Tuesday, 19 Nov 2024

Firefighters Battle Blazes and Cold at Marcal Paper Factory and Newark Airport

For decades, the sign atop the Marcal Paper Mills plant had been a landmark for New Jersey drivers, its red neon light a beacon to weary travelers that told them how close they were to home.

But on Wednesday night, roads near the iconic sign in Elmwood Park were illuminated by something else: a raging blaze that felled the sign and consumed the 1940s building that supported it.

The conflagration was one of three major fires that area firefighters battled amid frigid temperatures and harsh, blustering winds brought on by a polar vortex.

At Newark Liberty International Airport, about 30 minutes south of Elmwood Park, more than a dozen cars caught fire Thursday morning on the rooftop of a parking garage, sending a huge plume of smoke into the air.

In New York, firefighters were at the scene of a five-alarm fire hours after it broke out at 3:45 a.m. Thursday at a commercial building near the boundary of the Bedford-Stuyvesant and Bushwick neighborhoods in Brooklyn.

“These were very challenging conditions for our firefighters,” the Fire Department of New York’s acting chief of department, John Sudnik, said of the Brooklyn blaze. “However we are well-prepared.”

No injuries were reported at any of the three fires, officials said. The causes of all three fires were still under investigation.

Elmwood Park, N.J.: A paper plant in flames

By Thursday morning, ice had covered some of the ruins of buildings destroyed when the 45,000-square-foot Marcal warehouse caught fire the night before.

Smoke continued to rise from the site as firefighters worked to control the flames and hot spots that remained.

Elmwood Park residents and people traveling nearby said they could see the smoke from miles away. Courtney Gilmore, a 30-year-old Elmwood Park resident, said she could see the smoke as she commuted home Wednesday night.

While driving through the area, Ms. Gilmore said her eyes started to burn, and she had trouble breathing. Even with her car’s windows closed, the acrid smell “was awful,” she said.

The Marcal plant was built as part of a manufacturing business started in 1932 by Nicholas Marcalus, who came to the United States from Sicily, according to his obituary published in The New York Times in 1979.

The plant continued to operate, and the warehouse held large paper rolls that were used to make paper towels, toilet paper and tissues.

When the fire broke out on Wednesday afternoon, nearly 200 employees were working at the mill, Rob Baron, the president and chief executive of Soundview Paper Company, which now runs the Marcal plant, said in a statement. None of those employees were injured.

“The full extent of the damage to our facility is not yet known, but we know the impact will be incalculable to the lives of our dedicated workers and our business as a whole,” Mr. Baron said.

In and around Elmwood Park, a community of nearly 20,000 people in northern New Jersey, the plant was known for providing working class jobs. That loss would be felt by the region, State Senator Nellie Pou, who represents the area, said.

“As the only paper plant of its kind in the region, Marcal was not only the economic lifeblood of the surrounding communities, it was an icon for North Jersey,” Ms. Pou said.

So, too, would be the absence of the sign, a symbol of Elmwood Park to drivers on Interstate 80.

“When you’re little, when you’re a kid, you don’t know directions,” Ms. Gilmore said. “But you know the sign.”

New Jersey’s governor, Philip D. Murphy, said on Twitter that he would visit the scene to meet with local officials and emergency responders.

Newark: Cars catch fire at a garage

Travelers coming and going from the Newark airport were greeted by a thick cloud of smoke billowing from the top level of a parking garage on Thursday morning.

Seventeen cars were damaged or destroyed when a fire broke out around 6:40 a.m. on the rooftop of a parking deck at the airport’s Terminal C, according to Steve Coleman, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates the airport.

Video from television news helicopters showed firefighters trying to extinguish the flames, but the fire did not appear to spread.

The fire was mostly under control by 7:40 a.m., Mr. Coleman said, but emergency responders from the Newark Fire Department were still at the parking garage fighting hot spots.

The fire did not cause any airport delays, Mr. Coleman said. The parking deck at Terminal C, which exclusively serves travelers flying on United Airlines, was closed.

Brooklyn: A five-alarm warehouse fire

Temperatures were close to zero when firefighters got the call around 3:45 a.m. Thursday about a fire at a Brooklyn warehouse.

Given the weather, firefighters tried to fight the flames from inside the building, Fire Department officials said. But they were later pulled from the building for safety reasons, forcing them outside in the bitter cold.

Nearly 200 firefighters and emergency medical personnel responded to the blaze, the Fire Department said.

Buses were brought in to help keep firefighters warm, ABC 7 reported.

The fire was under control by 10:30 a.m. Photos posted on Twitter by the Fire Department showed icicles hanging off fire trucks and hydrants that were being used to get the fire under control.

The Fire Department said it anticipated that firefighters would remain at the site of the building for much of the day on Thursday.

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