BY BEA LEWIS
Staff Writer
GILFORD — An oil truck rolled over on a sharp curve
on Cumberland Road early Friday night, spilling some
of its 2,800 gallon load of heating oil, just a
quarter-mile from Lake Winnipesaukee.
The unidentified driver was not injured in the
crash, and told officials he lost control when the air
brakes failed on his diesel-powered truck.
Fire Chief Michael Mooney said the Fred Fuller Fuel
Oil Company truck was heading northeast down a steep
grade when the crash occurred shortly before 5 p.m.
The truck, which has a capacity of 3,000 gallons,
had just been filled and had only made one 200-gallon
delivery when the accident happened, according to
Mooney. Officials said the exact amount of the spill
wouldn’t be known until the damaged truck could be
pumped out.
The driver had made the last delivery of the day
and was heading back towards Route 11 when he lost
control on a sharp left hand turn. The truck went off
the side of the road, rolled onto its right side and
then slid back across the road into a stand of trees.
The cab of the truck was heavily damaged and at least
two seams in the oil tank split allowing number 2 fuel
oil to leak out, Mooney explained.
The driver was taken by private vehicle to Lakes
Region General Hospital to be checked as a
precautionary measure, authorities said.
Meanwhile, the Central New Hampshire and Lakes
Region Haz-Mat Teams, made-up of specially trained
firefighters from throughout the region, were called
in to help contain the spill.
Haz-Mat team members dug a series of trenches in
the woods downhill from the truck hoping to contain
the leaking oil from reaching the state’s largest lake
which is about a quarter mile away from the crash.
Team members also used absorbent pads and specially
designed "booms" made of cotton wading contained in
onion bag-like netting to help sop-up the oil.
The last trench was dug about 200 yards from the
truck. No oil was discovered there, leading Mooney to
believe it hadn’t spread beyond that point.
Fortunately the only house near the crash site was
located up hill and should not be affected, officials
added.
Two large wreckers had been called in and another
oil truck was being used to pump out the remaining oil
from the wrecked truck. The hatches, which are
normally used to empty the tank, were inaccessible
because the truck was on its side. So Mooney said the
Haz-Mat teams were planning to use a special saw
equipped with a low sparking blade to cut through the
aluminum tank to allow them to pump the oil out.
Meanwhile, nylon slings were being placed around
the body of the overturned truck in an effort to
slowly upright it. Fortunately, Mooney said, fuel oil
is relatively stable and is only prone to ignite when
it is heated and then sprayed in a fine mist towards a
flame.
But team members weren’t taking any chances and
stood by with fire hoses charged with water as fellow
members placed buckets beneath some areas of the truck
to catch leaking fuel. Mooney estimated that the truck
was leaking about a gallon of fuel oil an hour.
Accidents involving fuel oil delivery trucks are
rare according to Mooney, who said that most occur
during the winter months as a result of slick road
conditions.
Several representatives of the N.H. Department of
Environmental Services and Fire Marshal Don Bliss were
on hand throughout the clean-up operation which Mooney
predicted would last much of the night.
The owner of the truck, Mooney said, would be
financially responsible for hiring an independent
environmental clean-up company to complete the final
remediation. Such a company will typically dig test
wells to check for contamination and use specially
designed vacuums to suck up the oil. They may also
remove oil-soaked soils using an excavator. The
contaminated soil is typically trucked away and burned
in a special incinerator.
While the forecast was calling for rain Friday
night, Mooney was hoping the wet weather would hold
off. Had the spill occurred on a warm day with light
wind much of the oil would have evaporated, he
explained.
Haz-Mat team members were working in shifts to give
them a break from the oil fumes that were making some
men dizzy, Mooney said.
Two inspectors from the New Hampshire Department of
Motor Vehicles were at the accident scene and would be
inspecting the truck for mechanical defects, officials
said.