gas


Fire Station urges to call 811 before digging

A 30-foot-high shovel went on display at a Woodland Hills fire station Friday as part of a campaign urging residents to dial 811 before doing any digging so authorities can ensure there are no underground utility lines at risk of being damaged. “About 60 percent of pipeline damage due to […]


Digging Dangers 24 – Excavation Accidents of 2013

Compilation of excavation accidents involving buried utilities in 2013, including a pipeline accident and natural gas explosions, as narrated by Mike Parilac of Digging Dangers.


In Colorado, gas line damage from digging happens as often as four times a day

Nearly four times a day in Colorado, developers, homeowners or builders hit gas pipelines while excavating or digging into the ground, sometimes with deadly consequences such as the fatal explosion in Firestone that was caused by a severed line near a home. But Colorado officials have an inadequate system for […]


Several homes evacuated after gas line rupture in Greenfield

Western Mass News – WGGB/WSHM For some Greenfield residents, their cold Tuesday morning got even colder when a ruptured gas line forced them to evacuate their homes for several hours and close three roads in the process. For one grandfather, that was only the beginning. It was supposed to be […]


Gas main explosion badly burns construction worker

A gas line explosion and towering fireball hurt at least one construction worker and consumed construction equipment about 2 p.m. Wednesday along Illinois 162 in Maryville.

The injured person was taken to Anderson Hospital in Maryville with burns over 70 percent of his body, then flown to a St. Louis hospital. The equipment operator with Keller Construction in Edwardsville was stabilized at the Maryville hospital before being transferred to Mercy Hospital in St. Louis, which has a burn unit.

“They were able to get him here very quickly,” Anderson Hospital spokeswoman Natalie Head said. “Our prayers are with his family.”

News photographs and eyewitness accounts painted a chaotic scene, with police officers rushing toward the fireball.

Maryville resident Jim Harrison said he saw Maryville Police Officer Justin Krausz carry an injured person from the fire.

“He put his car in park, radioed it in and ran directly toward him, and picked him up and carried him a distance from the flames, then other rescue crews started arriving,” Harrison said.

Maryville Police Chief Rob Carpenter said a construction crew excavating at the site of the future Villas at Nottingham hit a 10-inch steel gas line and triggered an explosion at 1:45 p.m. Wednesday. Carpenter said the intense flames made it difficult for emergency workers to work, but they were able to get to a worker who was seriously injured and rush him to the hospital. “The flames were shooting very high in the air when we arrived,” he said.

Early reports that there was a fatality on the scene were in error, Carpenter said. “Everybody else is accounted for,” he said.

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CPUC begins hearings on Carmel explosion and five other PG&E pipeline accidents

As the California Public Utilities Commission began a new round of hearings in San Francisco today into PG&E’s pipeline record-keeping, Carmel Mayor Jason Burnett called for sweeping reforms and possibly a break-up of the utility


PG&E wins restraining order against company involved in pipeline explosion

In the fourth incident cited by PG&E as cause for a restraining order, the utility says Big N Deep drove heavy digging machinery over a gas pipeline near

Henry A. Barrios / The Californian

Gas line explosion highlights lack of coordination between pipeline owners and excavation contractors

This month’s fatal pipeline rupture near Bakersfield highlights a challenge that has vexed state, federal and private-sector officials in recent years: how to improve coordination between natural gas utilities and excavation contractors to better protect public s


One dead and three injured in PG&E natural gas line explosion southwest of Bakersfield

A third party, more than likely a farmer, hit the line with a piece of heavy equipment,” Kern County Fire Department Capt. Tom Ellison said. “The operator of that vehicle was killed.


Neighbors concerned about safety in fiber line construction

Residents of a Huntersville neighborhood contacted Channel 9 after they said AT&T’s fiber line work has caused a string of gas and water main breaks in the area.

A gas line was hit Monday night on Harvington Drive. It was repaired, but neighbors said they are tired of the problems.

The issues started last week when a contractor installing AT&T fiber lines accidentally severed AT&T service lines for the neighborhood. The service was out for more than 12 hours.

A contractor then cut a water line. The gas line that was cut Monday night caused a gas leak, and firefighters had to block off several streets.

Channel 9 anchor John Paul spoke with the neighbors about their complaints and learned that contractors are installing fiber optic lines.

Bill Clegg is not happy with the working being done in his neighborhood.

He showed Paul where fiber crews under contract with AT&T installed boxes in his yard in Huntersville. Clegg said he had no say in the matter and AT&T was granted an easement to install the cables, which provide high-speed Internet service.

“I didn’t realize they could come 10 feet to put a box in my yard for service I may never want down the road,” Clegg said.

Neighbors said that between their yards being torn up and their utilities being cut off, they are fed up.

“They’re tearing up my yard. They’re disrupting my lifestyle. I’m not very happy,” neighbor Ellen Law said. “You can see what they’ve done here. It’s a big mud hole.”

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