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About The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 2018)
C3 THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, DECEMBER 21, 2018 Signs indicate a property has been searched for hazardous materials. Steve Dopp gets a report from a member of the hazmat team about what they found at a residence. A stream of metal melted from underneath a vehicle leaves behind a grim reminder of how hot the Camp Fire burned. Photos by Colin Murphey/The Daily Astorian A deer moves through a destroyed neighborhood in Paradise. Dopp: He has to seek out hazardous waste by going from house to house Continued from Page C1 “Many of us here were involved with the North Bay fi res that ran through Sonoma, Napa, Lake and Mendocino counties last year,” Calanog said. “What we are looking at here in the town of Paradise is likely to be twice as big, if not more than what we dealt with last year. It will take longer and cost more.” The Camp Fire has since been put out and the town of Paradise completely evac- uated . The only people left in the area are law enforce- ment, arborists removing dangerous trees, utility and aid workers, debris removal fi rms and construction crews. Besides twisted metal, chimneys, melted trash cans and mailboxes scattered along the ground, the fi re also left behind hazardous materials that now have to be cleaned up before people can return to the area or even think about rebuilding. Dangerous materials Enter Dopp and other contractors working with the EPA. Dozens of workers are now on the ground in Par- adise looking through the wreckage to determine where dangerous materials exist and how to dispose of them. Dopp, who lives in Asto- ria with his family and is the co-owner of Workers Tavern in Uniontown with his wife, Diana Kirk, was prohibited from talking publicly about his role due to contractual obligations between the EPA and the company he works for, Weston Solutions. And while Dopp has worked in disaster zones before, in Paradise his job is especially tricky. Before hazardous waste can be removed, it has to be found. The only way to do that is for teams to go house to house and sift through the wreckage. What they fi nd Read this book, and you’ll understand a lot about what makes Oregon Oregon. — Jackman Wilson, Editorial Page Editor, The Register-Guard Plants begin to spring from the blackened ground near a destroyed home in Paradise. has to be recorded and fed into a computer for analy- sis. So while hazmat special- ists carefully pick their way through what is left on the ground, Dopp plugs informa- tion about what they are fi nd- ing into a tablet computer. Hazardous debris is every- where, covered in a layer of delicate, white ash like freshly fallen snow. Propane canisters, cans of paint, fi re- arms, ammunition, asbestos, gas tanks and other danger- ous materials litter the black- ened landscape. Calanog said it will take months to begin cleaning up Paradise. The effort will cost millions of dollars and include several distinct types of work, beginning with teams like the one Dopp is working alongside. “This is called phase one of the debris removal pro- cess,” Calanog said. “This is the fi rst work in the after- math of the fi re. Our teams are doing an assessment of the properties and remov- ing items like paint, solvents, cleaners, batteries and com- pressed gas cylinders. This fi rst phase is done in advance of phase two, which is the larger debris removal.” The information Dopp and other technicians are recording will be used to let county authorities know where the teams are, what properties have been cleared and what has been found, Calanog said. “What we are able to do is to start collecting data and report out at almost real time about the progress,” he said. “With this technology, we can report to the county and state down to each prop- erty what we have removed. We also have a lot of infor- mation from the county. So, we know the age of the home and that can be indicative at times of how much asbestos they are likely to encounter.” What remains EPA on-scene coordinator Bob Whittier said the initial assessment of the properties will provide important infor- mation to debris removal teams who will arrive in a few weeks. “There is also a health and safety aspect to the pre-screening,” Whittier said. “They are in there making sure there aren’t any inher- ent hazards before the suited guys can go in and remove materials.” So while the fi re may be out, there are still weeks of work left for people like Dopp, sifting through the ruins of thousands of structures. As teams clear proper- ties and evacuation orders are lifted, residents that sur- vived the fi re will begin to assess what remains. On most streets in Paradise, there is not much left. “Grit and Ink” tells a story that is very worthy of being told. — Kerry Tymchuk, Executive Director, Oregon Historical Society Small-town family business history at its best. —Richard Baker, U.S. Senate Historian Emeritus NOW AVAILABLE AT IN PRINT AND eBOOK FOR KINDLE Also available from local booksellers or call 800-621-2736 books.eomediagroup.com/grit-ink