California
gas pipeline explosion, fire injure up to 15 people
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[April 18, 2015]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - A
construction crew on Friday accidentally ruptured a natural gas
transmission line in Fresno, California, sparking an explosion and fire
that injured up to 15 people, four of them critically, officials said.
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The 12-inch (30-cm) pipeline, belonging to Pacific Gas & Electric
Corp <PCG.N>, was struck by a backhoe near state Highway 99,
unleashing a fireball that injured members of the construction team
and a jail inmate crew nearby, Fresno Fire Department spokesman
Peter Martinez said.
The accident forced closure of the highway in both directions, along
with an adjacent railroad line, Martinez said. Rail traffic was
halted to check for possible damage to a railway bridge over a
river, he said.
One worker in critical condition was flown to hospital by
helicopter, and 13 or 14 others were taken to hospitals for
evaluation and treatment of injuries after the pipeline was ruptured
at about 2:30 p.m., Martinez added.
Four of the injured were taken to Community Regional Medical Center
in Fresno, and two more were taken to the burn unit there, said
hospital spokeswoman Mary Lisa Russell, adding that four were in
critical condition and two serious.
The utility had shut off the gas flow by 3:20 p.m., with the
residual amount in the pipeline burning off just before 4 p.m., said
PG&E spokesman Donald Cutler.
A county public works equipment operator struck the natural gas
line, said The Fresno Bee, citing Fresno County Administrative
Officer John Navarrette.
The employee, who was badly burned, was the patient airlifted to
Community Regional Medical Center, the paper said, citing
Navarrette. Inmates on a work detail were among the injured, it
added, citing Sheriff Margaret Mims.
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The accident occurred at a shooting range used by law enforcement,
the Fresno County Sheriff's Department told the newspaper. Fresno is
about 190 miles (300 km) southeast of San Francisco.
The California Public Utilities Commission sent a team to Fresno to
investigate the explosion, spokeswoman Terrie Prosper said.
"The CPUC will conduct a full investigation of the explosion and has
already coordinated with the federal Pipeline and Hazardous
Materials Safety Administration," Prosper said.
A PG&E representative said the utility was also investigating.
(Additional reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles and Rory
Carroll in San Francisco; Editing by Eric Beech, Sandra Maler and
Clarence Fernandez)
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