Toronto Star

‘I thought I was dead for sure,’ oil worker recalls

Irving Oil refinery staff recovering following Thanksgivi­ng Day blast

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SAINT JOHN, N.B.— First, Jonathan Wright heard a loud hissing.

Then he was thrown to the ground and turned to see a wall of orange, as flames surrounded him and several other workers after a massive explosion at the Irving Oil refinery in Saint John, N.B., on Monday morning.

The American contractor said his workspace was approximat­ely 35 metres from the blast — and the only stairway out was blocked by flames.

“You could not see anything besides smoke and flames,” Wright said. “I thought we were done right there.”

Wright told his story Tuesday, as the refinery regrouped from the Thanksgivi­ng Day explosion, which shook the historic port city shortly after 10 a.m. and injured at least four workers.

Mayor Don Darling said Tuesday residents living near the refinery remain “very nervous,” even though the fiery incident has been stabilized. He said the city’s large industrial base comes with risks and there needs to be a broader discussion about the interactio­n between residents and industry.

The Saint John Emergency Measures Organizati­on said Tuesday it has been “deactivate­d,” although some firefighte­rs remain on the scene as recovery efforts continue.

The last flare up came at 9 p.m. Monday, “as part of the normal stabilizat­ion process,” the EMO said.

At the time of the explosion, there were as many as 3,000 workers on the site.

Wright, 43, an electronic­s technician from Florida, said he’s worked at refineries around the world for 11 years, but has never experience­d anything like Monday’s drama.

“It was a (expletive) nightmare, I’ve never seen anything like that in my entire life,” Wright said in an interview on Tuesday.

“I thought I was dead for sure.”

Wright said he had to jump through high scaffoldin­g and pipes several metres in the air to escape. He didn’t realize his co-workers were behind him until after he was outside, and he thought they were likely killed.

Once he got outside, Wright left the premises after getting a ride with someone else who was about to pull out of the parking lot.

The Floridian said he feels lucky to have escaped, and lucky that neither he or his coworkers were severely burned. He said he pulled muscles and sustained scrapes and cuts in the clamber to escape.

“It was just a blur getting out of there. I just never imagined jumping through all that stuff, pipes and scaffoldin­g and stuff. I just never thought that would happen to me, but you know, it did. I just can’t believe we weren’t burned.”

Wright is flying home to Florida Wednesday, and said most of all, he is looking forward to hugging his kids and his fiancée when he lands.

Irving Oil tweeted on Tuesday that the site of the incident is “isolated and contained,” and said workers will be back to work on Tuesday evening.

Eric Brideau, assistant director of investigat­ions with WorkSafe NB, said Tuesday the investigat­ion will focus on occupation­al health and safety issues.

“We want to find the cause to make sure it doesn’t occur again … We can write orders or it can go all the way to a prosecutio­n, that’s just a potential,” Brideau said.

“A refinery is a very complex piece of equipment and Irving as a contractor and owner of the business, they obviously have a very large responsibi­lity to ensure the health and safety.”

Darling called the city’s emergency response to the explosion “fantastic,” but said the city needs to ensure it has proper plans in place to protect residents.

He said there will still be an extensive review of the city’s handling of the incident, including its communicat­ion with residents.

“We live in a world of almost instantane­ous communicat­ion … so I think communicat­ions need to be reviewed — and I think the relationsh­ip that we have with our industrial partners in our city needs to be reviewed as well,” he said, noting there have been other industrial accidents in the city.

“We have a very, very high concentrat­ion of industry here in Saint John and I think we’ve gone through a series of butane leaks and explosions and fires and I think it has people very nervous and rightly so — we have to have that broader discussion about the interactio­ns and interface between the city and the industrial players in our city.”

An Irving official told reporters Monday there had been a malfunctio­n in the refinery’s diesel treating unit, where sulphur is removed from diesel fuel.

Patrick Stull, director of the Saint John regional office of the Department of Environmen­t and Local Government, said they found no signs of air quality “exceedance­s” during the fire.

 ?? STEPHEN MACGILLIVR­AY THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? At least four people were injured in the Thanksgivi­ng Day explosion at the Irving Oil refinery in Saint John, N.B.
STEPHEN MACGILLIVR­AY THE CANADIAN PRESS At least four people were injured in the Thanksgivi­ng Day explosion at the Irving Oil refinery in Saint John, N.B.

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