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Gallons of petrol poured on baseball field and set alight ‘to dry it quicker’ after rain

‘A poor decision was made’

Harry Cockburn
Tuesday 09 April 2019 09:02 EDT
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A baseball game delayed by rain at Governor Park, in the town of Ridgefield, saw frustrated locals pour petrol over the field and set it on fire to dry it more quickly. The pitch was destroyed.
A baseball game delayed by rain at Governor Park, in the town of Ridgefield, saw frustrated locals pour petrol over the field and set it on fire to dry it more quickly. The pitch was destroyed. (Google)

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Petrol and fire are not the most prudent means of drying a wet playing field. Petrol is a poison, and fire is famously ruinous to most life forms.

Unfortunately the town of Ridgefield, Connecticut, now requires a new baseball pitch, after “a poor decision was made”, and 24 gallons of gasoline were poured on the field and set alight to “dry the field quicker” following some rain that had delayed a local school game.

The technique may have dried the pitch, but it also destroyed it. The incident was reported on the town’s Facebook page.

A video posted on Twitter over the weekend showed part of the baseball pitch in the grip of the blaze with tall flames raging across the centre while two men appear to be sweeping soil into the fire.

Police are investigating who was responsible for lighting the fire, which is expected to cost over $50,000 (£38,000) to repair, according to local newspaper the Ridgefield Press.

“Thanks to the RFD, Peter Hill the director of public works, the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, and our Certified Spill Response Team for their incredible help,” the post on the town’s Facebook page read.

“It’s looking like it will cost $50,000 and could even exceed that,” said the town’s first selectman (council leader) Rudy Marconi on Sunday night.

“It doesn’t seem like a lot but it’s a very, very expensive process.”

Mr Marconi did not name who he believed was responsible, but told the paper around 75-100 people witnessed the incident, with many of them filming it on their telephones.

“They collected quite a bit of evidence yesterday,” Mr Marconi said. “Whether or not someone gets charged, it’s the police department’s decision to make.

“There were plenty of witnesses,” he said. “I don’t know how they ignited it but it could be out there on one of the cell phone videos.”

The spill team will transport at least five containers full of contaminated soil off site on Monday, Mr Marconi said.

“The plan is to excavate the infield, place dirt in a safe container, and add fresh clean soil to the field,” the notice on the town’s Facebook page said.

A later update read: “The field may be closed for the week due to the need for testing to be completed.”

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