Help arrives after Morgan County snowplows destroyed in fire


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MORGAN – Several counties stepped in to help Morgan County after a fire devastated their roads department building and left crews with just one functioning snowplow.

The roads department thought they might have to scramble to find enough help to get ready for Thursday's storm — but they were wrong.

Bret Heiner, public works director for Morgan County said there's not much left of the shop and firefighters had a tough time getting inside to fight the fire Monday.

"There was so much smoke and so much pressure," he said. "They couldn't even get the doors open. Had to cut the doors. As you can see, they had to cut the doors in half just to get in."

An apparent electrical fire from one of the older plow trucks spread, destroying everything inside.

"Five plow trucks, a ton truck, a loader, just like you see here. Ruined them all. They're a total loss on all our equipment. Had another pickup truck that got ruined."

Bret Heiner, public works director for Morgan County.
Bret Heiner, public works director for Morgan County. (Photo: Mike Anderson, KSL TV)

With one remaining snowplow, Heiner knew they would need to ask for help with a storm on the way.

"It's amazing what happened after that," Heiner said. "Every county in northern Utah responded."

They've now got a truck from Utah County, one from the Utah Department of Transportation, two from Summit County and three from Wasatch County. Many others offered, so there's more available if they need it.

"It's just amazing how great the people are in Utah, the outpour of support from other counties and cities," Heiner said.


All we could do when this happened is pray, and people just stepped up.

–Bret Heiner, Morgan County public works director


It's why many homeowners likely didn't notice any difference Thursday. The roads department will get by for now in a smaller garage and county building. They still without a repair shop, but Heiner said they have what they need to tackle winter.

"All we could do when this happened is pray, and people just stepped up," he said.

Unfortunately, new plows can't be bought like cars — they have to be custom made. Heiner said they'll likely continue to depend on loaned gear for most of the winter.

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Mike Anderson, KSLMike Anderson
Mike Anderson often doubles as his own photographer, shooting and editing most of his stories. He came to KSL in April 2011 after working for several years at various broadcast news outlets.
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