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Gloucester County Office of Emergency Management

Smoke From Gloucester County Wildfire Triggers 911 Calls, Sets Off Carbon Monoxide Alarms Smoke From Gloucester County Wildfire Triggers 911 Calls, Sets Off Carbon Monoxide Alarms
Smoke From Gloucester County Wildfire Triggers 911 Calls, Sets Off Carbon Monoxide Alarms Residents across Gloucester County woke up to thick smoke from the 133-acre Pheasant Run wildfire in the Glassboro Wildlife Management Area last week, causing widespread smoke and carbon monoxide detectors to sound off early Friday morning, Nov. 8. The Gloucester County Office of Emergency Management warned that changing wind directions could further affect surrounding communities, including Glassboro, Washington Township, and Williamstown, where local fire departments have been fielding an “unprecedented” number of emergency calls. A TikTok video that shows smoke covering the area is title…
Leak That Stank Up Counties For A Week Has 'Fully Ceased,' South Jersey Officials Say Leak That Stank Up Counties For A Week Has 'Fully Ceased,' South Jersey Officials Say
Leak That Stank Up Counties For A Week Has 'Fully Ceased,' South Jersey Officials Say A chemical leak that stank up towns in several counties in South Jersey for a week has ceased, officials said. The TA Travel Center truck stop where the smell originated in a parked tanker truck has been reopened, according to the Gloucester County Office of Emergency Management. (OEM) "The chemical reaction that took place in the vessel is believed to have fully ceased," the OEM said on Wednesday, Aug. 17. The leak gave off a rotten egg odor that lingered in Gloucester and Camden counties and across the Delaware River toward Philadelphia.  The fix has been confirmed with visual insp…
Town Hall Meeting Set For Mysterious Odor That Stank Up South Jersey Town Hall Meeting Set For Mysterious Odor That Stank Up South Jersey
Town Hall Meeting Set For Mysterious Odor That Stank Up South Jersey A town hall meeting is planned, in-person and via Zoom, on Tuesday evening, Aug. 16, in East Greenwich, Gloucester County to discuss last week's rotten egg odor caused by a chemical leak. The odor was first reported on Wednesday, Aug.. 10. It spread to several adjoining counties and across the Delaware River. The Gloucester County Office of Emergency Management (OEM) said that the widespread odor was coming from the Truck Stop in East Greenwich from a trailer containing about 7,000 gallons of Mercaptan that was venting.  The East Greenwich meeting begins at 6 p.m. at the mun…