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Pennsylvania Gas Explosion Leaves 5 Dead In Allentown

Pennsylvania Gas Explosion

02/10/11 11:33 PM ET   AP

ALLENTOWN, Pa. — A thunderous gas explosion devastated a rowhouse neighborhood, killing five people, and suspicion fell on an 83-year-old cast-iron gas main. The fiery blast was the latest natural-gas disaster to raise questions about the safety of the nation's aging, 2.5-million-mile network of gas and liquid pipelines.

The explosion, which flattened a pair of rowhouses and set fire to a block of homes late Wednesday night, occurred in an area where the underground gas main lacked shut-off valves. It took utility workers five hours of toil in the freezing cold to punch through ice, asphalt and concrete and seal the 12-inch main with foam, finally cutting off the flow of gas that fed the raging flames.

Dorothy Yanett, 65, said she was in her living room with her husband awaiting the evening news when she heard a series of booms.

"Everything falling and crashing, glass, just a nightmare," said. She found glass in the shoes she was going to put to leave the house. "There was no odor, there was no smell. Then it was like all hell broke loose."

Joe Swope, a spokesman for Reading-based UGI Utilities Inc., said that a routine leak-detection test in that area had come up clean on Tuesday, and that there had been no calls about gas odors before the disaster.

Lehigh County Coroner Scott Grim said earlier Thursday four bodies had been recovered – a 4-month-old boy, a 16-year-old girl, a 69-year-old woman and a 79-year-old man. Cadaver dogs found the fifth victim, a 74-year-old woman, in the rubble on Thursday night, Fire Marshal Matthew Bainbridge said. Their names were not immediately released.

Forty-seven homes were damaged, and eight of them appeared to be a total loss, said Allentown Fire Chief Robert Scheirer.

The exact spot of the explosion and what triggered it were under investigation.

"The investigation will look at the 12-inch main, but will also look at service lines that feed gas into the nearby homes and businesses, as well as potential causes inside the home," Scheirer said. "Until that investigation is complete, it's premature to conclude exactly where the leak took place."

Investigators planned to send cameras through the main to look for cracks, and perform air pressure tests on the service lines.

Last September, a 44-year-old gas transmission line ruptured in San Bruno, Calif., killing eight people, injuring dozens and leaving 55 homes inhabitable. Investigators said the pipe had numerous flawed welds. And in Philadelphia last month, a gas main explosion sent a 50-foot fireball into the sky, killing a utility worker, injuring six people and forcing dozens from their homes. Fire officials are investigating.

Past pipeline explosions have been blamed on such factors as corrosion or damage done by heavy construction equipment.

Rick Kessler, worked on pipeline safety issues for many years as a Democratic congressional aide, said that cast-iron pipe is a vestige of an earlier era and that the federal Pipeline Safety Improvement Act of 2002 envisions its replacement with safer materials, such as steel. He said Pennsylvania may have the most cast-iron gas lines in use.

"Think about the things in your daily life that are made of cast iron, besides a frying pan," said Kessler, now a lobbyist and vice president of the Pipeline Safety Trust, a watchdog group. "We should always be concerned when we have pipes dating back a century, made of materials that may have been state-of-the-art at the time, and really aren't."

Swope said there was no history of leaks in the immediate area of the Allentown explosion. Asked about any plans to replace the main, the utility spokesman said that the section had been deemed safe and reliable. He also said there had been no recent reports of construction in the neighborhood.

As for the possibility that the freezing weather caused a pipe to rupture, Swope said: "In the winter, there's always the concern about the freezing-thawing cycle, but seeing that we just ran the leak survey less than 48 hours before the incident, that doesn't appear to be a cause."

The blaze was too hot to allow workers to go to the curb or a home to cut off the gas, so they had to go into the street to plug up the main, according to the fire chief. Swope said shut-off valves are not considered feasible for that type of main construction, which dates to 1928.

An Associated Press investigation published Saturday found that many pipelines around the country are not equipped with remotely operated or automatic shut-off valves that can quickly stop the flow of gas in an accident, even though federal safety officials have recommended such devices to industry and regulators for decades.

Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission spokeswoman Jennifer Kocher said age is not the only consideration in deciding when to replace gas lines. Other factors include the number of leaks per mile, how the soil's composition could affect the pipe, whether it is located in a densely populated area, the amount of pressure and the size of the line. The gas main in that area was under comparatively low pressure, she said.

The Morning Call newspaper reported that the residents of a rowhouse at the center of the blast were Beatrice and William Hall, according to their daughter-in-law, Michelle Hall. Yanett, one of their neighbors, called the Halls "a beautiful couple" and "just lovely people" who were active in the Methodist church and a local food bank.

Antonio Arroyo said he and his wife fled their home with only the clothes on their backs. Their home was considered a total loss.

"I thought we were under attack," he said in a shelter with about 250 other evacuees a few hours after the explosion.

On Thursday, backhoes dug into the rubble in the devastated neighborhood and plywood covered blown-out windows of a church.

"I was reading a book in the living room and it felt like a giant kicked the house. It all shook. Everything shook," said Tricia Aleski, who lives a few blocks away. "I checked the stove and everything, make sure everything's off."

Jason Soke was watching college basketball when the explosion rattled his windows. He went to the third floor and looked out and saw flames and smoke.

"Your senses kind of get stunned," he said. "It puts you on edge."

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ALLENTOWN, Pa. — A thunderous gas explosion devastated a rowhouse neighborhood, killing five people, and suspicion fell on an 83-year-old cast-iron gas main. The fiery blast was the latest natur...
ALLENTOWN, Pa. — A thunderous gas explosion devastated a rowhouse neighborhood, killing five people, and suspicion fell on an 83-year-old cast-iron gas main. The fiery blast was the latest natur...
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01:47 AM on 02/13/2011
gee, i wonder if hydrolic fracturing is jostling those old gas pipes. wadya think?
07:33 AM on 02/13/2011
Spell-check before trolling
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
clearthinker16
reads, investigates and thinks before making stupi
05:01 PM on 02/12/2011
this is not the first one in Allentown, there was another one a few blocks away a few years ago, I see a pattern here
11:30 AM on 02/12/2011
It's interesting companies are the only ones in a position to know how old their pipes are and when to replace them. I say they should be held to account for the poor souls that died. To me it was criminal negligence that lead to the death of innocent victims. Again they should know when things need replacing and just how old the pipes are. They rake in the money they are RESPONSIBLE for the maintenance of the pipes. Where are you Justice system?
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ken607
Nothing natural about gas,nothing clean about coal
08:39 AM on 02/12/2011
83 year old gas line.PRIVATE COMPANIES DO IT BETTER HUH? 83 year old pipe! what about the old pipe in cali that killed people and destroyed many homes. over and over again FAILURES of huge scale! totaly avoidable. but because we MUST have govt out of private buisn, this is what we get PROFFITS OVER SAFTEY! grow up america regulation IS DESPERATLY needed.
10:23 PM on 02/11/2011
There have been a spate of these explosions the past year. We must have laid down a ton of pipe over a period of a couple of decades in the early 1900's and all that pipe is now a ticking time-bomb. Scary stuff. That Californina neighborhood was just decimated.
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Marla Thurman
08:46 PM on 02/11/2011
Ohio and Pennsylvania. Dude.
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mimsnpips
it just keeps gettin darker outside
07:35 PM on 02/11/2011
Our 2 PA U.S. Senators visited the disaster site today, Friday. The Democrat said he wants funding to fully inspect, repair, and replace these antique pipes.
The Republican basicaly said his heart goes out to the people, and..stuff happens. THERE'S the difference in a nutshell!
07:36 AM on 02/13/2011
Interesting how someone with little knowledge of the pipeline industry can KNOW the cause before the incident has even been investigated.
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
04:32 PM on 02/11/2011
Yes, we badly need to upgrade our infrastructure at almost every level, and doing so would also provide jobs at a time when they are greatly needed. Our lack of political will to do this is a national failing, and one based heavily on narrow ideologies.

That said, though, let's also be realistic about how we produce energy. Natural gas is dangerous, although accidents are fairly rare. Oil is dangerous, and gasoline is even more so. Even coal is dangerous, including especially for those who mine it. Electricity itself is dangerous, and kills many people every year. So what's the answer? Go back to wood fires and candles? Well, they're dangerous too, and try to imagine living in a city heated only by stoves and fireplaces.

Oddly, the form of energy production that has the best safety record in this country and in most developed countries (though not Russia) is nuclear. In the most notorious nuclear plant disaster in American history, Three Mile Island, not a single person was killed. Yet people still get worked up at the very mention of it, and will continue to do so long after this accident that killed five in Allentown is forgotten.
05:26 PM on 02/11/2011
So the only way you can measure how dangerous something is, is after it has killed how many 1 million, 2, 10 million?
Nuclear is not safe........
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
06:56 PM on 02/11/2011
The point is pretty straightforward, jn, and a bunch of silly hyperbole on your part won't refute it.

All forms of concentrating energy output are inherently dangerous to one degree or another. Simple fires from wood, for example, have easily killed millions of people over the centuries. Vehicles that are gasoline-fired, for another example, are involved in tens of thousands of deaths every year in the United States alone. Natural gas kills people not only by fire, as in this story, but by asphyxiation. Any idea how many people die worldwide in coal-mine disasters every year?

So all forms of energy production by fuel are unsafe. But where do you get this weird thing about a million or even ten million people victimized by nuclear? Even Chernobyl, a plant that would not have passed inspection anywhere but in Russia, killed nowhere even remotely approaching those figures. And in the rest of the developed world, exactly how many people have been killed by nuclear accidents in more than five decades? I submit to you that the answer will be in single digits.

So please explain to me your contention that "nuclear is not safe." It has certainly proved itself over decades to be at least as safe as coal, oil, gas, and even simply the transmission of electricity itself.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RedDogBear
11:14 AM on 02/14/2011
"Three Mile Island, not a single person was killed."

That's a common myth from the nuclear power industry. The fact is that the radiation that was leaked certainly led to earlier and more frequent cancer victims in the surrounding population. The problem is that due to the nature of cancer you can never prove which ones were caused by radiation and which ones by other factors so you can't point to specific individuals and say person X died because of Three Mile Island. But they are out there.
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
04:11 PM on 02/14/2011
Funny that you would use the word "certainly" for an outcome that you then immediately say cannot be proved.

But if it can't be proved that "person X" died as a result of the rather small release of radioactivity at Three Mile Island, it should "certainly" be possible to establish a statistical rise in cancers in all the years since the accident, and any such increase should reflect both wind patterns at the time and proximity to the reactor. As far as I know, there is no evidence of any statistically significant upsurge of this kin. So please tell us again exactly how you know that such deaths are "out there."

If this kind of thing, when just months ago 29 workers "certainly" and without a shadow of doubt died in a coal mine not all that far from Three Mile Island, is your notion of positive proof that nuclear is terribly unsafe compared with other forms of energy production, then you are simply blowing smoke.
03:50 PM on 02/11/2011
Here is another WPA opportunity to get Americans back to work...

Hopefully, anybody in D.C. that votes against getting Americans back to work fixing this will be met with a 1st-hand experience in their neighborhood soon.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Becky Bartlett
Perfectly capable of regulating my own uterus
02:38 PM on 02/11/2011
It's funny how gas companies never have money for infrastructure repair and yet can still manage to pay their executives million dollar bonuses.

P.S. I live less than 20 miles away from this site and I heat my house with natural gas.
01:58 PM on 02/11/2011
Massive gas line explosion in Ohio last night as well....Hanoverton, Ohio.

What is going on ?
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SocialistBoy
No pix no reply
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
greencowgirl
11:23 AM on 02/11/2011
Dig around and maybe there's a tie to the Koch brothers. Its happened before.
10:46 AM on 02/11/2011
Gasland, the Academy Award nominated documentary about the perils of natural gas drilling, is causing a tempest outlashing from the gas & oil industry because they don't want to be held responsible for responding to those who suffer. Go Gasland!!!!
01:52 AM on 02/13/2011
right on vickib. i wonder if hydraulic fraking is shakin' up the old underground infrastructure a bit too much!
07:43 AM on 02/13/2011
"Gasland", the Academy Award nominated FICTIONentar­y.

There, That is better, and if you do not believe me Google it.

"In a review of the film for The Times in June, Mike Hale found the film compelling but sloppily executed at times, opening the door to criticisms. In one “particularly unfortunate” sequence, Mr. Hale wrote, the film features an audiotape of an anonymous caller accusing Halliburton of illegally dumping chemicals in a Pennsylvania creek.

“It’s maddening to see how easy he makes it for the film’s critics to attack him, and how difficult for sympathetic but objective viewers to wholly embrace him,” Mr. Hale wrote.

“Mr. Fox shows a general preference for vivid images — bright red Halliburton trucks, beeping but unidentified scientific instruments — over the more mundane crossing the t’s and dotting the i’s of investigative journalism,” he added.

Green - Energy, the Environment and the Bottom Line
January 25, 2011, 4:32 pm
Industry Boos Oscar Nod for ‘Gasland’
By JOHN COLLINS RUDOLF
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LouGots
09:12 AM on 02/11/2011
We just had one of these in Philadelphia. "Only" one death.

The comments opining that the solution is more government don't get it. Our entire economy public and private, is trying to get by on cutting corners. That's what happened with the home mortgage crisis, and that's what's happening with infrastructure. We are ignoring prudent inspection and maintenance, just as we had ignored prudent lending and borrowing.

If anybody things the answer is more drone jobs for the politically favored, they are missing the point. What is needed is responsibility--financial and even criminal responsibility for reckless behavior. Did someone sign off on a decision not to inspect and replace gas mains? That's who we go after.
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09:53 AM on 02/11/2011
Why don't those folks making a FORTUNE taking natural gas through hydrofracking be required to update these systems. Since they are exempt from the clean air act and the clean water act they are able to take what they want with little over head (all those expensive protection habits that other smaller industries are held to). Have those that are in line to make their fortune in a particular field be responsible for infrastructure changes. They need an infrastructure to supply their source.

I have a feeling it would all be subsidized through taxes anyway...
08:58 AM on 02/11/2011
No regulations. No inspections. No controls at all over energy companies, bankers, corporations and everything else seems to be the new norm in Washington, including the White House.