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Dateline: February
23,
2006
Fire
burns grass off face of Greenbelt Dam
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
A cutting torch is
being blamed for a fire that burned the grass off the Greenbelt Dam last
Thursday.
Sources say a workman
with the crew in charge of dismantling the old bridge below the dam on
State Highway 70 caused sparks that ignited the dry grass. Flames spread
up the face of the dam, and a north wind drove the fire to the south. The
blaze also jumped the highway at one point.
Clarendon and
Howardwick firemen worked together for five to six hours to contain the
fire, according to Clarendon First Fire Chief Jeremy Powell.
Greenbelt Water
Authority General Manager Bobbie Kidd said the only way to get the blaze
under control was to set another fire on the north end of the dam.
“You can’t drive
a fire truck up that steep slope,” Kidd said.
Officials were also
concerned that fire-fighting equipment might damage the sprinkler system
on the dam.
Kidd said a dollar
estimate has not been set for the damage from last week’s fire, and
it’s unknown whether the heat harmed any portion of the sprinkler
system. For now, the water authority is hoping to get the grass
reestablished to prevent damage to the dam itself.
“If we get a big
rain without grass on it, we could get a wash in the dam and have to
repair it,” Kidd said. “We’ll probably start watering it to prevent
that.”
Powell said the fire
burned an estimated 70 acres.
With still no
appreciable precipitation, a countywide burn ban remains in effect in
Donley County.
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