Firefighters struggle to battle blazes in brutally cold temperatures from New Jersey to Indiana
Fires broke out from New Jersey to New York to Indiana.
Firefighters from New Jersey and New York to Indiana are pushing through the brutally cold temperatures to do their jobs.
In New Jersey, a monstrous fire broke out Wednesday night at a paper mill in Elmwood Park.
The fire was so massive people that people flying into Newark International Airport could see it.
More than 150 firefighters descended on the scene. The temperature hovered near 4 degrees, with a wind chill of negative 12.
The fire was under control early Thursday morning, officials said. No one was injured, officials added.
In New York City, where temperatures plunged to 2 degrees, the coldest of the year, a 5-alarm fire in Brooklyn posed "challenging conditions for our firefighters," the New York City Fire Department tweeted. No injuries were reported.
In Camden, New Jersey, firefighters had to use a blow torch to thaw out frozen fire hydrants.
Firefighters also struggled in the Midwest.
In Cameron, Wisconsin, where the wind chill fell to minus 52 Wednesday, fire chief Mitch Hansen looked more like an ice sculpture after fighting a fire.
And in Plainfield, Indiana, frozen crews fought an unrelenting blaze at a trash facility, leaving fire equipment coated with ice.
"The weather and large amount of trash is making this a daunting task," the Plainfield Fire Territory said on Facebook.