Melted butter clogs historic canal and storm drains after dairy plant fire in Wisconsin

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Melted butter clogs historic canal and storm drains after dairy plant fire in Wisconsin
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A dairy plant caught fire in central Wisconsin on Monday night, sending the melted contents of a storage room full of butter flowing through the building, clogging a historic canal adjacent to the business and storm drains.

A dairy plant caught fire in central Wisconsin on Monday night, sending the melted contents of a storage room full of butter flowing through the building as it went up in flames, local authorities said. The runoff seeped into surrounding storm drains as well as a large canal adjacent to the business, which ultimately clogged the waterway despite crews' efforts to contain the spread, The blaze broke out at a dairy processing and packing plant owned by Associated Milk Producers Inc.

Officials determined that the fire began inside a room at the plant where butter was being stored, and the runoff occurred as a result of increasing heat throughout the building. The cause of the fire itself remains under investigation, the fire department said. No injuries were reported in connection with the incident.

Melted butter clogged a canal in central Wisconsin on Monday night, Jan. 2, after a fire broke out at a nearby dairy plant.After working to fight the fire for"multiple hours," firefighters from multiple area departments were able to contain and extinguish the blaze"before it could spread past the firewalls and throughout the building," the Portage Fire Department, emphasizing that"the butter runoff and heavy smoke slowed access to the structure.

A Hazmat team also responded to the blaze and"attempted to contain the runoff" flowing into the nearby storm sewers in addition to the. The canal, once used for commerce, is considered a historical landmark and plans for its restoration have been underway for years. "They placed boom and other absorbents to control the runoff," said the fire department, noting that the Department of Natural Resources would evaluate any damages to drains and waterways.

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