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Lieutenant Jim Keightley Washington State Patrol Yakima. Assistant District Commander WSP District Three Yakima County & Western Benton County. WSP is the designated HazMat incident command agency for all jurisdictions within Yakima County.
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Lieutenant Jim KeightleyWashington State PatrolYakima Assistant District Commander WSP District Three Yakima County & Western Benton County WSP is the designated HazMat incident command agency for all jurisdictions within Yakima County
Wilbur Ellis Chemical FireGrandview, WashingtonYakima County January 26-28, 2005
Fire in one of several storage warehouses on the Wilbur-Ellis Grandview complex. Event
Population 8,415 4th largest city in Yakima County Elevation 834 ft 19 Churches 6 Public Schools 2 Other Schools City of Grandview
16 Commissioned Officers 7 Patrol Vehicles 6 Reserves 6 Dispatchers Grandview Police Department
Fire Resources 1 Full time Chief 1 Full time Captain 25 Volunteer Firefighters 4 Engines 1 Ladder Truck 2 Command Vehicles Grandview Fire Department
WILBUR-ELLIS CO1303 W. Wine Country Rd.Grandview WA 98930 31 locations in Washington and Eastern Idaho. Incorporated in 1921, Wilbur-Ellis Company has grown to become a leading international marketer and distributor of agricultural and industrial products, with sales exceeding $1.366 billion in 2003. The Company remains privately held, with ownership concentrated primarily within the founding family. Wilbur-Ellis Co. Inc
Azinophos Dimethoate Liquid Endosulfan Endosulfan Liquid Formaldehyde Formetanate Paraquat Strychine Zinc Phosphide Partial listing of chemicals at Grandview Site
Weather • Fog or low cloud cover • Temperatures, • High’s in the 30’s to low 40’s • Low’s in high 20’s low 30’s • Winds light and variable (swirling) • Strong inversion in the valley holding cool moist air (fog) close to the ground
Initial Response • 1205 Fire alarm received • Evacuation of Wilbur Ellis employees First responders Grandview Fire Department • Unknown what chemicals were burning • Approx 15 minutes later fax received with first product list Grandview Police Department • Evacuated ½ mile radius around fire due to unknown make-up of smoke coming from fire. 400 evacuees, several businesses forced to close. • 1230 WSP notified of fire
Initial Response Smoke At initial response and for several hours it was unknown if the smoke was toxic. It was a strong irritant, with an intense nauseating odor.
Operational Period One • Ensure safety of responders and the public • Decontamination set up and operating • City of Grandview Declaration of Emergency declared and submitted to state • Discussion at command post; should the entire city be evacuated. The decision was no.
Operational Period One EPA strike team arrives. Air quality monitoring begins. EPA felt ½ mile evacuation was sufficient.
Operational Period 2 • Initial air samples taken from areas around site prove non-toxic • Air monitoring continues on limited basis • Maintain protection of exposed facilities and begin removing hazardous contents from neighboring buildings
Operational Period 2 • 0730 the next day I-82 Reopened after 17 hour closure
Operational Period 3 Action plan was to open the building to introduce oxygen to fire. Create hot burning fire to act as incinerator for the materials in the warehouse. “Let it burn”
Operational Period 4 • Continue to monitor the air • Continue to protect exposed buildings • Continue to remove product from exposed building • No entry into fire building
Operational Period 5 • Incident Action Plan • Maintain exposure protection • No entry to building • Continue to air monitor • Continue to remove hazardous material to safety • Decontamination and disposal management • The scene was transferred to NRC for clean up and restoration
Summary • This was a three day event. • 38 different agencies or departments responded to or provided support for the event. • Nearly 200 individual response and agency personnel were involved. • 21 People were sent or presented to local hospitals, 2 remained overnight. • No deaths or significant injuries.
All participating agencies were invited to a comprehensive after-action review meeting. Everyone was given an opportunity to share their thoughts, ideas, and concerns.
Mutual Aid agreements between lower and upper valleys • Qualified personnel in our area • No serious injuries, death or property damage • Number of people involved and responded to the incident • Spirit of cooperation between agencies • Good decisions • Resources from local, state and federal agencies • Northwest Area Plan worked well
Facilities • Long Term Space and Equipment • Do not have a Type III Incident Management Team • Location of incident command from fire scene • COMMUNICATIONS • ICP and Field • ICP and OAEOC • OAEOC and State • No real interoperability
Communications • 39 different agencies, many single-use communication systems • No single system or even single frequency usable between all responders • Only reliable communication between all responders was cellular phones
Communications Did not have ability to establish top down interoperable network that would incorporate multiple frequencies with all on-site agencies. Law enforcement, fire, and other emergency response agencies could communicate with each other OK, but there were not enough inter-agency frequencies for an event this size.
Communications The Ideal Within the Incident Command System The supervisor of each unit (squad, task force, or single resource) has instant communication with their supervisor who in turn has instant communication with their supervisor, regardless of what agency they actually work for.
Questions Lieutenant Jim Keightley509-249-6702james.keightley@wsp.wa.gov