CLEANUP OF
DIESEL FUEL CONTINUES IN DES MOINES RIVER
MEDIA CONTACT:
Ted Petersen at 515-725-0274 or [log in to unmask].
DES MOINES –
The focus of cleanup work to contain a spill of red diesel fuel from the Iowa
Events Center complex has narrowed to two sandbars in downtown Des Moines.
Early efforts
centered on installing absorbent booms across the river Oct. 18, the day of the
spill’s discovery. Haz-Mat Response out of Omaha and Kansas City installed two
booms near the Southeast 14th Street and U.S. Highway 65 bridges to catch any
fuel drifting downstream. The booms at U.S. Highway 65 were removed
Tuesday.
Although they
recovered some fuel at the Southeast 14th Street Bridge, much of the fuel may
have stopped at two sandbars in downtown Des Moines. Instead of floating on down
river, the fuel particles collected on the sandbar north and east of the Grand
Avenue Bridge.
Any fuel not
caught there travelled further downstream with much of it ending up on a sandbar
south of the Martin Luther King Jr. bridge crossing.
Haz-Mat
Response placed booms around both sandbars. They are working at each site using
river water to blast the fuel out of the sand so they can recover it. Sunny days
on Tuesday and Wednesday and turbulence in the water from the low head dams will
also help break down the fuel.
The DNR will
meet with Haz-Mat Response Thursday to review progress and determine if further
cleanup is needed.
An estimated
2,500 gallons of diesel fuel flowed down a roof drain from a standby generator
located on the roof of Hy-Vee Hall. The fuel was discovered in the river about
6:30 a.m. Oct. 18 after it flowed into a storm drain that led to the river.
Cleanup of the drains is complete.
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