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Foyle dwellers take cover as tyre inferno rages 06.10.09

by Linda McGrory

HOMEOWNERS along the Foyle from Muff to Quigley's Point were yesterday warned to take cover as thick black smoke was expected to be carried on the wind from a major fire at a tyre depot across the lough in Campsie, Co Derry.
Donegal County Council yesterday received notification from the Northern Ireland Fire Service that smoke arising from the overnight fire involving 50,000 old tyres, was predicted to blow over parts of Inishowen as the wind changed.
"Members of the public in the (Muff to Quigley's Point area) are advised to take due care especially those with breathing or chest difficulties and young children. The public are advised to keep windows and doors closed until the smoke has dispersed," said Donegal County Council waste awareness officer Suzanne Tinney.
The Fire Service in the North is investigating the possibility that the blaze, involving up to 50,000 tyres on a one-acre site, may have been started deliberately. The fire broke out at Campsie Industrial Estate around 10pm on Sunday. People living in the Campsie and Eglinton areas were urged to keep windows and doors closed against the smoke. As the morning progressed, the smoke blew due east along the Lough Foyle coast and could be seen from as far away as Moville.
Sixteen fire tenders including 70 personnel from across Northern Ireland and Donegal battled the blaze overnight and well into Monday, pouring thousands of gallons of water on the blaze to extinguish the flames. The fire was finally brought under control before lunchtime but it is believed it will not fully extinguish until later today. The NI Fire Service will now have to bring in specialist equipment to quarry through the layers of debris to find any smouldering material that could reignite.
Police in Derry are appealing to anyone who witnessed any suspicious activity in the area to come forward. Local councillor Jim McKeever who is a member of the Northern Ireland Fire Authority praised the hard work of all the fire crews who attended the scene. He said he would be seeking an examination of the regulations governing the storage of old tyres and similar waste, to see what kind of controls and licensing arrangements are in place.
"I will be seeking the advice of our Council solicitor, engineer and environmental officers to determine what measures can be put in place to ensure that these types of compounds are strictly controlled and closely monitored.
"These fires not only take up a lot of emergency services resources that could be better used elsewhere but they also create environmental dangers and cleanup problems, " said Cllr McKeever.

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