CNN
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A fire that started Tuesday afternoon at a recycling plant in the eastern Indiana city of Richmond was emitting toxic smoke and has forced evacuation orders for about 2,000 people – and it is expected to burn for days, officials said.
Plastics were among the items burning at the plant, and the smoke – a thick, black column rose from the site Tuesday – is “definitely toxic,” Indiana State Fire Marshal Steve Jones said in a news briefing.
“There is a host of different chemicals that plastics give off when they’re on fire, and it’s concerning and we want to make for sure we give people heads-up on an evacuation,” Jones said Tuesday evening, adding he expects the fire to burn for days.
Firefighters responded to the facility Tuesday to find a semi-trailer behind one of the plant’s building engulfed in flames, Richmond Fire Chief Tim Brown said. The trailer was loaded with an “unknown type of plastics,” and the fire spread to other piles of plastics around the trailer and eventually to the building, Brown said.
Details about what started the fire at the semi-trailer weren’t immediately available.
An evacuation order was put in place for residents within a half-mile of the fire, but authorities could change the order if the direction of the wind shifts, Jones said. Residents outside of the evacuation zone but downwind of it – to the east and northeast – were being encouraged to shelter in place and bring pets inside.
“We do not expect the evacuation order to be lifted tonight,” Richmond Mayor Dave Snow said Tuesday. “A bus will remain in place if needed and shelters are ready to accept citizens from the area.”
The evacuation order affected about 2,000 residents, the Wayne County emergency management agency told CNN.
One firefighter was injured after falling and hurting his ankle, and has since been treated and released from a hospital, Brown said.
No other injuries were reported. Everyone who was said to be working at the building when crews responding to the scene have been accounted for, Brown said.
“It’s a big enough fire that it’s just not gonna be tonight. It’s going to burn a while,” Jones said.
The Environmental Protection Agency and the Indiana Department of Environmental Management were on site “evaluating any potential hazards resulting from the fire,” Snow said in a Facebook post.
Firefighters have had trouble getting access to the facility, with piles of plastic blocking access roads, Brown said. “It creates quite a challenge because we only have access to one side of the building,” he added.
“Once the fire got out of control, it darkened down on us, (and) we backed out real quick and then went into defensive mode,” Brown said.
The flames spread to several buildings at the site, but crews managed to stop the fire’s spread before it could jump into residential areas, Brown said.
“It’s probably the largest fire I’ve seen in my career,” Brown said.