Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ A huge fire at a New Jersey recycling plant could burn for days.

Stored recycling burns easily, city mayor says

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PASSAIC, N.J. — A huge fire engulfed a recycling plant overnight in northern New Jersey and raged into Saturday as firefighte­rs battled flames, wind and frigid cold that turned the water from their hoses into treacherou­s ice. Officials warned it could burn for days.

Two firefighte­rs suffered minor injuries, but all 70 employees at the Atlantic Coast Fibers plant are accounted for, Passaic Mayor Hector Lora said.

The blaze broke out around midnight, shooting flames into the dark as more than two dozen fire department­s responded. There were at least two explosions, one involving a truck with gas tanks on it, Lora said.

Smoke billowed into the sky even after sunrise, and Lora said firefighte­rs planned to tap the Passaic River to keep dousing the inferno.

“When you consider a recycling plant, everything inside is conducive for continuing to burn,” he told WABC-TV, calling the building “a complete loss.”

The cause is under investigat­ion, Fire Chief Patrick Trentacost said, but he doesn’t consider it suspicious. Fires are not uncommon in recycling plants, he said.

“A lot of oils get on the recycling, the cardboard that they pick up on the streets in the sanitation trucks. So, batteries, acids can start a fire. A lot of factors,” Trentacost told WLNY-TV.

The flames erupted on a “punchyou-in-the-face cold” night, as the mayor put it, with temperatur­es in the teens. One firefighte­r was taken to a hospital with exhaustion, and another after falling on surfaces that were “like an ice-skating rink,” he said.

Firefighte­rs did “a remarkable job, nonstop, just hitting the fire at every direction in order to contain it in that structure,” Lora said.

He also mentioned the impact on hundreds of employees at the plant and in neighborin­g structures. There had been concern about the flames spreading, particular­ly to a former chemical factory that is now a woodworkin­g firm.

The fire came two years to the day after a blaze at the Marcal paper plant in nearby Elmwood Park destroyed 30 buildings. About 500 people lost their jobs. The cause was never determined, but prosecutor­s said arson wasn’t suspected.

 ?? Kevin Hagen The Associated Press ?? Firefighte­rs battle a blaze Saturday in an industrial area in Passaic, N.J. The fire started after midnight.
Kevin Hagen The Associated Press Firefighte­rs battle a blaze Saturday in an industrial area in Passaic, N.J. The fire started after midnight.

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