Daily Times (Primos, PA)

1 dead, 1 missing after explosion at a private school in Minneapoli­s

- By Amy Forliti and Jeff Baenen

MINNEAPOLI­S » One school staff member has been found dead and another is still missing following a natural gas explosion Wednesday at a private school in Minneapoli­s, authoritie­s said.

The body was found in the rubble of a building that partially collapsed during the explosion at the Minnehaha Academy, Minneapoli­s Fire Chief John Fruetel said during a news conference. The Christian school serves students from pre-kindergart­en through 12th grade.

Both individual­s worked at the school, according to the Minneapoli­s Fire Department. No other details were immediatel­y released.

The school released a statement earlier in the day saying all of its summer program students and staff were “accounted for and safe.” The school didn’t immediatel­y return a message seeking comment following Fruetel’s news conference.

Contractor­s were doing work on the building at the time of the blast, which investigat­ors determined was caused by a gas explosion, according to Assistant Fire Chief Bryan Tyner.

Four people remained hospitaliz­ed late Wednesday, including one in critical condition, at Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapoli­s, according to the hospital. Victims suffered injuries ranging from head injuries and broken bones to cuts from debris, according to Dr. Jim Miner, the hospital’s chief of emergency medicine.

Aerial video footage of the school’s campus showed part of a building crumbled, windows in other areas blown out and shattered, and bricks and other debris scattered about. Three people were rescued from the roof of the building shortly after the explosion and fire, Tyner said,

Paul Meskan, who lives across the street from the school, said he was pulling weeds when the blast happened, and he ran over to the school. Meskan said he and other people who rushed to help found a man pinned under the rubble.

“We just started digging,” Meskan said, noting that after police and firefighte­rs arrived, “we kept digging, and gas, gas was going. Fire was going.

“And it’s like, ‘we’re not going back until we get this guy out of here.’ And we got him out, and they got him on a stretcher.”

The Star Tribune reported that city records show Master Mechanical Inc. was issued a permit on June 7 for “gas piping and hooking up meter” at the school’s address. Ryan Larsen, a company official, released a statement saying the company was monitoring the situation and referred all questions to the Minneapoli­s Fire Department.

 ?? DAVID JOLES — STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? Emergency personnel move away as a gas fire continues to burn following an explosion at Minnehaha Academy Wednesday in Minneapoli­s. Several people are unaccounte­d for after an explosion and partial building collapse Wednesday at a Minneapoli­s school,...
DAVID JOLES — STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP Emergency personnel move away as a gas fire continues to burn following an explosion at Minnehaha Academy Wednesday in Minneapoli­s. Several people are unaccounte­d for after an explosion and partial building collapse Wednesday at a Minneapoli­s school,...
 ?? AARON LAVINSKY — STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? Emergency workers respond to an explosion at Minnehaha Academy in Minneapoli­s Wednesday. Assistant Fire Chief Bryan Tyner said it appears the explosion may have been caused by a ruptured gas line, but that the investigat­ion is ongoing.
AARON LAVINSKY — STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP Emergency workers respond to an explosion at Minnehaha Academy in Minneapoli­s Wednesday. Assistant Fire Chief Bryan Tyner said it appears the explosion may have been caused by a ruptured gas line, but that the investigat­ion is ongoing.
 ?? DAVID JOLES — STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? A Minneapoli­s police officer puts up police tape following an explosion at Minnehaha Academy Wednesday in Minneapoli­s.
DAVID JOLES — STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP A Minneapoli­s police officer puts up police tape following an explosion at Minnehaha Academy Wednesday in Minneapoli­s.
 ?? DAVID JOLES — STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? Former Minnehaha Academy employees Elizabeth Van Pilsum, left, and Rick Olson, center, react after an explosion at the school Wednesday in Minneapoli­s.
DAVID JOLES — STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP Former Minnehaha Academy employees Elizabeth Van Pilsum, left, and Rick Olson, center, react after an explosion at the school Wednesday in Minneapoli­s.

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