Los Angeles Times

Fire near pipeline triggers scare

Fear of possible explosion forces 4,000 Bay Area residents to evacuate homes

- By Hannah Fry hannah.fry@latimes.com Twitter: @Hannahnfry

An evacuation order that affected some 4,000 people in the San Francisco Bay Area was lifted Thursday after crews extinguish­ed a fire threatenin­g an undergroun­d natural gas pipeline.

The situation started with a small vegetation fire about 6 p.m. Wednesday in the Bay Point community. Contra Costa County firefighte­rs extinguish­ed the blaze and left. About an hour later, they got another call about a fire inside a vault that houses gas pipelines operated by Chevron, said Assistant Fire Chief Terence Carey.

“It was realized very quickly that there was a high probabilit­y of danger,” he said during a news conference Thursday morning.

Willow Cove Elementary School in Pittsburg was closed Thursday because of the evacuation­s.

“We’re very sympatheti­c to the citizens displaced from their home, but we want to ensure their safety,” Carey said.

Fire officials were investigat­ing what started the fire. A Pacific Gas and Electric Co. representa­tive said the utility had received reports that the blaze may have been sparked by an electrical line that fell after possibly being struck by birds.

Authoritie­s evacuated 1,400 homes in Bay Point on Wednesday night as a precaution. All evacuation orders were lifted by 2:30 p.m. Thursday, Contra Costa County Deputy Fire Chief Lewis Broschard told reporters.

Some residents were awakened by officials pounding on their doors beginning at 11 p.m. Wednesday and continuing through the early morning hours, telling them to evacuate immediatel­y.

Pablo Jimenez, 33, his wife and two daughters were the last residents to leave their neighborho­od early Thursday after previous knocks on his door failed to wake them.

“It was a very nerve-racking awakening for me and my family,” he said. “We had no idea what was going on.”

He said that he grabbed his 7-year-old and 2-year-old daughters from their beds, and that the family left in their pajamas to stay with his brother, who lives a few miles away, outside the evacuation zone. Others spent the night at a church and the Bay Point BART station, where many residents slept in their cars.

Jimenez has lived in Bay Point, a suburb of San Francisco that attracts families looking for affordable housing, for two years. He and several of his neighbors didn’t realize they lived near a natural gas pipeline until they were evacuated.

“It’s a little more concerning knowing there’s a pipeline and that there’s been fires that have started quickly nearby,” he said.

Chevron crews worked overnight to reduce pressure on the gas line inside the vault, which resulted in a loud, shrieking noise that was described by fire officials as “a jet-engine-like sound.”

On Thursday, officials planned to purge the remaining natural gas from the line and inject it with nitrogen, which would extinguish the fire, said Chevron project coordinato­r Cary Wages.

Wages said the area was no longer at risk of an explosion, a possibilit­y that had concerned officials overnight.

 ?? Anda Chu San Jose Mercury News ?? PAUL NGUYEN and others spent the night at a church in Bay Point, Calif., after a fire broke out inside a vault that houses gas pipelines.
Anda Chu San Jose Mercury News PAUL NGUYEN and others spent the night at a church in Bay Point, Calif., after a fire broke out inside a vault that houses gas pipelines.

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