by Staff Sgt. Benjamin W. Stratton
92nd Air Refueling Wing Public Affairs
9/15/2014 - LIBERTY LAKE, Wash. -- A
tanker truck leaking a hazardous chemical prompted emergency responders
to shut down Interstate 90 near the Washington-Idaho state line Sept.
14 garnering regional response including Fairchild Air Force Base
firefighters.
"We arrived on scene within 30 minutes of receiving the call," said
Bryant Benitez, a 92nd Civil Engineer Squadron fire department driver
and operator. "While Spokane has their own hazardous materials team,
they asked for assistance and we were happy to lend a hand by helping
mitigate the situation, solve the issue and support with decontamination
equipment and personnel."
Four Fairchild firefighters, one technician and a variety of support
staff as well as the base's mobile decontamination and rehabilitation
unit joined two dozen other firefighters, trucks and equipment from
Spokane regional fire districts in response to the incident.
The leaking truck was parked at the Washington State Patrol weigh
station and Port of Entry just east of Liberty Lake after the smell was
reported by a fellow motorist following behind who noticed a "peculiar
smell" emanating from the truck.
"A valve on the truck began malfunctioning leading to the vapor leak,"
said Lt. D.J. Hill, the Spokane City HAZMAT coordinator and Spokane Fire
Department firefighter.
The Florida-based truck carried 7,000 gallons of anhydrous
trimethylamine, a flammable substance used in making solvents, animal
feed supplements and products consumed by the paper, oil and gas
industries.
Such a substance required HAZMAT crews on scene to use extreme caution
limiting their time on site. The crews had to go into the spill zone
seven times before they could successfully contain the substance and
have confidence the area and air were safe. Only about a gallon of the
substance leaked, but even that small amount can be extremely dangerous
as the chemical is extremely flammable.
"This multi-jurisdiction response would not have been possible without
Fairchild's support," Hill said. "Some days, like today, we don't have a
complete HAZMAT team on hand, so it's great we have such a powerful
working relationship with Fairchild's emergency responders. While it may
be the first time we've integrated like this, it certainly doesn't feel
that way."
Echoing Hill's admiration, Benitez explained how the feeling is mutual.
"The base has always had amazing community support," Benitez said. "We care about them just as much as they care about us."
According to Idaho State Police, I-90 reopened Monday morning after
Washington and Idaho state officials cleared the Northwest's main
throughway for public transit.
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
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