Northwood re-opens to residents after evacuation
Published 10:39 am Friday, February 21, 2014
NORTHWOOD — Many questions remain unanswered after a chemical fire caused the evacuation of Northwood Thursday morning.
Worth County emergency personnel responded to a fire at the Northwood Ag Products fertilizer storage facility at the airport at about 7:45 a.m. There were several minor explosions, and a building was fully engulfed in flames, potentially causing sulfuric acid exposure. How the fire began is unclear.
Four people were treated at Mercy Medical Center in Mason City, according to a hospital spokeswoman. She did not know the extent of their injuries and asked that others seek treatment who were suffering from symptoms including vomiting, nausea or respiratory issues.
By 8:20 a.m., authorities had evacuated Highway 105 to the north of Northwood city limits and began evacuating Northwood’s nearly 2,000 residents to neighboring communities. The Worth County Sheriff’s Office said residents were allowed to return to their homes shortly after 3 p.m.
While some traveled to places such as Albert Lea for the day and night, many were evacuated to Kensett where authorities had set up evacuation centers.
At about 10 a.m., most downtown Northwood businesses appeared to be closed, with only a few cars parked on the streets. School buses traveled the streets carrying people, some of whom were wearing facemasks. Northwood-Kensett schools were already closed in anticipation of blizzard conditions.
Some of the few people on the streets in downtown Northwood were Antwan Martin, his wife and six children, driving around in their car trying to figure out where to go.
Martin said a man knocked on the door of his apartment at the Schoolside Apartments and told him to evacuate.
“We just moved here from Chicago,” he said. “We’ve never been through anything like this.”
After they went to Northwood’s Civic Center and found no one there, they headed to Kensett.
Volunteers and authorities set up a main evacuation center at the Kensett Community Center, and residents with pets were asked to go to Kensett City Hall. At about 10:30 a.m., there were about 200 people at the community center and about 25 at City Hall.
Steve O’Neil, Cerro Gordo County emergency management director, said the community center was reaching capacity, and he anticipated another shelter to be set up at the Lutheran church in Kensett. The American Red Cross was also called in to assist.
The National Weather Service issued a civil emergency message about the fire, calling it a “dangerous situation.”
The NWS said residents who did not have transportation could be transported to Kensett from the Sheriff’s Office at 1000 Central Ave. The Sheriff’s Office handled transportation for people who could not get to the Central Avenue.
Short-term effects of sulfuric acid exposure include irritation of the eyes, nose and throat, teeth erosion and difficulty breathing. Long-term exposure may cause irritation of the skin and chronic inflammation of the nose, throat and bronchial tubes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The Worth County Sheriff’s Office has not yet released a press release about the incident.