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Safety board investigators have done extensive work on the issue of gas line purging since an explosion last year at a Slim Jim factory in North Carolina killed four people. They've identified other explosions caused by workers who were unsafely venting gas lines inside buildings. A team from the board on Monday was turned away by local authorities, who said they would have access once criminal investigators had cleared them. The town's chief building inspector, John Parker, said there were "a lot of eyes" on the Kleen Energy project as it was being built. His office conducted numerous building inspections over the years
-- at times daily. He said third-party inspectors often were on hand. Parker said it appears the workers were performing the purge by sending nitrogen through the line followed by natural gas to clear out any moisture, which he called "an accepted and approved method." Parker said he could not recall any recorded building code violations involving the project. Investigators from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration were also at the site. OSHA records show there was a planned inspection on July 28, 2009, for work being performed by O&G Industries. There was one violation relating to record keeping and reporting. OSHA spokesman John Chavez said records show O&G settled the matter informally by paying a $1,000 fine. "Relatively speaking, they do appear to have a pretty clean record," Chavez said. Also Monday, Gov. M. Jodi Rell ordered a review of state safety codes. She created two panels, one to identify the cause of the explosion and contributing factors, such as construction problems, worker safety issues and licensing or permitting matters. The other, a panel of state agencies, local officials and experts, will be charged with determining whether changes need to be made to Connecticut laws, state or local regulations or building or fire codes. O&G said about 114 workers for nine subcontractors were on the site at the time. It said six workers were still hospitalized Monday. Middlesex Hospital spokeswoman Melissa Brady said all the injured were expected to survive. Kleen Energy Systems LLC began construction on the plant in February 2008 on a wooded and hilly 137-acre parcel of land overlooking the Connecticut River, a few miles from Wesleyan University. It had signed a deal with Connecticut Light and Power for the electricity produced by the plant, which would be one of the biggest built in New England in the last few years. The plant would produce energy primarily using natural gas, which accounts for about a fifth of the nation's electricity.
[Associated
Press;
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