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Indiana Jones
Location: Alberta, Canada
Registered:: May 02, 2007
Posts: 13429
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5 dead, 12 injured in US power plant blast

By Luis Torres de la Llosa (AFP)
– 2 hours ago
Sunday, February 07, 2010

MIDDLETOWN, Connecticut — At least five people were killed and 12 injured Sunday in a massive gas explosion that tore apart an unfinished US power plant and rattled windows miles (kilometers) away.

However officials cautioned that they did not know how many people were in the Kleen Energy plant, which was still being constructed, and therefore they could not immediately account for everyone who may have been present.

"We know that 12 individuals have been injured. Five individuals are known to have lost their lives," Sebastian Giuliano, the mayor of Middletown in Connecticut, told a news conference.

Terrorism had been ruled out, according to the mayor, who said the accident happened during a testing procedure.

Rescue workers helped by search dogs scoured the rubble at the plant where a brief, but fierce fire following the accident sent flames and black smoke billowing skyward.

"There was like a fireball going up and a lot of smoke. The explosion was strong enough to break one of our windows. Our neighbors had also their windows destroyed," said Scott Harmann, 44, whose father lives in a house just across the Connecticut River from the plant.

Nearby resident Mike Woronoff said he heard "a loud boom" at his house some two miles (3.2 kilometers) from the plant.

"I have friends that live 15 miles from here that called me because they could hear it. Then we could see the smoke. It went on for a mile and a half, then stopped," he said.

Amid confusion over the number of casualties local officials immediately warned of the potential for carnage.

"There was a massive explosion, there are multiple injuries and possible fatalities," Middletown police spokesman George Yepes told AFP soon after the blast.

"The reports vary from a few to possibly as many as 50 dead," Brian Albert from the Middlesex hospital, which was treating several of those injured, said in the immediate aftermath.

Uncertainty as to the final toll seemed set to continue until contractors working on the site were able to compile an accurate roster of those present.

A Middletown fire official said it was "initially thought there was approximately 50 employees" there at the time and that "it's unknown how many people are missing."

Giuliano said "there could be anywhere from 100 to 200 people working on the site on any given day. Exactly what's that number, that's the starting point and that's the number they can't nail down today.

"Fortunately what I was told is that most of the people working there were evacuated from the building when they ran the test," he said.

A local resident told the Hartford Courant newspaper that the explosion took place during a test of the plant's power generating systems.

The 620-megawatt Kleen Energy plant, said to be one of the largest power facilities to be planned in New England for many years, was still under construction.

The future gas-fired energy production plant is located on the outskirts of Middletown, close to residential housing.

A company called Energy Investors Funds recently acquired 80 percent of the plant, which had been due to go online sometime in 2010.

The American Red Cross said it had set up a phone number -- (860) 347-2577 -- for "anyone concerned for the well-being of a relative or a friend that was working at the Kleen Energy plant."

Reference Source


An aerial view of the Kleen Energy Systems plant, where an explosion took place earlier today
Indiana Jones
Location: Alberta, Canada
Registered:: May 02, 2007
Posts: 13429
Posted   Hide PostReply With QuoteReport This Post  
Desperate Search for Victims of Explosion in Connecticut

By RAY RIVERA
Published: February 7, 2010

MIDDLETOWN, Conn. — Search and rescue crews braved icy weather late into the evening Sunday to look for possible survivors who might be buried in the wreckage at the site of a power plant where hours earlier an explosion rocked this central Connecticut college town.

Their efforts were being frustrated by a sheer absence of information about how many people were working at the site, where construction crews were completing work on the power plant being built by Kleen Energy Systems. City and state officials said as many as 100 to 200 might have been on the job when the explosion occurred Sunday morning, but other officials put the count as low as 50. By nightfall they had counted five dead and more than two dozen with unspecified injuries.

Officials said they believed many workers may have fled the scene unharmed. But dealing with an unknown number of contractors and subcontractors on the project, officials on Sunday night, more than seven hours after the explosion, still had no list of names of people who were supposed to have been on the job and who might still be missing.

“It’s one thing to say we don’t know who was on the job in the morning after the incident,” the Middletown mayor, Sebastian N. Giuliano, said at his office Sunday evening. “But at this stage of the game to still be fuddling around with this is extremely frustrating.”

The accident was one of the worst in memory in this town of about 45,000 people, where church steeples and old Colonial buildings are common and industrial smokestacks are rare. About 15 miles south of Hartford, the town is home to Wesleyan University. That the accident happened on Super Bowl Sunday was only adding to the confusion, Mr. Giuliano said.

“We’re trying to figure out who was on the site today and is home now, sitting at home watching the Super Bowl, and who might be still under the rubble,” Mr. Giuliano said.

Mr. Giuliano added that it was still unclear whether all the contractors involved in the project had been contacted, efforts that might also be hampered by the game. He was unsure how many contractors were even involved, he said.

At a family assistance center set up by the Red Cross at City Hall, a handful of people came throughout the day to look for information, and more people called, but it was not the flood of people that might be expected given the uncertainty of who might have been working.

Mark Brinkerhoff, a spokesman for the Middlesex County Red Cross, said the people calling in were looking for the same thing everyone else was: a list of names.

“It’s frustrating,” he said. “They’re calling the hospitals, hospitals tell them to call the police, police tell them to call the Red Cross; nobody has this information.”

The blast could be heard throughout the town and neighboring communities, breaking some windows near the site, officials said.

“It shook my whole house, and I live six and half miles from here,” said Essie Spencer, a Red Cross volunteer from Higganum, a small community south of Middletown. “We thought it was an earthquake or dynamite. It really shook. Every window in my house rattled. My dog freaked out.”

Watching the Super Bowl at a bar on Main Street in Middletown on Sunday evening, Jon Johnson, 38, said he learned of the explosion after seeing a flurry of posts on Facebook during a lunch break in Wallingford.

“The first message I saw was, ‘Don’t go to Middletown, it’s in chaos,’ ” said Mr. Johnson, who lives in Portland, across the Connecticut River from the plant. “I started asking, ‘What the heck happened?’ ”

But what confusion the blast had caused had calmed by evening. Even at the Red Cross center, volunteers were watching the game in the pauses between calls.

The release of the victims’ identities was being delayed until their relatives had been notified. The mayor said he expected that search-and-rescue efforts would continue into the morning and last as long as three days.

One victim was identified by friends and relatives as Raymond Dobratz, 57, a pipe fitter from nearby Old Saybrook, where he had also served for more than a decade on the Police Commission and the parks and recreation commission, and had been an officer with the Westbrook Elks Lodge.

“He’s a man who served the community for many, many years,” said Adam Stillman, of the Old Saybrook Democratic Town Committee. “Obviously his loss is a terrible tragedy.”

Mr. Dobratz had two adult sons and a wife who works as a nurse, said Richard Metsack, a friend who served with Mr. Dobratz on the police commission. Sometimes he would help his son with his small fishing charter business.

Mr. Dobratz had even once coached the town’s current chief of police in Little League.

“He just loved the town,” Mr. Metsack said.

Reporting was contributed by Robert Davey and Thomas Kaplan in Middletown, and Michael S. Schmidt and A. G. Sulzberger in New York.

refrence Source - New York Times
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