Update: Tennessee opens investigation into flood deaths at Impact Plastics
Local reports quoting employees of Erwin, Tenn.-based Impact Plastics Inc. say up to six employees died when flash floods from Hurricane Helene swept though Unicoi County on Sept. 27.
Employee Robert Jarvis told News 5 WCYB that six workers were swept away by the flooded Nolichucky River, which runs near the business park housing injection molder Impact Plastics.
Another worker, Jacob Ingram, told Knox News that some employees survived by clinging to yellow plastic pipe made by PolyPipe USA, another manufacturer at the site. Ingram posted several videos on Facebook showing the flooding and employees hanging onto a truck loaded with pipe.
The workers and the company are telling conflicting stories about the minutes preceding the devastation.
At least one survivor and families of the missing workers say they were not allowed to evacuate, but the company denies that claim.
The Riverview Industrial Park, where the injection molding business is located, was closed on Sept. 30. The business park is by the Nolichucky River, which reportedly swelled with a rush of water comparable to nearly twice what cascades over Niagara Falls.
Jarvis took issue with a company statement that management had been monitoring the weather situation before the flood. He said he got a text that the parking lot was flooding and went out to check his car.
"I moved my car to higher ground, which it was still in water. There wasn't no dry ground in the parking lot," Jarvis told WCYB. "I got out. I said can we leave, and the woman said no."
The woman then consulted with a manager, he said.
"About 10 minutes later she came back and said y'all can leave. It was too late," Jarvis said. "We had one way in, one way out. When they told us we could leave, the one way out was blocked off. So, we're stuck in traffic on that road waiting to see what we'd do."
Some employees with four-wheel drive vehicles managed to get around the others.
"But if you didn't have four-wheel drive or if you were stuck in that line I was stuck in, it was too late because, I mean, like I said, my car got washed down the river, down the road actually."
"They should've evacuated when we got the flash flood warnings, and when they saw the parking lot," Ingram told Knox News. "When we moved our cars we should've evacuated then. … We asked them if we should evacuate, and they told us not yet, it wasn't bad enough.
"And by the time it was bad enough, it was too late unless you had a four-wheel-drive," he said.
Ingram told Knox that he and 10 other employees were fighting their way through waist-deep water in the parking lot when a truck driver from PolyPipe called them over and helped them get onto the back of his open-bed truck, which was packed full of large yellow flexible gas pipe.
They were there for hours waiting for rescue. The truck was hit by debris several times, knocking some people into the water, he said. Eventually the trailer flipped, but he and others managed to hang onto the pipe.