Oakland

Fire crews extinguishing remaining metal burning at Oakland recycling facility

NBC Universal, Inc. A fire at a recycling facility in Oakland has been snuffed out, but health concerns are still smoldering. Robert Handa reports.

Firefighters on Thursday continued to squelch what's left of a fire at a Radius Recycling – formerly Schnitzer Steel Industries – facility in Oakland, a spokesman for the city's fire department said.

The fire broke out at about 5:30 p.m. Wednesday at the facility at 1101 Embarcadero West, sending up plumes of smoke affecting Oakland, Alameda and other cities in Alameda and Contra Costa counties.

Complaints came too from residents of Milpitas, which is south of Oakland in Santa Clara County. On Thursday, smoke was expected to drift north of the fire. 

"It's a massive pile of debris," said Oakland Fire Department spokesman Michael Hunt on Thursday morning.

Crews were using cranes to pull it apart so firefighters could douse anything still burning. The fire ignited in a light scrap pile that may have contained aluminum, tin or light iron/steel.

"We are working closely with the first responders to bring this situation to a safe conclusion," Radius Recycling spokesperson Danielle Gambogi said Thursday morning.

Firefighters contained the blaze to a single pile of debris by 6:30 p.m. Wednesday and Oakland crews, along with fireboats from Alameda and San Francisco brought it under control Wednesday night.

Firefighters and heavy equipment operators from Radius Recycling were pulling apart the debris pule at night and into the morning.

Crews on Thursday morning still had a lot to untangle, spraying water on it to prevent any small fires from spreading. But that was causing smoke.

Data from the Bay Area Air Quality Management District showed "elevated readings last night for fine particulate matter in East Bay, along the Bay as far south as Fremont," district spokesperson Erin DeMerritt said by email Thursday. "There were also elevated readings inland, in places like Moraga, Dublin and San Ramon along the 680 corridor."

The air district extended an air quality advisory initially issued Wednesday into Thursday and expected smoke to continue in the region for several more hours, DeMerritt said.

Crews worked overnight and Radius Recycling provided resources Thursday morning to finally extinguish the fire.

No one was injured and the cause is under investigation, Hunt said.

Air quality is not expected to exceed the national air quality health standard for the area and the air district is not issuing a Spare the Air Alert.

If people smell smoke, they should protect their health by staying inside with their windows and doors closed until the smoke subsides, air district officials said.

Residents should set their air conditioning units and car ventilation systems to re-circulate to prevent outside air from coming inside, air district officials added. The U.S. government's air quality index can be found at fire.airnow.gov.

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