The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Carbon monoxide leak sickens 32 people in New York City

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NEW YORK » A carbon monoxide leak in a building three blocks from the World Trade Center sickened 32 people and raised alarm that shuttered several busy blocks in lower Manhattan at the start of the workday Tuesday, authoritie­s said.

The problem ultimately was traced to a broken boiler pipe in a grocery store basement, Fire Department Chief of Department James Leonard said. But people started feeling faint around 8:30 a.m. just as a worker opened a package in the basement, stirring worries that the parcel might have been poisonous.

The concern brought a police bomb squad and FBI agents to the scene. Authoritie­s ultimately determined the package wasn’t hazardous, Leonard said. It contained salad bowls.

“A prudent person could make that connection — that ‘ the box opened, then we passed out.’ But between the fire department and the po- lice department, we ruled out that type of incident,” he said.

The grocery store, called Amish Market, and the apartments above in the 12-floor building were evacuated as firefighte­rs measured carbon monoxide levels that maxed out their meters in some places. The meters mea- sure up to 1,000 parts per million, enough to “render you unconsciou­s very, very quickly,” Leonard said.

The normal level of carbon monoxide in a house can be from under one to 15 ppm, depending on whether there’s a gas stove, according to the U. S. Environmen­tal Pro- tection Agency.

While some people passed out in the store, called and its basement, all the injuries were relatively minor, Leonard said.

A person who answered the store’s phone later Tuesday said no managers would be available to comment for the rest of the day.

 ?? MARK LENNIHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Emergency personnel work in lower Manhattan after a carbon monoxide leak Tuesday, June 13, 2017, in New York. Authoritie­s ultimately traced the problem Tuesday morning to a broken boiler pipe in the grocery store basement.
MARK LENNIHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Emergency personnel work in lower Manhattan after a carbon monoxide leak Tuesday, June 13, 2017, in New York. Authoritie­s ultimately traced the problem Tuesday morning to a broken boiler pipe in the grocery store basement.

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