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Cause of Delano Bay
hay fire a mystery
Hay business owner to rebuild
By Danna Webster
KP News
A fire near Delano Bay on June 28
destroyed a truck used by a local businessman to haul
and sell hay. Weeks of active investigation into the
fire are complicated by inconclusive evidence. The fire,
which broke out while the truck was parked overnight,
was categorized as suspicious.
A hazmat team hired due to fuel contamination
works on the
site of a blaze that destroyed a fully-fueled
truck used for a
hay business.
Photo by Danna Webster |
A dozer used to help extinguish the fire, which started
during the night.
Photo by Danna Webster |
Property owner Sharon Moore was
awakened by her blind Australian shepherd, Aussie, about
2 a.m. “My blind dog woke me up or the whole damn place
would have burned down,” Moore said. “He may not be able
to see but he can smell and hear. As soon as I raised
out of bed, I could see the hay load on fire but I
couldn’t see the truck.”
Moore made her first of two 911
calls immediately. She says that by the time the fire
trucks arrived, it was too hot to get close to the
truck. According to Moore, the loss included 35 tons of
hay, two trailers, four elevators, three outbuildings
and a 1999 Kenworth truck. “Nothing left except the
smoke stack and part of the grill,” she said.
In a press release, Fire District
16 Division Chief Guy Allen wrote, “With concern for the
power lines down in the driveway, firefighters used the
deck gun on the fire engine to initially knock down the
flames. As more firefighters arrived, hand lines were
set up around the structures and the hay trailers to
contain the fire. The estimated dollar loss is roughly
$120,000, including the truck and trailers, hay and the
two buildings.”
According to Allen, the truck
owner, Joe Leitz, informed firefighters he had about 200
gallons of diesel in his fuel tanks because he had
filled them the night before. The hazmat response unit
of NRC-Environmental Services was hired to clean up the
diesel spill.
The fire is under investigation by
county fire marshals, insurance and law enforcement
officials. Investigators have labeled the fire as
suspicious but they disagree about its origin. Some
evidence supports that the fire started in the engine of
the truck, and other evidence finds that the fire
started at the rear of the hay load.
The fire, originally called suspicious, was
likely electrical,
according to the county fire marshal.
Photo by Danna Webster |
NRC Environmental Services was hired to come on
site
even as the fire was still smoldering.
Photo by Danna Webster |
Pierce County Deputy Fire Marshall
Mike Patti has been at the front of the active
investigation. “There are a lot of things I need to rule
out,” Patti said. “I’m leaning toward a faulty
electrical system based on the burn patterns, either a
battery or electrical system problem.” At press time, a
report was expected in a few days, but the case remains
open pending additional information.
“I’m calling it electrical,” Patti
says. “The insurance company was calling it arson. My
finding is the one that counts. I have the final say. If
they want to call it arson, then the proof is on them.”
While the investigation is ongoing,
the costs to rebuild the hay business have fallen on
Leitz. According to Moore, Leitz immediately began
working on an older truck to get it road worthy and
ready for a haul to Yakima for hay loads. “I put a motor
in Old Blue a couple of years ago and parked her for a
spare,” Leitz said. On his first trip to Yakima after
the fire, “she did have a little breakdown,” he said,
“but stayed up and going.” He brought back 25 tons of
hay and was ready to sell on July 14 at his usual corner
in the O’Callahan’s parking lot in Key Center.
Leitz is a second-generation hay
business owner. His father originated Leitz Livestock
“east of the mountains” in the ‘40s. They trucked hay to
the dairies on the west side from Sequim to the Key
Peninsula. Leitz kept the company name, though he’s
locally known to some people as “the Hay Guy.”
About four years ago, he moved to
the Key Peninsula. “I was just down here looking for a
change away from Yakima. I drove down here one day,
brought in a load of hay downtown and sold it,” he said.
“I started talking to Sharon, who introduced herself;
and then I knew who she was.” Moore’s stepfather and
Leitz’s father were both in the hay business and were
good friends. The rest is history, as the saying goes.
Leitz rented Moore’s barn and began parking his trucks
on the Delano Road property, returning it to a hay
business enterprise.
“I love it here on the Key
Peninsula,” Leitz said. “There isn’t a better place in
the world to live. So many good people. People I don’t
even know, and my customers, stop by and want to know if
I need anything. I had one guy offer to punch a driveway
for me up his road and let me park my trucks up there.
Greg (Calahan), the bar owner, he’s the best and that’s
the kind of people we need out here.”
Undaunted by the destruction of her
outbuildings and by the inconveniences caused by the
fire that took out the electricity and waterline to her
house, Moore said they plan to rebuild.
“We are here to stay,” Leitz said.
“It’s gonna be a good summer, I think; unless something
else happens… It’s hard to put somebody down when
they’re tough.”
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