The Oklahoman

State, feds hunt for gas blast cause

- BY BOB SALSBERG

LAWRENCE, MASS. — Investigat­ors worked Friday to pinpoint the cause of a series of fiery natural gas explosions that killed a teen driver in his car just hours after he got his license, injured at least 25 others and left dozens of homes in smoldering ruins.

Authoritie­s said an estimated 8,000 people were displaced at the height of Thursday’s post-explosion chaos in three towns north of Boston rocked by the disaster.

Most were still waiting, shaken and exhausted, to be allowed to return to their homes.

Gov. Charlie Baker said Friday that hundreds of gas technician­s were being deployed throughout the night and into Saturday to make sure each home is safe to enter.

Even after residents return and their electricit­y is restored, gas service won’t be turned on until technician­s can inspect every connection in each home — a process that could take weeks.

“This remains a tremendous inconvenie­nce for many people,” Baker said. “It’s essential for the crews to get this right.”

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board sent a team to help investigat­e the blasts in a state where some of the aging gas pipeline system dates to the 1860s.

The rapid-fire series of gas explosions that one official described as “Armageddon” ignited fires in 60 to 80 homes in the working-class towns of Lawrence, Andover and North Andover, forcing entire neighborho­ods to evacuate as crews scrambled to fight the flames and shut off the gas and electricit­y.

Gas and electricit­y remained shut down Friday in most of the area, and entire neighborho­ods were eerily deserted.

Authoritie­s said Leonel Rondon, 18, of Lawrence, died after a chimney toppled by an exploding house crashed into his car. He was rushed to a Boston hospital and pronounced dead Thursday evening.

Rondon, a musician who went by the name DJ Blaze, had just gotten his driver’s license hours earlier, grieving friends and relatives told The Boston Globe. “It’s crazy how this happened,” said a friend, Cassandra Carrion.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? The house owned by Lawrence Police Officer Ivan Soto sits nearly burned to the ground Friday in Lawrence, Mass. It was one of multiple houses that went up in flames on Thursday afternoon after gas explosions and fires were triggered by a problem with a gas line that feeds homes in several communitie­s north of Boston.
[AP PHOTO] The house owned by Lawrence Police Officer Ivan Soto sits nearly burned to the ground Friday in Lawrence, Mass. It was one of multiple houses that went up in flames on Thursday afternoon after gas explosions and fires were triggered by a problem with a gas line that feeds homes in several communitie­s north of Boston.

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