Daily Times (Primos, PA)

NTSB: Father-son team was moving gas meter at time of blast

- By Amy Forliti,

MINNEAPOLI­S » Federal investigat­ors said Friday they are looking into the oversight of a fatherson team that was conducting the “hazardous operation” of moving a gas meter at a Minneapoli­s school when a natural gas explosion caused part of a building to collapse, killing two people.

The father and son were working for a contractor that was moving the meter from inside Minnehaha Academy to outside the school as part of gas company’s CenterPoin­t Energy’s plan to move meters outside for easier access, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board said.

NTSB investigat­ors were interviewi­ng the father and son, who were working for contractor Master Mechanical, and planned to interview other employees and gas company workers as well, said Christophe­r Hart, an NTSB board member. He said investigat­ors were seeking details about the relationsh­ip between the two companies, the process for contracts, and any oversight meter’s movement.

“That’s a very hazardous operation and requires considerab­le planning and oversight to conduct that operation safely ... and we want to find out all we can about how robust was that oversight process,” he said.

The bodies of two longtime school workers — receptioni­st Ruth Berg, 47, and custodian John Carlson, 82 — were found in the rubble earlier this week. The medical examiner said Friday that both died from blunt force of the injuries sustained a school building them.

Hart said investigat­ors will also look into whether the father or son attempting to move the meter were fatigued, distracted or impaired, which is standard in any investigat­ion. He said he was unsure if other contractor­s or the gas company were on site at the time. The question of whether the gas was shut off at the street or at the building was also being examined.

A representa­tive for Master Mechanical when part of collapsed on did not return a message Friday. CenterPoin­t Energy referred questions to the NTSB.

Hart said it will take some time for investigat­ors to get into the building’s basement to examine the pipes because the building is structural­ly unsafe. Hart said he and an investigat­or used a firetruck’s ladder to get over the rubble and get a closer look at the destructio­n, but excavators need to begin the painstakin­g process of removing debris without destroying evidence before investigat­ors can get inside.

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