Coeymans Hollow, mutual aid battle brush fire

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By Melanie Lekocevic

Capital Region Independent Media

There were heavy smoke conditions when firefighters first arrived on the scene. Courtesy of Coeymans Hollow Volunteer Fire Corporation

COEYMANS HOLLOW — A brush fire on Tompkins Road drew a response from five local fire companies.

There were no injuries in the blaze. The origin of the fire is not known.

The fire broke out around 1 p.m. on March 11 behind a residence at 238 Tompkins Road. Members of the Coeymans Hollow Volunteer Fire Corporation responded to the call.

Assistant Chief John Williams was among the first to arrive on the scene and found a heavy smoke condition, according to the fire company.

There was an active brush fire in the woods and it was spreading.

Williams requested additional manpower and the department’s UTV, or utility task vehicle, to the scene.

He also put out the call for mutual aid from neighboring fire companies to provide additional manpower and brush equipment. Departments responding to the scene included Selkirk Fire Department, Cornell Hook & Ladder Fire Company, Westerlo Fire and Medway-Grapeville Fire Company. Also responding to the scene were the Albany County Sheriff’s Office and the Sheriff’s Office’s EMS Division.

The Ravena Fire Department covered Coeymans Hollow calls while the department was engaged with the brush fire.

Fire trucks on the scene of a brush fire on Tompkins Road. Courtesy of Coeymans Hollow Volunteer Fire Corporation

“We would like to thank all of our mutual aid partners for their help today,” the department said in a statement. “We would also like to thank our own membership for their response today.”

Due to high-risk fire conditions, New York state has implemented the annual statewide brush burn ban from now through May 14.

Dry conditions make the risk for brush fires rise, so any outdoor burning is discouraged, according to the Coeymans Hollow Volunteer Fire Corporation.

“We would like to take this opportunity to remind folks this is a bad time to have any outdoor burns,” according to the department.

Open burning of brush and debris is the number one cause of spring wildfires in New York.

Under the statewide burn ban, the burning of leaves, chemically treated or painted wood, brush, trash and other solid wastes is prohibited, according to the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. Burning trash is illegal year-round in New York.

Five fire companies responded to the scene of the fire. Courtesy of Coeymans Hollow Volunteer Fire Corporation
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