Factory Fires in the US - I'm sure it's nothing, just food manufacturing plants catching on fire

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The Federal Aviation Administration reported that an unidentified small plane crashed within a mile of the runway of the Covington Municipal Airport.

Six tractor-trailers were damaged as a result of the crash.

Local officials declared in a press conference that there were no survivors of the crash; however, it remains unclear how many victims there are.

The National Transportation Safety Board is currently investigating the cause of the crash

There's one.

A quick rundown:


#1
Salinas, California


As the smoke settles near Taylor Farms, questions remain on the future of the business and the roughly 1,000 people employed at the Abbott Street facility.
There is little to nothing left of the processing facility due to fire and smoke damages caused by Wednesday night’s blaze, according to Deputy Fire Chief Sam Klemek.
“About 85% to 95% of the building is a total loss,” he said.

#2 Hermiston, Oregon



Multiple workers are hospitalized following an explosion at a food processing facility that has nearby residents on alert for possible evacuation.
The explosion occurred Tuesday evening at Shearer’s Foods in Hermiston, a city in agriculturally rich eastern Oregon. No deaths have been reported from the blast, but the extent of the damage to the plant and its future were not clear. City officials are concerned what the fire could mean for the community and local economy.

#3 Conway, New Hampshire


Neighbors banded together to support crews as they battled a fire in Conway for about 16 hours Monday night.
More than 12 departments and agencies worked together to put out the fire at East Conway Beef and Pork.

#4 San Juan, Texas



On March 31, 2022, a structure fire significantly damaged a large portion of the largest fresh onion packing facilities in South Texas.

#5 Jonesboro, Arkansas


“The situation at our Jonesboro factory is under control and we are looking into the cause of the fire,” a Nestle spokesperson said. “Thankfully, no employees were injured and all are safe. We appreciate the quick response of the Jonesboro Fire Department and emergency response teams. The factory will remain closed as we assess the damage and return the factory to full operation. We plan to continue to support our employees financially during this time.”
Nestle opened the plant in 2002 and in December 2020 the company unveiled plans to invest more than $100 million to expand the frozen foods plant, including the addition of 90,000 square feet and a new production line for Hot Pockets frozen sandwiches. In addition to Hot Pockets, Nestle makes products under the Stouffer’s, Lean Cuisine, DiGiorno, Tombstone and Sweet Earth brands at the plant.

#6 Mauston, Wisconsin


A portion of Mauston’s Wisconsin River Meats burnt down during an overnight fire Feb. 2-3, with the cause of the fire still under investigation.
“The old portion of the plant is a total loss,” Wisconsin River Meats said in a Fake-Fact-Checker Facebook post about the fire. “We humbly ask that you be patient and please give us some time to sort out the cause of the fire and for us to transition some of our business and invoicing to our warehouse.”

#7 Fayetteville, Illinois


Operating from what company officials referred to as the command center at Deli Star Corp.’s St. Louis Innovation Center, the Siegel family-led operations and executive team have spent the week scrambling to fulfill customers’ orders and work with local officials investigating a Jan. 11 fire that destroyed its 75,000-square-foot processing plant in Fayetteville, about 40 miles southeast of them.

#8 Belfast, Maine


Fire crews from several towns have been battling a fire at the Penobscot McCrum potato processing plant in Belfast. Crews were called to the scene at 28 Pierce Street around 3:30 a.m., according to Maine Department of Public Safety spokesperson Shannon Moss.

#9 Leoti, Kansas


A fire at a fertilizer company in western Kansas prompted evacuations Tuesday afternoon because hazardous materials were involved, officials said.
The Ford County Regional Hazardous Materials Team deployed to Leoti for the fire and was fighting the blaze and removing hazardous material, Wichita County Clerk Lynda Goodrich said.

#10 Claypool, Indiana




Louis Dreyfus Company (LDC) said on Wednesday a fire had broken out in a bag house at its Claypool, Indiana, soybean processing and biodiesel plant on Tuesday and the affected systems had been suspended.
No employees were injured and the fire was put out by 9:15 p.m. central time on Tuesday, LDC said in a statement. LDC’s website said soybean deliveries were suspended at the plant on Wednesday. LDC says Claypool is the largest fully integrated soybean processing and biodiesel plant in the United States.

#11 Winston-Salem, Carolina


An uncontrolled fire at a fertilizer plant in North Carolina forced thousands of people to evacuate as firefighters stood back Tuesday because of the danger of a large explosion.
Authorities drove through neighborhoods and knocked on doors asking residents to leave within a one-mile radius (1.6 km) of the Winston Weaver Company fertilizer plant on the north side of Winston-Salem, where the fire started Monday night. Overnight, bright orange flames and thick plumes of smoke could be seen shooting into the sky. No injuries were reported.

#12 Sunnyside, Washington


A smoldering pile of sulfur quickly became a raging chemical fire just after 1 p.m. Monday at Nutrien Ag Solutions, 1101 Midvale Road, Sunnyside Fire Chief Ken Anderson said.
The fire destroyed one storage building on the southeast corner of the fertilizer storage facility in the Port of Sunnyside and damaged others, but adjacent Nutrien buildings and storage tanks containing hazardous chemicals were spared, Anderson said Monday evening.

#13 Lecompte, Louisiana


A fire started at the Cargill-Nutrena feed mill in Lecompte, LA in the early hours of Thursday morning and burned for 12 hours, coverage by local television news station KALB said. An explosion reportedly occurred as firefighters were working the scene.

#14 Maricopa, Arizona


It’s a long road to recovery for Maricopa Food Pantry after a fire destroyed around 50,000 lb of food. The fire happened just 15 minutes after their food bank closed on Monday morning. Smoke was still coming from the rubble 24 hours later. “It had to be 40-50 feet in the air, just pure black smoke. It engulfed the entire neighborhood,” said Maricopa Food Pantry President Mike Connelly. “The heat we could feel down at the corner.”

#15 Dufur, Oregon


The headquarters of Azure Standard, the nation’s premier independent distributor of organic and healthy food, was destroyed by fire overnight. There were no injuries. The cause of the fire is unknown and under investigation. The loss of the facility and the impact on companywide operations is being assessed and expected to be limited and temporary. No other Azure Standard facilities were affected.

#16 Planfield, Indiana


Investigators from the ATF’s National Response Team began its on-scene investigation on Friday into the massive fire at a Walmart facility in Plainfield.
The team, led by Supervisor Christopher Forkner, is working with the Plainfield Fire Territory, Indiana State Fire Marshal’s Office and the Plainfield Police Department, according to a press release. ATF special agents from the Indianapolis Offices of the Columbus Field Division will also be assisting.

Of course it is not unusual for there to be fires at food industry facilities, and fire departments are accustomed to responding to such fires and putting them out.


But in many of these cases, we are talking about absolutely uncontrollable fires that seemed to erupt very suddenly.


And in many of these cases the firefighters that responded were not able to save the structures because the fires were so enormous.


My Musings:
You'll notice that this string of fires doesn't seem to matter to the MSM.

Some of them are apparently VERY suspicious.

Isn't it interesting that fertilizer plants, food processing plants, and stuff like that seem to all be being hit?

That's since the beginning of 2022, by the way.

But of course, it's not a story that the Jedi would tell you, would they?
 
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Thank God I have my freeze dried hamburger survival meals.

View attachment 3207071

Occam's Razor: the fires at these food production plants are due to new staff being hired and a lack of maintenance / parts due to the pandemic.
Occam's Razor #2. Nobody's flagging on this because these numbers aren't outside the norm for industrial fires within the time period and continental US.
 
Not to come in and deboonk all over the thread like a goddamn Redditfag, but as someone relatively experienced in the food processing racket, I'm not entirely convinced this is deliberately caused. And I'm definitely not convinced this would organically cause food shortages.

Food processing, from my experience, is generally a razor-thin margin type of profit which leads to heavy emphasis on production and speed. Shortcuts invariably happen; the time it takes to properly repair a machine might be three days but if the maintenance crew can get it jury-rigged and running in three hours the jury-rig more often than not will be used. Similarly, the thin margins also lead to workers being worked for longer hours and less pay, meaning hat you are ever attracting the greatest of workers. Sure, the supervisors, maintenance crews, and leads are going to be better, but even if they can tard-wrangle the typical grunt from fucking shit up, there will still be a lower ability on average due to aforementioned factors.

All that is to say that I'm not entirely convinced that this is due to malicious action or at least that this is entirely deliberate. It may be that some of this is deliberate, but when you consider that the worker shortage and poor economy is probably exacerbating all the already mentioned issues, I don't know if outside factors are needed to explain this.

And I'm absolutely not convinced this would cause food shortages or would lead naturally to a price hike. There are tens of thousands of food processing plants in this country, even if they started going up at twice the rate they were this year, it wouldn't even scratch a percent of food processing capacity in this country. If this ends up being blamed for a massive food cost hike, or bare shelves, it is bullshit of the smelliest kind. If that happens, it is a scapegoat for actual issues like inflation, and the oil price manipulation that has been going on.
 
That was in West, Texas. To clarify, a city in Texas called West. And yes, it was a goddamned media circus for well over a month.
You should go there if you get a chance. They're famous in Texas for their kolaches.
 
We're all forgetting that Gen Z has entered the work force. Safety doesn't matter, only trans representation matters.
I know this is mostly likely sarcastic, but in actual plants you're about as likely to see a tranny as you are a martian because the work is too hard and only pays marginally more than disability. Line workers do not give a shit about Diversity and Representation, and overwhelmingly supervisors end up getting draw from the usual grunt worker than being an outsider. Only entrypoint for wokeshit would be HR or an upper corporate office, and I've never seen anything beyond the rare "we don't discriminate here" deal.
 
Wasn't there a spate of poultry plant fires in the southern US in the 90's? All within months of each other?

No great conspiracy back then, either, just your usual uncaring corner-cutting bosses who were locking doors to prevent workers taking unauthorized breaks and decrepit grease-soaked equipment that would burn real good from spark-plug tier electrical arcs.


Anyway, Tim Pool is already breaking out in hives over it, so I'm sure it's a nothingburger.

LOL, burger..... food.......


Also, double LOL at pointing to potato chip and hot pockets as "key" food production..... that stuff is processed shit that the REAL food plants throw out as waste....
 
I know this is mostly likely sarcastic, but in actual plants you're about as likely to see a tranny as you are a martian because the work is too hard and only pays marginally more than disability. Line workers do not give a shit about Diversity and Representation, and overwhelmingly supervisors end up getting draw from the usual grunt worker than being an outsider. Only entrypoint for wokeshit would be HR or an upper corporate office, and I've never seen anything beyond the rare "we don't discriminate here" deal.
It was slightly sarcastic but the diversity push is also probably a factor. I work with a couple that are fucking terrible but they'll never get fired. I could very well imagine them not doing the job right and blowing something or someone up. You can only tard wrangle so much.
 
I know this is mostly likely sarcastic, but in actual plants you're about as likely to see a tranny as you are a martian because the work is too hard and only pays marginally more than disability. Line workers do not give a shit about Diversity and Representation, and overwhelmingly supervisors end up getting draw from the usual grunt worker than being an outsider. Only entrypoint for wokeshit would be HR or an upper corporate office, and I've never seen anything beyond the rare "we don't discriminate here" deal.
A little powerlevel here, but literally every single troon I know IRL* is an unemployed NEET, lives with parents, on welfare, and begs for money on social media. I can't think of a single normal, employed, successful troon whatsoever. I have a bunch of gay coworkers -- and I've known plenty of gay coworkers -- but troons are a special kind of mental that doesn't have the basic ability to make logical decisions. I'm no biologist, but anyone who's crazy enough to remove their genitals probably can't drive a forklift or operate any kind of machinery.

*A long time ago I mentioned in the Transgenderism Support thread that I once met a terrible impassible MtF tranny back in the 2000's at one of my jobs at a large retailer. Said tranny was a male Boomer who worked at the store for well over a decade before trooning out. This guy was an outlier as far as being an employed tranny, and it's someone I've only ever seen a handful of times -- thus I don't consider them a tranny that I know IRL. As for other real-life troons, I've seen several former classmates of mine randomly transition, and yes, they are all in fact junkies, NEETs, and other assorted pieces of trash.
 
A little powerlevel here, but literally every single troon I know IRL* is an unemployed NEET, lives with parents, on welfare, and begs for money on social media. I can't think of a single normal, employed, successful troon whatsoever. I have a bunch of gay coworkers -- and I've known plenty of gay coworkers -- but troons are a special kind of mental that doesn't have the basic ability to make logical decisions. I'm no biologist, but anyone who's crazy enough to remove their genitals probably can't drive a forklift or operate any kind of machinery.

*A long time ago I mentioned in the Transgenderism Support thread that I once met a terrible impassible MtF tranny back in the 2000's at one of my jobs at a large retailer. Said tranny was a male Boomer who worked at the store for well over a decade before trooning out. This guy was an outlier as far as being an employed tranny, and it's someone I've only ever seen a handful of times -- thus I don't consider them a tranny that I know IRL. As for other real-life troons, I've seen several former classmates of mine randomly transition, and yes, they are all in fact junkies, NEETs, and other assorted pieces of trash.
I’m still curious if there’s any such thing as the elusive “troon construction worker/trades”person””. I’m not talking about the soft handed fags who work in the office then drive their shiny clean “work” truck to the jobsite once a month to pretend they’re necessary to the project or the overpaid faggy “helpers” who follow around architects/engineers/PMs like lost puppies whose jobs consist of “taking notes while wearing every form of PPE imaginable”

I’m talking about: where’s the troon steelworkers? How come I don’t see any ftm Aidens working as concrete finishers or plumbers/pipefitters?
 
Not to come in and deboonk all over the thread like a goddamn Redditfag, but as someone relatively experienced in the food processing racket, I'm not entirely convinced this is deliberately caused. And I'm definitely not convinced this would organically cause food shortages.
You make some cogent and informed points and you're most likely correct.

But that's not nearly as fun as dooming and fingerpointing with the rest of my Kiwi brethren, so instead of agreeing with you and suggesting that we need to compare this to some sort of baseline of normal rates of fires in factories and chemical plants, I'll do this instead: Hey @Jet Fuel Johnny, we may not know who's behind this suspicious string of arsons, but you know who absolutely doesn't care either way? China! They've been stockpiling grain and wheat and fertilizer this whole time! And they ramped up that effort right around the time the fires started, probably. Hmmmmm...
 
It's Clownworld so my guess is...

Either Jews or Lizard people or Lizard People Jews.

Or maybe Obama.

No, wait, I'll bet Trump and Elon Musk are banding together and doing it.

No clue who's actually doing it, but we're moving pretty rapidly into the realm of "WTF" with all of this.

The fertilizer plant fires are interesting too with how little interest there is about it.

A few years back a fertilizer plant exploded in the Midwest and the news wouldn't shut the fuck up about it for weeks.

Now...

crickets.
I'll tell you who's burning down the factories.

That damned sasquatch!
 
but not so much the fertilizer plants. Tons and tons of volatile chemicals are involved in fertilizer manufacture, and ammonium nitrate, one of the most common nitrogen fertilizers, is insanely explosive under certain conditions. That's what caused the massive explosion in Beirut a few years back.
As somebody who might worked for the biggest chemical company in the world for some time, this cant happen in the west. we already done that and we learned from it.

, but I did work in oil refineries and chemical plants for a while, and you are 100% correct, 24/7 production, and regular maintenance checks on the each production unit. Downtime costs plants insane amounts of money. One refinery I worked at in Louisiana lost over a million dollars a day during plant turnarounds. No competently managed plant is going to shirk on routine maintenance to save money, because everyone knows that you're just setting yourself up to lose enormously more than whatever paltry amount you save up front.
you can also not just shut down a plant in an hour or so, it can take days till everything is stable enough for emergency repairs.

Food processing, from my experience, is generally a razor-thin margin type of profit which leads to heavy emphasis on production and speed. Shortcuts invariably happen; the time it takes to properly repair a machine might be three days but if the maintenance crew can get it jury-rigged and running in three hours the jury-rig more often than not will be used. Similarly, the thin margins also lead to workers being worked for longer hours and less pay, meaning hat you are ever attracting the greatest of workers. Sure, the supervisors, maintenance crews, and leads are going to be better, but even if they can tard-wrangle the typical grunt from fucking shit up, there will still be a lower ability on average due to aforementioned factors.
the eastern european slaves in europe are in short supply right now and worked even harder than normaly, I dont wanna know how much human meat is in my tendies right now...
 
Tons and tons of volatile chemicals are involved in fertilizer manufacture, and ammonium nitrate, one of the most common nitrogen fertilizers, is insanely explosive under certain conditions. That's what caused the massive explosion in Beirut a few years back.
That's also what caused the accidental explosion in Oklahoma City in the 90's, I think someone left some in a truck or something. Not sure, just going off memory..
 
I’m talking about: where’s the troon steelworkers? How come I don’t see any ftm Aidens working as concrete finishers or plumbers/pipefitters?
The closest thing I've ever seen to a working class "Joe" who's a FTM was a while back when I saw a group of cops buying donuts at 7-Eleven: they were all young, burly men (think of former Marines) except one of the cops was a woman with short buzzed hair and looked butch with big shoulders, but was still clearly female (I could hear her speaking to the other cops, and had a distinct woman's voice). She could have just been a normal dyke, she could have been FtM, or she could have just been a turbo tomboy who just happened to be 6'2'' and on steroids -- regardless, that was one of the few instances I can think of off top of my head.
 
Here's a reenactment safety video of the West Texas disaster:


A lot of these disasters are caused by a clusterfuck pileup of various mistakes and acts of carelessness. I've been watching a lot of industrial disaster reenactments on this YT channel and I find them fascinating. I've learned that A. Companies will happily sacrifice the lives of employees to save a quick buck, B. Industrial employees have a shocking lack of situational awareness around equipment that can kill them within seconds, C. At least 80 percent of accidents are caused by people ignoring or shutting off imminent danger alarms, and D. Going to a special employee lunch celebrating a month without a lost-time injury will anger the Grim Reaper so much that he'll blow you all up about an hour later.
 
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