Man charged with arson for starting New Jersey wildfires
A 19-year-old man in New jersey has been charged with arson after causing a large wildfire by failing to extinguish a bonfire made from wooden pallets. The fire, which started at the Greenwood Forest Wildlife Management area in Barnegat Township, has burned over 15,000 acres and led to the evacuation of thousands of residents. Thankfully, officials have reported no injuries or fatalities, though some property damage has occurred. Acting Governor Tahesha Way declared a state of emergency while Governor Phil Murphy is away on an official visit. Containment efforts are ongoing, with about 50% of the wildfire under control as of Thursday morning. The blaze is affecting air quality in surrounding areas, including New York City, due to increased pollution levels. The wildfire is noted as one of the largest in the past two decades for New Jersey,with officials concerned about its potential to spread in the dry conditions typical of the peak fire season.
Man charged with arson for starting New Jersey wildfires
A 19-year-old man was charged with arson after he failed to properly extinguish a bonfire he had, causing a massive wildfire in Ocean County, New Jersey.
So far more than 15,000 acres have burned and thousands of people have been evacuated after the fire erupted Tuesday afternoon at the Greenwood Forest Wildlife Management Area in Barnegat Township, New Jersey, according to NBC 10 Philadelphia. The residents have since been permitted to return home.
The man made a bonfire using wooden pallets but left without ensuring the fire was extinguished. The fire in southern New Jersey is the second-largest fire in the past two decades. In 2007, a blaze burned 26 square miles.
On Wednesday, acting New Jersey Gov. Tahesha Way declared a state of emergency. Gov. Phil Murphy is currently in Poland for an official visit to a Holocaust memorial but will return Friday.
Officials said they’ve contained about 50% of the wildfire as of Thursday morning with no injuries or deaths reported, but a commercial building and several vehicles have been damaged.
“This is still a very active fire,” Shawn LaTourette, New Jersey’s commissioner of Environmental Protection, said Wednesday. “As we continue to get this under full control, the expectation is that the number of acres will grow and will grow in a place that is unpopulated.”
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The wildfire has caused adverse effects on air quality beyond the fire’s region. The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation shared that there will be higher-than-normal pollution levels in New York City, just 54 miles north of the fires, in Rockland, Westchester, Nassau and Suffolk counties.
The wildfire in the Pine Barrens, located between Philadelphia and the Atlantic coast, is in peak forest fire season, having been under a severe drought warning.
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