The #1 web site for Information on tire fire owners


   Tracy, Ca 
   8-08-1998
  Westley, Ca 
   9-22-1999
    EDWARD  J 
        FILBIN
  Home Page

  FILBIN, EDWARD J 

   6113 MC CRACKEN RD  WESTLEY, CA 95387

 1)MARY  has a little LAMB FARM  data record

view of tire fire/grass fire from about 4 miles out.

Doc Nbr           /   Date            /    Business Name:             
 1990-0000188- / 24-JAN-1990 /  MARYS LAMB FARM 
 Address    Mailing Address:  6113 MC CRACKEN     WESTLEY, CA 95387 
                                                                                             
                                 Owner 
                                       FILBIN, EDWARD J 
                                                                  6113 MC CRACKEN RD
                                                                  WESTLEY, CA 95387
                                 Owner 
                                       FILBIN, MARY ETTA 
                                                                  6113 MC CRACKEN RD
                                                                  WESTLEY, CA 95387
 
 
Seven Million Tires Ablaze in California

Seven Million Tires Ablaze in California

MODESTO, California, September 23, 1999 (ENS) - An enormous tire fire is burning in Stanislaus County 20 miles west of Modesto. Seven million tires covering 35 acres are ablaze sending a thick cloud of black smoke straight up about 3,000 feet into the air.

Emergency crews from the West Stanislaus Fire Protection District responded within moments of the initial 911 call early Wednesday morning but have been unable to extinguish the inferno because they cannot maneuver the fire engines close enough.

The intense blaze was started when lightning struck a metal ramp used to move the tires, according to an employee of the company that owns the tires, Cal-Neva Ranch Company, LLC.

Sheriff's deputy Tammy Drew, a spokesperson for the Stanislaus County Emergency Operations Center, said, "I was within 300 feet of it. Bursts of flame were spinning up through the column of smoke. The fire engines could not get in to fight it."

Crews isolated about 20 percent of the burning tires with bulldozers, and a helicopter dropped water on this smaller fire until it was extinguished. The remaining 80 percent is being kept from spreading to the surrounding grasslands with backburns and firebreaks, Drew said.

It is not expected to spread to the tire burning plant operated by the UAE Energy Operations Corp. on the same property. The smoke from the fire continues to dissipate and has not threatened any neighboring communities such as the small town of Westley two miles away.

Brandy Nikaido, spokesperson for San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control Board said their monitoring stations are not picking up much of a difference in the particulate matter levels since the fire began.

The fire is burning so hot it goes straight upwards and is dispersed in other locations due to the light and variable winds. "Controlling it like putting a leash on Mother Nature," Nikaido said.

With assistance from the state, Stanislaus County has established temporary air monitoring stations near Westley and Patterson to provide early warning of potential problems. There are no immediate plans for evacuation unless there are dramatic changes in the wind direction forcing smoke and ash to low levels toward neighboring communities.

A health advisory for Stanislaus County remains in effect. People with lung disease or asthma, heart problems or other respiratory conditions are advised to remain indoors if smoke or haze is present.

The town of Tracy, California, about 15 miles from the burning tire pile, had to deal with a similar fire, called the Royster fire, last summer. A report on that fire presented in October 1998 to the state Waste Tire Working Group said almost five million pounds of toxins, including hundreds of thousands of pounds of cancer causing agents were released.

Reese-Chambers, an environmental consulting firm which wrote the report, concluded the Royster fire released an estimated 323,000 pounds of benzene into the air. Benzene is a known carcinogen that also is believed to cause birth defects.

At eight million tires, the Royster fire was slightly larger than the current fire. It was never completely extinguished and is still smoldering today, almost a year later, according to Drew.

It is possible this one would continue to smolder indefinitely, Drew speculated.

In a chronological history of how seven million tires came to be in the pile blazing today, the "Modesto Bee" newspaper said the tires have been collected by the pile's owner Ed Filbin since the 1950s.

An ongoing struggle with the state of California over the tire pile began with legal action against Filbin in 1987 and continued until on August 5, when the state waste board again ordered Filbin to clean up the pile or face $10,000-a-day fines. On September 7, the board rejected his plea for a 30 day stay of the order. On September 22, lightning struck the Filbin pile.

The historical account is online at: http://www.modbee.com/metro/story/0,1113,104393,00.html

woops , sorrry , the modesto bee dont want YOU acccess OUR history ..$$$$
check here ,,,, indymedia tire fire site


 


 
Edward Filbin update 2-2002 , still not in jail.


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