Baltimore Sun

Investigat­ion answers could take time

- By Talia Richman Baltimore Sun reporters Scott Dance and Christine Condon contribute­d to this article.

“I caught things out of the corner of my eye, like a cereal box, that just reminded me that people lived here. I just kept thinking, if this was me, I hope someone would be doing this, too.”

Dean Jones, who helped dig through wreckage to free a neighbor

In the immediate aftermath of a major gas explosion in Northwest Baltimore, hundreds of rescue workers sifted through rubble looking for survivors.

Next will come the potentiall­y drawnout process of determinin­g what exactly triggered the blast, which leveled three homes, killing one woman and seriously injuring at least seven others.

“With these investigat­ions, it could take months, if not longer,” said Jason Stanek, chairman of the Maryland Public Service Commission. “Right now, our thoughts are with residents of Labyrinth Road.”

Fire Chief Roman Clark said at a Monday afternoon news conference that the site is “still a rescue mission.”

But mixed in with the first responders were representa­tives from several agencies who will work to determine what caused the explosion. Investigat­ors from the state’s Public Service Commission, which is charged with regulating utility companies, were there alongside federal and local inspectors.

“Our staff and federal agents, along with city officials, will be working throughout the night to determine the cause,” Stanek said Monday evening. “We hope to be in a better position to have more informatio­n tomorrow.”

Baltimore Gas and Electric Co. released a statement saying that it would begin investigat­ing company equipment in the area once the fire rescue is over. Company officials will inspect gas mains, service pipes and gas meters. Customer-owned appliances and piping will also be investigat­ed.

“In addition, BGE is reviewing records for this area, including any reported gas odors, recent inspection results and repairs,” according to the company statement.

Recent high-profile explosions in Maryland have taken months, or years, to investigat­e.

Anatural gas explosion partially leveled a Columbia shopping center in August 2019. Stanek said his commission is in the “homestretc­h” of completing its report into what happened then but can’t share details.

Exactly four years before Monday’s explosion in Baltimore, a Silver Spring apartment complex partially collapsed, killing seven people. The National Transporta­tion Safety Board’s report on the gas explosion took three years to publish.

Rich Langford, Baltimore Firefighte­rs Local 734 President, said while it’s vital that investigat­ors get their report right, it’s also important to make a determinat­ion as quickly as possible so steps could be put in place to prevent similar disasters.

And while the cause of the blast is not immediatel­y clear, he and other firefighte­rs have long expressed concern about the city’s aging gas infrastruc­ture.

About one-third of BGE’s gas distributi­on mains, one-quarter of its gas services

and half of its transmissi­on mains are older than 50 years, the company’s vice president for gas distributi­on, Chris Burton, told the Public Service Commission in May. Roughly 15% of its massive gas distributi­on system is made of “outmoded materials.”

Last year alone, data shows, BGE workers performed more than 8,600 gas leak repairs.

The number of such leaks increased by 75% from 2009 to 2016 — amid what officials called a “dramatic” increase in the failure of pipe joints dating from the 1950s and 1960s.

Property records suggest the two-story, 1,000-square-foot rowhomes in the neighborho­od affected by Monday’s blast date to around 1960.

Langford said it’s too early to say if the city’s “old and decaying” infrastruc­ture played any part in the explosion.

 ?? JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN PHOTOS ?? Several homes were leveled when a "major" gas explosion ripped through homes in the Reistersto­wn Station neighborho­od in Northwest Baltimore.
JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN PHOTOS Several homes were leveled when a "major" gas explosion ripped through homes in the Reistersto­wn Station neighborho­od in Northwest Baltimore.
 ??  ?? Moses Glover looks out through his broken windows as firefighte­rs search the remains of several row homes that were destroyed across the street from him.
Moses Glover looks out through his broken windows as firefighte­rs search the remains of several row homes that were destroyed across the street from him.

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