Fire damages Ontario packing firm
By Ronald Bond - Argus Observer
Sunday, July 22, 2007 12:07 AM PDT
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| Numerous onion crates and pallets went up in flames during Friday night’s fire at a Baker Packing Company lot in Ontario. Crews worked into the early morning protecting several nearby buildings from the blaze. No injuries were reported. |
Ontario - More than 50 firefighters from seven different agencies in the western Treasure Valley battled a blaze that erupted late Friday night at an Ontario packing firm.
Firefighters responded to Baker Packing Company, Southeast Ninth Avenue, just after 11 p.m. Friday to find fire devouring onion bins, pallets, trailers and machinery in a storage lot/filling station area. The blaze also damaged a partially constructed onion shed.
Several thousand onion bins and pallets were destroyed in the fire, according to the Ontario Fire & Rescue Department.
Crews evacuated the nearby Sierra Vista Apartments and McDaniel Mobile Manor trailer park and spent the next several hours trying to protect those structures while the fire raged. Ashes from the fire also engulfed cheat grass across the street from the company, but that fire was put out shortly after it started.
Engines remained on the scene until about 5 a.m. Saturday, and Saturday afternoon, ground fire crews were still at the scene.
A preliminary estimate from the Ontario Fire & Rescue Department listed about 12,000 onion bins, 14,000 pallets, two forklifts, two tractors, three or four semi-trailers and about seven acres of cheat grass burned in the blaze.
However, no structures in either the apartment complex or the trailer park were damaged, and no injuries have been reported.
Baker Packing Company co-owner Jerry Baker said Saturday morning he did not know what the damage or repair estimate would be, but said the hardest part will be replacing the crates and pallets destroyed in the fire.
“It’s a big hassle, and just a lot of work,” he said. “A lot of work in a short time frame. This is 20 or 25 percent of our total boxes.”
No probable cause for the blaze has been released yet.
However, Baker said part of the fence on the east side of the lot was cut open. Baker also said fire officials believe the blaze started in the middle of the lot.
“We have not eliminated the possibility that it’s arson,” Ontario Fire Chief Terry Mairs said Saturday.
The investigation into the cause of the fire will begin Monday, Mairs said.
TO INFOHOMO wrote on Jul 9, 2009 1:51 PM: