Frenchtown Fire: Two wrecks in two minutes
Maggie Dresser Mineral Independent | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 6 years, 8 months AGO
Frenchtown Rural Fire District responders scrambled on Tuesday, April 4 when two separate motor vehicle wrecks were called in only minutes apart.
The first accident occurred on Interstate-90 near Nine Mile at mile marker 82 when a westbound pickup truck collided with a cable barrier.
Frenchtown Rural Fire responded to the scene and said nobody was transported to the hospital.
The cable barrier where the pickup truck collided was already damaged from prior accidents, and that 12-mile stretch has multiple damages that remain unrepaired.
“The cable barrier was not functioning,” said Mel Holtz, a Frenchtown firefighter. “They are designed to check vehicles and prevent people from going into oncoming traffic.”
Holtz said the Montana Department of Transportation is aware of these damages and will work on repairing them.
The second accident occurred north of Interstate-90 near Huson on Mill Creek road when a vehicle drove the wrong way. The oncoming four-door vehicle on the correct side veered off the road to avoid a collision and flipped upside down into a field.
No injuries were reported and nobody was transported to the hospital in either accident.
ARTICLES BY MAGGIE DRESSER MINERAL INDEPENDENT
Sheriff's office loses important asset
After serving with the Mineral County Sherriff’s Office for 25 years, Superior Mayor Roni Phillips announced her retirement from the Jail Administrator and 911-Dispatcher positions in early April. Phillips will remain Superior’s mayor, and will continue working as an EMT on Superior’s ambulance.
Wolf count in Region 2 is up, but mostly stable
Following Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks 2017 Annual Report release this spring, officials estimate 633 gray wolves reside in Montana, more than the previous five years.
Sheriff's budget may lose some overtime
At the Sheriff’s Office final budget hearing in Superior on Friday, Aug. 16, county officials decided the only area they could make financial cuts were in overtime.