Chattanooga Times Free Press

Up to 5,200 gallons of fuel spilled into Ocoee

Cleanup underway in Polk County

- BY BEN BENTON AND MARK PACE STAFF WRITERS

OCOEE, Tenn. — Up to 5,200 gallons of fuel spilled into the Ocoee River on Tuesday and Wednesday after a tanker truck drove off the road, down an embankment and into the river. The driver of the truck lost control while traveling on the winding Highway 64 in Polk County, flipping the semitracto­r-trailer onto its right side and spilling the majority of the 8,000 gallons of fuel it was carrying.

The accident occurred early Tuesday evening when the driver, Glenn Morris of Hixson, Tennessee, lost control while driving near mile marker 12.5. His truck, owned by Pilot Mountain, North Carolina-based Petroleum Transport Co. Inc., plummeted 40 feet down an embankment and rolled into the river, causing Highway 64 to be closed.

Morris sustained minor injuries, according to officials, and was taken to a hospital by family members.

The next priority became containing the fuel.

Booms — devices that help contain hazardous materials spills — were deployed near the tanker truck and downstream in an effort to keep spilled fuel from spreading, Polk County Emergency Management Agency Director Steve Lofty said. Hamilton County crews responded Tuesday to the scene to help with that effort, he said. Crews made an attempt to right the tanker Tuesday night but couldn’t do it while it was full.

Early Wednesday, two divers looked for the leaks that were allowing diesel fuel and gasoline to slowly seep out of the tanker into the river. Officials with the Environmen­tal Protection Agency estimate that up to 5,000 gallons of diesel fuel and up to 200 gallons of gasoline leaked from the tanker.

Officials set up booms as far as 2 miles downstream to contain the spilled fuel. An environmen­tal cleanup group and state and federal officials worked Wednesday to remove it from the water.

“TDEC is on site coordinati­ng with [the Environmen­tal Protection Agency] and local officials on sampling requests, water quality monitoring … as needed,” said Kim Schofinski, spokeswoma­n for the Tennessee Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on.

The United States Department of the Interior and a threatened and endangered species consultant have been asked to inspect the scene, according to a release from EPA spokesman Jason McDonald. No wildlife deaths have been reported, but officials will conduct a more thorough assessment now that the truck has been removed and booms have been deployed. The Ocoee River contains numerous fish species including trout, crappie, catfish, sunfish and several species of bass, according to the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency.

Lofty said the smell of gasoline was “pungent” immediatel­y after the spill, and local residents who came to the scene Tuesday evening to lend a hand were asked to leave the area until the fumes dissipated. Polk County’s fire and rescue boat also was deployed to the scene.

Fuel that did not spill was off-loaded from the truck early Wednesday. The truck was successful­ly removed later in the afternoon.

Meanwhile, cleanup work continues.

Tennessee environmen­tal and emergency management officials were on the scene during the day Wednesday, Lofty said. Emergency responders from neighborin­g Bradley and McMinn counties also helped, he said.

With the highway closed most of Wednesday, Tennessee Department of Transporta­tion crews provided help with traffic, said spokeswoma­n Jennifer Flynn. Officials manned diversion points to direct traffic to alternate routes to get around the spill site via State Route 68, which crosses the mountains from Madisonvil­le to Ducktown.

The spill is not expected to have an impact on the recreation­al paddling schedule. The river does not flow on Tuesdays or Wednesdays.

Contact staff writer Ben Benton at bbenton@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6569. Follow him on Twitter @BenBenton or at www.facebook.com/ benbenton1.

Contact staff writer Mark Pace at mpace@timesfreep­ress.com or 423757-6659. Follow him on Twitter @themarkpac­e and on Facebook at Chatta nooga OutdoorsTF­P.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO / POLK COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE ?? A scuba diver and members of a cleanup crew survey the submerged tanker truck Wednesday at the Ocoee River crash site off of Highway 64 in Polk County.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO / POLK COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE A scuba diver and members of a cleanup crew survey the submerged tanker truck Wednesday at the Ocoee River crash site off of Highway 64 in Polk County.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ?? Workers reroute traffic away from the area where a tanker truck overturned into the Ocoee River in Polk County.
STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER Workers reroute traffic away from the area where a tanker truck overturned into the Ocoee River in Polk County.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States