The Morning Call

Agency issued subpoena over chocolate plant blast

NTSB wants unredacted reports from state regulator

- By Michael Rubinkam Associated Press

Federal safety investigat­ors issued a subpoena to Pennsylvan­ia’s public utility regulator Monday for documents related to a fatal explosion at a chocolate factory, escalating a monthslong legal dispute over the state agency’s authority to share the sensitive informatio­n.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board said the Pennsylvan­ia Public Utility Commission has refused to provide unredacted inspection and investigat­ion reports for UGI Utilities Inc., the natural gas utility at the center of the probe into the March 24 blast at the R.M. Palmer Co. plant in West Reading.

The powerful natural gas explosion leveled one building, heavily damaged another and killed seven people. Investigat­ors have previously said they are looking at a pair of gas leaks as a possible cause of or contributo­r to the blast.

The interagenc­y dispute over five years’ worth of UGI records involved a conflict between state and federal law.

The Public Utility Commission said it could not provide the records in the format that the safety agency demanded, citing a state law that protects “confidenti­al security informatio­n” about key utility infrastruc­ture from public disclosure, even to other government agencies.

The commission said it offered safety investigat­ors a chance to inspect the reports at its Harrisburg office or to sign a nondisclos­ure agreement, but the federal agency refused.

“This is a unique situation where a federal agency is demanding that the PUC violate state law,” PUC spokespers­on Nils Hagen-Frederikse­n said in a written statement. “It is unfortunat­e that the NTSB has rejected possible solutions to this issue, but we continue working to resolve this impasse.”

The safety board said federal regulation­s entitled it to the utility company records and asserted the PUC was required to turn them over.

Because federal law preempts state law, NTSB chair Jennifer L. Homendy wrote to the state utility commission chair, the PUC “has no legal basis to withhold the … inspection reports from the NTSB in any manner.”

In addition to issuing the subpoena, the safety agency said it also barred the Public Utility Commission from having any further role in the federal probe.

“The actions of PA PUC have evidenced a lack of cooperatio­n and adherence to our party processes and prevent your continued participat­ion in the investigat­ion,” Homendy wrote.

About 70 Palmer production workers and 35 office staff were working in two adjacent buildings at the time of the blast. Employees in both buildings told federal investigat­ors they could smell gas before the explosion. Workers at the plant have accused Palmer of ignoring warnings of a natural gas leak, saying the plant should have been evacuated.

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