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Fire damages Main Street storage units
Oct 12, 2012 | 240490 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Durant firefighters use power tools to gain entry into a storage shed which was ablaze late Thursday.
Durant firefighters use power tools to gain entry into a storage shed which was ablaze late Thursday.
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Durant firefighters work to open metal doors at a storage shed while smoke billows over the top on Thursday.
Durant firefighters work to open metal doors at a storage shed while smoke billows over the top on Thursday.
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A wide view of the storage building which was significantly damaged by fire Thursday on East Main Street. Durant firefighters had to force open several individual units to fight the fire.
A wide view of the storage building which was significantly damaged by fire Thursday on East Main Street. Durant firefighters had to force open several individual units to fight the fire.
slideshow

A fire at a storage unit at 101 E. Main St. caused significant damage to the building Thursday night.

A caller reported smoke in the area of SE First and Main streets around 10:18 p.m. Upon arrival, Durant firefighters reported heavy smoke coming from the southeast corner of the multi-unit storage building.

Several DFD units responded to the scene, and firefighters used “tools to pry locks and open the doors of the storage units,” according to a fire department report. Four of the units received heavy fire damage, and all the units received smoke damage.

Crews spent more than two hours at the scene extinguishing the blaze, and the cause has yet to be determined.

In a separate incident, a portion of Highway 70 was closed east of Durant on Thursday evening after a reported ammonia leak at Potters Sausage.

Shortly after 7 p.m., Durant firefighters responded to the leak and found “a cloud coming over the building.” Employees told DFD personnel that the building was empty.

Maintenance personnel arrived and were able to fix the problem, which was a compressor shut-down causing a “pop off valve” to release the ammonia. DFD spent two and a half hours on the scene performing “hazardous materials leak control and containment,” according to a report.



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