The McLeese Lake Volunteer Fire Dept. discovered Saturday gas was siphoned completely from one of its pumper trucks and partially from another truck (seen here). Monica Lamb-Yorski photo

The McLeese Lake Volunteer Fire Dept. discovered Saturday gas was siphoned completely from one of its pumper trucks and partially from another truck (seen here). Monica Lamb-Yorski photo

Siphoned gas leaves McLeese Lake fire dept. one truck short

Fire Chief Ian Hicks said surveillance cameras will have to be installed after fuel was siphoned from two trucks

When the McLeese Lake Volunteer Fire Dept. responded to an MVI-caused fire last Saturday afternoon on Highway 97 their yellow pumper truck would not start.

Later that evening Fire Chief Ian Hicks discovered the gas had been siphoned out of the truck, as well as half of the tank in their other pumper truck.

“My training officer Gord Rourke told me he couldn’t get the truck going and thought he must have flooded it or something,” Hicks told the Tribune. “At the time I thought ‘OK, it is a 40-year-old truck.'”

Raed more: McLeese Lake Fire Dept. need for hall heightened

However, when Hicks arrived back home at about 8 p.m. Saturday evening he tried to turn the truck on and thought something was odd.

“It was running like perfection last time I parked it here,” he said, adding they’d recently used the truck at practice and the check list showed fuel had been put in on May 24.

He then looked at the gauge on the dash and saw the gas tank was completely empty.

“I crawled underneath and bang, it was bone dry — just air,” he said. ” Luckily there was still enough gas left in the other truck to get it to the fire. We always have them fuelled up so we can respond to an emergency.”

Read More: Crews respond to MVI-caused fire north of Williams Lake

Williams Lake Tribune