From the Yakima Herald-Republic Online News.


Posted on Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Grandview french fry plant destroyed in fire


GRANDVIEW -- A major fire has been contained within a frozen food plant in downtown Grandview, but the building is a total loss, according to firefighters at the scene.

Firefighters from Hanford, Grandview, Yakima, Toppenish and Sunnyside responded to the 9-1-1 call about 9 a.m. The building is located at 206 Avenue A, across from Grandview City Hall.

About 140 workers were evacuated from Wild River Foods, which makes frozen french fries. There were no reports of injuries.

Caterino Macias, 42, operates the bagging machine at the end of the processing line, and was in the plant when the fire began.

"I heard a noise. I didn't see what the problem was, then the alarms began going off and everybody ran out," Macias said. 

Incident commanders said the fire started in an electrical panel in the middle of the two-story masonry building, and a spark caused the fire.

Ken Aker, who works at nearby Kenyon Cold Storage, said he saw flames in the plant's engine room, which spread rapidly to the north and to the rest of the building. 

In addition to the fire engines, three aerial trucks were sent from Yakima, Toppenish and Hanford. Firefighters used the large boom trucks to spray water onto the flames from high up in the air, but the roof collapsed and the 100,000-square-foot plant was destroyed.

 Wild River Foods opened about 18 months ago, when the plant was purchased by OB2.

This morning's fire comes a day after firefighters responded to another fire just a block away at 125 Division St. KNDO reported that an early morning fire destroyed Su Mercado market. About 1 a.m. Monday, crews from stations in the Lower Valley reponded to the call, and it took about three hours to extinguish the fire, KNDO reported.

 -- David Lester

Grandview Fire Department incident commander Dave Smith directs traffic by phone Tuesday as the Wild River Foods potato processing plant burns.
ROSS COURTNEY/Yakima Herald-Republic
Grandview Fire Department incident commander Dave Smith directs traffic by phone Tuesday as the Wild River Foods potato processing plant burns.
ROSS COURTNEY/Yakima Herald-Republic
A Sunnyside firefighter aims a water stream toward flames at the roof Tuesday as Grandview's Wild River Foods potato processing plant burns.
ROSS COURTNEY/Yakima Herald-Republic A Sunnyside firefighter aims a water stream toward flames at the roof Tuesday as Grandview's Wild River Foods potato processing plant burns.
ROSS COURTNEY/Yakima Herald-Republic
A truck full of potatoes waits idle Tuesday as the Wild River Foods potato processing plant burns.
ROSS COURTNEY/Yakima Herald-Republic A truck full of potatoes waits idle Tuesday as the Wild River Foods potato processing plant burns.
ROSS COURTNEY/Yakima Herald-Republic
Smoke towers over the city of Grandview as the Wild River Foods potato processing plant burns downtown Tuesday.
ROSS COURTNEY/Yakima Herald-Republic Smoke towers over the city of Grandview as the Wild River Foods potato processing plant burns downtown Tuesday.
Firefighters battle the blaze which destroyed Wild River Foods plant in Grandview on July 1, 2008.
ROSS COURTNEY/Yakima Herald-Republic
Firefighters battle the blaze which destroyed Wild River Foods plant in Grandview on July 1, 2008.
Firefighters battle a blaze which destroyed Wild River Foods in Grandview on July 1, 2008. No one was hurt in the fire which started in an electrical panel.
ROSS COURTNEY/Yakima Herald-Republic
Firefighters battle a blaze which destroyed Wild River Foods in Grandview on July 1, 2008. No one was hurt in the fire which started in an electrical panel.

Watch the Wild River Foods fire