Storage” company chartered in Wood County under the name Surnaik Holdings of WV, LLC.

Messina said officials have yet to identify any law or regulation that would have required the property owners to identify its contents to a state agency or program, but also indicated that a review is ongoing.

Moving forward, weather conditions are expected to improve for firefighting efforts as well as air quality in the area, according to Tony Edwards of the National Weather Service in Charleston.

“That plume is going to be able to rise and escape a little better. It should be heading off towards the north and then veer around to the north east in time. But at a more stable trajectory and keep it heading to the north and northeast,” said Edwards. “So, overall, that should help efforts and improve air quality a little bit as we go through time. Unfortunately, [it will not be] anything like we saw over the weekend with the plume going straight up and a good air quality but at least an improvement.”

The state Fire Marshal’s Office is investigating the cause of the fire.

 

Justice Declares State of Emergency in Response to Wood County Industrial Fire

For the latest on the fire in Wood County, see here.

 

Updated: Oct. 23, 2017, at 5 p.m.

 

Gov. Jim Justice declared a state of emergency in Wood County Monday afternoon in response to an industrial fire in Parkersburg that has burned since early Saturday morning.

 

The fire was reported at about 1 a.m. Saturday at the old Ames tool plant, just outside Parkersburg city limits.

 

The emergency declaration allows the state to bring in more resources for those fighting the fire. According to a news release from the governor’s office, The declaration will remain in effect for 30 days unless it is terminated or extended by a subsequent proclamation.

 

Previous story: The mood on Monday morning had shifted from the night before, when an emergency county commission meeting had officials still wondering what the continued response might be.

 

 

With a volunteer-led effort that had been stretched to capacity, city water resources depleted and the county expending hundreds of thousands of dollars in just two days, commission president Blair Couch said, with the fire still burning, state officials were helpful overnight.
 

“Of course no one in that room at that time could make a decision. They had to talk to their higher-ups and make some calls,” Couch said. “Secretary [Jeff] Sandy went to work for us and he was able to get an assurance from the state of West Virginia that bills would be paid. The effort may cost anywhere from 60 to 100,000 [dollars] a day. And it may take four to five days to put this out.”

 

The fire, which began around 1 a.m. Saturday, is located at 3801 Camden Ave. The facility once housed the former Ames tool plant but is now a warehouse facility owned by Surnaik Holdings of WV, LLC. 

 

Some government facilities, including the offices at the Fourth Circuit Court, closed on Monday. Wood County Schools were also closed and a voluntary shelter has been established for those in the area near the blaze.

Couch said those decisions came as a shift in weather patterns lowered the plume of smoke that’s dissipated but still lingers in areas around Parkersburg.

“It wasn’t such a bad problem, but when it starts lowering and becoming a ground-level problem — it troubled me to no end to see these residents — that if you go by the site on your left hand side is an active industrial fire on the right hand side is businesses and family homes with small children,” he said. “And, so, we’ve got to do something and right now. We’re smelling it in this room — the smell of burnt plastic.”

Officials from the state Department of Environmental Protection continue to monitor the air for particulate matter from the burnt plastics stored at the facility. More detailed air quality monitoring is also being sought through the federal Environmental Protection Agency, as well as private contractors.

Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety Secretary Jeff Sandy said officials are still reviewing Material Safety Data Sheets and trying determine exactly what was in the warehouse when the fire started.

“We are working on that. We have meetings scheduled throughout the day. We are getting what they call bill of ladings, which documents what was purchased and what was in that facility,” he said.

Sandy said various state agencies have supplied diesel fuel, fire foam and other resources to help fight the fire and that the governor’s office has committed to continue providing whatever is needed moving forward.

State Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management director Jimmy Gianato says state resources will be on site until the fire is out and any potential threats are mitigated.

“Ultimately, the responsibility lies with the owner of the property. So we’re working with them and in trying to make sure that they understand what their long-term responsibilities are to remediate everything,” he said. “DEP is the lead from the state side as far as the environmental piece in the fire marshal has people on scene — so they’ll continue to work on this. So, our resources from the state level will be here until it’s over.”

No injuries have been reported and the cause of the fire is still unknown.

With Resources and Finances Strained, Continued Response to Wood County Fire Remains in Question

For the latest on the fire in Wood County, see here.

 

Updated: October 22, 2017 at 10:36 p.m.

 

With resources and funding in question, officials in Wood County are still trying to determine how to deal with a large industrial fire just outside of the city limits of Parkersburg. The fire, which started about 1 a.m. Saturday and destroyed a warehouse facility, is expected to burn for days as local officials still have no timeline as to when the fire will be out.

 

Thick black smoke continued to billow Sunday night from the building that was once an Ames tool plant. While no injuries have been reported, the scene has been declared a disaster area, Wood County Schools are closed on Monday and local officials have issued a voluntary shelter in place for the surrounding area.

The Wood County Commission held an emergency meeting Sunday night to discuss continued response, as city water resources have been strained and volunteer-led firefighting efforts have been stretched to capacity.

I spent a lot of time with the incident commander and the issue gets to be that volunteer fire departments are, therefore, volunteer,” said commission president Blair Couch. “It was lucky that it was on a Friday night, Saturday, Sunday because a lot of volunteers were available. We had a lot of units available.”

With volunteer resource availability lessening, county commissioners were joined at the meeting by representatives from the state Department of Environmental Protection, the State Fire Marshal’s Office, the Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety and the Division of Highways, as well as Congressman David McKinley’s office. 

Commissioners said the county had spend about $200,000 in two days trying to fight the fire. Private contractor Specialized Professional Services, Inc. of Washington, Pennsylvania estimated continued costs of extinguishing the fire and other remediation efforts at about $60,000 per day, which would take at least five more days. The company delivered firefighting foam to the scene over the weekend. 

“We called this special meeting because we’re getting taxed beyond our resources,” said  Couch in an interview after the meeting. “We’ve expended funds and reduced the volatile situation to being more manageable, but it continues to burn.”

Couch and other commissioners asked representatives from the company who owns the warehouse, Surnaik Holdings of WV, LLC, if they were able to help finance extinguishing the fire. Company officials provided blueprints of the facility to the commission but did not agree at Sunday night’s meeting to fund continued response. They did offer employee resources to aid other efforts.

I think that the individual property owner understands that — not only does he have to extinguish this fire, even if some other resource would do that for him — then he has the long phase of cleaning up and mitigating a hazardous disaster,” said Couch after the meeting. “There’s no other way to look at it. He’s going to have to expend money to fix the situation.”

Couch said county officials are also looking to the state to help get the fire out, whether that is manpower and resources or help with funding.

“I think the state has resources but now we’re going away from ‘Can you provide us a truck?’ to ‘Can you provide us money?’ And the subcontractor that’s here that’s offered this service to work on this has agreed to come back at 9:30 in the morning to see if solutions are made,” he said.

The County Commission is scheduled to meet again on Monday morning to make further decisions about financing the response and to what degree Specialized Professional Services, Inc. will be contracted.

Mark Stewart, of the Lubeck Volunteer Fire Department, said plastic pellets were being stored at the warehouse, although he could not specify the exact compounds. He said he could not confirm or deny any additional materials that might have been stored on site but also said Material Safety Data Sheets for the stored materials have been turned over to local and state officials and are currently being reviewed.

 

The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection said they have been testing air samples and burnt material from the site, and that the immediate and surrounding area was found to be within acceptable air quality limits.

 

Stewart told the County Commission roughly 9 million gallons of water had been used in attempting to put the fire out, with about 3 million gallons being drawn from the Little Kanawha River to lessen the strain on Parkersburg’s water supply.

 

Thirty-one volunteer fire departments from seven counties in West Virginia and Ohio assisted with response efforts thus far. Officials from the state Fire Marshal’s Office say the cause of the fire has yet to be determined and the investigation is ongoing. 

 

Wood County Joins List of High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas

Another West Virginia county has been designated as an area with high drug trafficking.

Wood County, West Virginia and fifteen other counties nationwide are being added to the list of High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas.

In May, U.S. Senator Joe Manchin and Congressman David McKinley wrote a letter to National Drug Control Policy Acting Director Richard Baum, asking for Wood County to the receive the federal designation.

According to a news release, the designation will enable Wood County to receive federal resources to coordinate and develop drug control efforts among federal, state and local law enforcement officials. It also will allow local agencies to benefit from ongoing initiatives working to reduce drug use and its consequences across the country.

“I’m glad Director Baum has answered our calls to declare Wood County a High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area,” said Manchin in the release. “The opioid epidemic is impacting every way of life in our state and it is crucial our law enforcement officials and drug task forces are well equipped to combat the influx of drugs coming into our state.”

“We need all the help available to fight drug epidemic ravaging our communities,” McKinley noted in the joint release with Senator Manchin. “The HIDTA program gives law enforcement additional resources to take drug traffickers off our streets.”

Wood County is the 21st county in West Virginia to be designated as a High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area. Berkeley, Boone, Brooke, Cabell, Hancock, Harrison, Jefferson, Kanawha, Lincoln, Logan, Marshall, McDowell, Mercer, Mingo, Monongalia, Ohio, Putnam, Raleigh, Wayne and Wyoming counties have also received the federal designation.

Truck Maker Hino to Relocate Assembly Plant in West Virginia

Japanese truck maker Hino Motors Manufacturing said Wednesday it is moving its West Virginia assembly plant about 20 miles to a larger location at a former retail distribution center.

Hino Motors Manufacturing President Takashi Ono said the $100 million investment could create up to 250 new jobs.

Upscale retailer Coldwater Creek closed its nearly 1 million-square-foot distribution center near Mineral Wells in 2014 after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. The Wood County Development Authority owns the property.

Hino currently assembles medium-duty trucks at a 245,000-square foot facility that opened in 2007 in the Wood County community of Williamstown. That facility currently employs about 300.

The company expects the new location to be operational by 2019. State economic development officials said it will house several operations, including cab assembly currently handled in Japan.

West Virginia Commerce Secretary Woody Thrasher said the expanded facility could help the state attract other suppliers to the region.

“We feel this may be the beginning of many good things,” Thrasher said.

Hino’s American headquarters are located in Farmington Hills, Michigan. The company operates a parts plant in Marion, Arkansas, and parts distribution centers in Mira Loma, California and Gahanna, Ohio.

Hino is owned by the Toyota Group. It marks the second economic expansion announcement in two days involving Toyota with a facility in West Virginia.

On Tuesday, Toyota Motor Corp. announced a $374 million investment at five U.S. plants to support production of its first American-made hybrid powertrain, including $115 million to add hybrid vehicle transmission production in Buffalo, West Virginia.

Jury Duty Absences Cost West Virginia County

County officials in West Virginia have expressed concern over what they say is the persistent problem of ignored jury summons.

The Parkersburg News and Sentinel reports that Wood County Prosecutor Pat Lefebure says the phenomenon of shirking jury duty seems to have intensified over the past few years, with absences costing the county.

Lefebure says three people failed to show for a special grand jury session the county recently held, resulting in its cancellation. The county had to pay the jurors who showed, as well as overtime for 15 officers subpoenaed to testify.

He also says an average of five of the 35-40 people called for a felony jury trial do not appear.

Failure to appear can carry a civil penalty and fine of up to $1,000.

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