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FIRE DES­TROYS COVERED BRIDGE POTATO CHIP FACT­ORY

 * +4 more
 * JIM DUMVILLE LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE REPORTER, RIVER VALLEY SUN

JIM DUMVILLEThe sign pro­mot­ing the plant’s tours and gift shop still stands in
front of the smoul­der­ing debris Sat­urday morn­ing.

Res­id­ents and offi­cials of the small New Brun­swick ham­let of Hart­land are
reel­ing Sat­urday morn­ing, March 2, after a Fri­day even­ing fire lev­elled
the loc­ally owned potato chip plant, which bore the name of the town’s iconic
land­mark.

The fire began just before 6 p.m., Fri­day, March 1, and raced through the
Covered Bridge Potato Chips plant, leav­ing little more than a large pile of
rubble and dev­ast­a­tion in its wake.

Hart­land Fire Depart­ment Deputy Chief Tom Reid said his depart­ment used
mutual aid and equip­ment from nine area fire depart­ments to battle the
stub­born blaze.

Reid said his first crews arrived on the scene to see smoke com­ing out the
build­ing’s doors. He said all the work­ers who had just begun the day’s second
shift safely evac­u­ated the build­ing and turned off the large pro­pane tanks.

Reid said they received word en route to the fire on Albright Court in
Waterville that every­one was safely out of the build­ing and turned off the
pro­pane valves.

Reid said fire­fight­ers entered the build­ing to dis­cover a fire burn­ing in
the attic.

Reid said fire­fight­ers entered the build­ing to dis­cover a fire burn­ing in
the attic.

“After a while it came through the roof,” he said. “That’s when we had to move
trucks and everything.”

With the blaze fully involved, fire­fight­ers were lim­ited to an exter­ior
attack, using the lad­der truck for an aer­ial attack.

With the blaze fully involved, fire­fight­ers were lim­ited to an exter­ior
attack, using the lad­der truck for an aer­ial attack.

Reid explained most of the mutual aid fea­tured tankers con­tinu­ously haul­ing
water.

“We need a lot of water to feed that aer­ial,” he said. “We put out close to
3,000 gal­lons per minute.”

Once the roof col­lapsed, Reid said the team con­tin­ued to pour thou­sands of
gal­lons of water into the struc­ture.

“There’s no way it could have been saved,” he said.

Reid said the grease and oil in the chip plant helped fuel the blaze.

“She went up fast, with a lot of black smoke,” he said.

Reid said the fire­fight­ers bene­fit­ted from the wind dir­ec­tion, which
pushed the smoke and heat away from the pro­pane tanks and the neigh­bour­ing
busi­nesses.

He explained that they evac­u­ated employ­ees from the Irving gas bar, Bur­ger
King and Sub­way next door and took pre­cau­tions sur­round­ing the gas and
pro­pane tanks for safety reas­ons.

AIR-QUALITY WARNING

The chip plant sits on Albright Court, a short dead-end street par­al­lel to
Route 2, the Trans Canada High­way, at the exit to Hart­land in Waterville.

Fol­low­ing the fire, Envir­on­ment Canada issued an air-qual­ity state­ment
warn­ing of poten­tially elev­ated pol­lu­tion levels in Waterville and areas
north­east of Car­leton County.

The state­ment, issued around 9 p.m. Fri­day, explained the fire may cause
sig­ni­fic­ant con­cen­tra­tions of poten­tially toxic smoke and pol­lut­ants to
spread down­wind of the plant to the north­east.

Small amounts of smoke drif­ted from the rubble Sat­urday morn­ing as Reid and
other Hart­land Fire Depart­ment mem­bers waited for invest­ig­at­ors’ arrival
from the Fire Mar­shal’s Office.

He explained the Fire Mar­shal would try to determ­ine the cause of the fire and
instruct his depart­ment on its next steps regard­ing hot spots and cleanup.

He explained the Fire Mar­shal would try to determ­ine the cause of the fire and
instruct his depart­ment on its next steps regard­ing hot spots and cleanup.

Reid expressed con­fid­ence the own­ers will rebuild the vibrant chip plant,
which he estim­ated employs more than 100 people. He said the chips are
mar­keted world­wide. He remembered see­ing the brand on shelves dur­ing his
visit to Flor­ida.

Covered Bridge Potato Chips is the out­growth of the multi-gen­er­a­tion
Albright fam­ily potato farm. The com­pany began in 2004 as a potato
dis­tri­bu­tion oper­a­tion by Matt and Ryan Albright and became the Covered
Bridge Potato Chips oper­a­tion in 2009.

The plant is not only a sig­ni­fic­ant con­trib­utor to Hart­land’s pro­duc­tion
and indus­trial sec­tor, it serves as a pop­u­lar tour­ist des­tin­a­tion for
the region.

It offers reg­u­lar tour­ist and school tours of the chip pro­duc­tion
facil­ity. The Albright fam­ily are also act­ive mem­bers of the Car­leton
County com­munity.

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The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)
5 Mar 2024
A11



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