THE PUBLIC WORKS MAINTENANCE GARAGE FIRE DAMAGE IS ESTIMATED AT $4 MILLION DOLLARS. THE CAUSE AND ORIGIN OF THE FIRE IS UNDER INVESTIGATION.
January 30, 2015
EDISON -- As the investigation into the four-alarm fire that
is estimated to have caused about $4 million in damage and leveled the Edison
Department of Public Works maintenance garage continues, officials are working
to ensure township services are not interrupted.
"My administration is working on contingency plans to
ensure our streets are
maintained and our residents are safe," Mayor Thomas Lankey said Friday in a statement. "We are looking at a number of options."
maintained and our residents are safe," Mayor Thomas Lankey said Friday in a statement. "We are looking at a number of options."
Woodbridge sent salt spreaders to help Edison maintain its
streets and other neighboring communities have offered assistance for snowfalls
that are expected next week, the mayor said.
The fire apparently started inside the town's maintenance
garage at 745 New Durham Road at 9:50 p.m. Thursday, authorities said..
The fire destroyed 11 public works salt spreaders with
attached snow plows, three street sweepers, three repaving vehicles, a road
maintenance truck and a fire engine that was awaiting repairs, township
officials said.
The facility is insured through the Central Jersey Joint
Insurance Fund, which will determine the value of the insured loss, officials
said.
Edison's fleet of sanitation trucks, its other public works
vehicles and its supply of salt and sand are not stored at this site and are
intact, officials said.
"We have different locations where we have different
equipment, but we lost several things here," Council President Robert
Diehl said. "Right now they are doing an assessment and inventory of what
is left. We are working with the county and we are working with several
surrounding towns who are helping us with contingency plans on how to maintain
service with the loss of these vehicles."
Between 75 and 100 firefighters from Edison and Metuchen
fought the fire, which was brought under control at 1 a.m. Friday. Crews from
PSE&G were unable to secure a natural gas line to the facility until 8 a.m.
Firefighters from other communities stood by at Edison firehouses during the
emergency.
"I am thankful there was no loss of life or injury to
the many firefighters who helped bring this fire under control as quickly and
safely as possible," Lankey said.
The fire is under investigation, officials said.
"We're working with the prosecutor's office to possibly
find the source of the fire," Diehl said.
This is second structural fire at the New Durham Road garage
since 2012. Two other fires occurred outside in the adjacent yard, township
officials said. None of the previous fires were suspicious, officials said.
In June of 2014, a sanitation truck was destroyed after it
caught fire outside and a second truck suffered minor damage. In March of 2013,
a 50-by-50-foot salt barn and a few pieces of equipment were destroyed by fire.
In February 2012, five sanitation trucks were destroyed outside in the yard
after hours, an official said.
While conducting and maintaining complete plow and salt
operations for all streets and roads in the Woodbridge service area, Woodbridge
Department of Public Works (DPW) also assisted Edison with its plowing and
salting operations Friday morning, spokesman John Hagerty said in an email
Friday.
"Woodbridge DPW sent two triaxle dump trucks, four
seven-yard dump trucks and one supervisor's pickup with a spreader," he
said. "All trucks were equipped with plows and salt spreaders and loaded
with salt from the Woodbridge salt reserve."
Woodbridge DPW drivers manned the vehicles with drivers from
Edison to direct the trucks on the routes.
"Woodbridge trucks were equipped with handheld radios
so Edison supervisors could communicate with the vehicles," Hagerty said,
adding that Edison did open its salt yard to supply trucks with additional
salt.
Under mutual aid provisions, Edison will cover any costs
incurred by Woodbridge, Hagerty said.
Piscataway Mayor Brian Wahler said Friday that he reached
out to Lankey and council members to ask if they will need any assistance this
weekend.
"We'll try to help out as much as we can," Wahler
said.
Wahler said that some heavy machinery can take months to
replace.