USA TODAY US Edition

Mass. gas company linked to more blasts

Columbia’s parent company NiSource connected to 3 other explosions

- Kevin McCoy

The corporate parent of the Massachuse­tts natural gas utility that’s the focus of an investigat­ion into explosions and fires that killed one person and injured about 25 others had links to three previous gas line blasts, a review of federal and state records and court filings shows.

The links emerged as Columbia Gas of Massachuse­tts scrambled to provide assistance and informatio­n to residents of Lawrence, North Andover and other Merrimack Valley communitie­s after Thursday’s tragedy.

The history of other accidents also came as the National Transporta­tion Safety Board launched an investigat­ion that showed Columbia Gas pipes in the area of the explosions had been over-pressurize­d. Normally, gas would flow into residences at a rate of a

pound per square inch, NTSB Chairman Robert Sumwalt said Sunday in Massachuse­tts.

“We believe the gas did indeed flow into homes at significan­tly greater flow rates and pressure. The real question for this investigat­ion is to answer why this occurred,” Sumwalt said.

A pressure increase in the disaster area also had been indicated on the pipeline controller’s console in Columbus, Ohio, around the time of the disaster, Sumwalt said Saturday.

Columbia Gas of Massachuse­tts is the business name of Bay State Gas Company, according to a written summary of testimony Stephen Bryant, the utility’s president and chief operating officer, provided in April for a rate hike request submitted to the Massachuse­tts Department of Public Utilities.

Incorporat­ed in 1974, the company is one of seven natural gas distributi­on companies that are subsidiari­es of NiSource, a publicly traded holding company based in Merrillvil­le, Indiana.

Columbia Gas distribute­s natural gas to roughly 321,000 residentia­l, commercial and industrial customers in three Massachuse­tts areas centered in Lawrence, Springfiel­d and Brockton, according to Bryant. NiSource’s combined utility operations serve approximat­ely 3.9 million customers in seven states and operate roughly

60,000 miles of distributi­on pipelines. The Massachuse­tts tragedy has renewed public focus on the safety of natural gas pipelines and the companies that own and maintain them. Through its subsidiari­es, NiSource had links to at least three gas line explosions in three states during the last six years.

❚ Springfiel­d, Massachuse­tts, ex-

plosion: In November 2012, a Columbia Gas of Massachuse­tts service line explosion injured 21 and destroyed a building that housed the Scores strip club in Springfiel­d, west of Boston. The blast heavily damaged roughly a dozen nearby buildings and blew out windows in others.

NiSource said in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing the gas service line was pierced, and an explosion occurred, “while Columbia of Massachuse­tts was investigat­ing the source of an odor of gas.”

Columbia Gas spokeswoma­n Andrea Luppi in 2014 told Springfiel­d newspaper The Republican the company had paid millions of dollars to settle 84 percent of damage claims filed by 832 individual­s and firms.

Luppi acknowledg­ed the Springfiel­d tragedy was the costliest incident in the company’s history at that time, the news organizati­on reported. The settlement­s included a $650,000 agreement to repay the city for property damage and other expenses. The utility also agreed to provide a $200,000 grant to the city for planning and urban renewal efforts.

However, some Springfiel­d residents and businesses that suffered from damage caused by the explosion sued Columbia Gas. Julio and Evelyn Edwards, a local radio station and a church organizati­on filed a 2015 federal lawsuit that alleged the Edwards family members were left homeless, while the businesses were unable to operate for months. They sought $1.5 million in collective damages.

Massachuse­tts U.S. District Court Judge Mark Mastroiann­i dismissed the case in 2016 on legal technicali­ties. The plaintiffs mistakenly identified the utility in the lawsuit as Columbia Gas of Massachuse­tts. The proper legal entity is Bay State Gas Company (doing business as) Columbia Gas of Massachuse­tts, the utility said. Additional­ly, the federal court lacked jurisdicti­on because the company and plaintiffs all were based in Massachuse­tts.

Russell Shaddock, owner of the building that had housed the Scores strip club, filed a separate 2014 lawsuit in Hampden Superior Court seeking $1 million in damages from Columbia Gas. The Republican reported that a spokeswoma­n for the utility said Shaddock had not accepted settlement­s offered by the company.

Shaddock did not respond to a telephone message seeking comment about the case.

❚ West Virginia pipeline blast: In December 2012, an interstate natural gas pipeline operated by Colum- bia Gas Transmissi­on, another NiSource subsidiary at that time, exploded in Sissonvill­e, West Virginia.

Escaping high-pressure gas from the 20-inch pipeline sparked a fire that destroyed three homes in the sparsely populated area, according to a National Transporta­tion Safety Board report. The explosion also propelled a 20-foot section of the pipe more than

40 feet from its original location, the report said. Two Columbia Gas operations personnel who were repairing a leak on a production pipeline about 4.75 miles from the accident location stated that “they could hear the roar from the releasing gas,” the report added. The ruptured pipe was part of a pipeline segment that was installed in 1967, the report said.

The NTSB concluded the probable cause of the rupture was external corrosion of the pipe wall due to deteriorat­ed coating. Also, the report cited the utility company’s failure to detect the corrosion “because the pipeline was not inspected or tested after 1988.”

❚ Ohio pipeline explosion: A natural gas release from an “improperly abandoned” service line was responsibl­e for a March 2015 explosion and fire, the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio concluded in a report on the Upper Arlington disaster that caused

$9 million in structural damage. The report focused on actions of Columbia Gas of Ohio, a NiSource subsidiary. The state regulator’s staff concluded the gas line was installed at a home on Sunningdal­e Way in

1960 and was taken out of service between 1985 and

1997. But the line was never disconnect­ed from the gas main and was not plugged or sealed, the report said.

The explosion occurred after Columbus Water Department employees went to the home to disconnect water service in preparatio­n for planned plumbing work on a water leak. The workers mistakenly opened the gas valve box while doing the work, the report said. As a result, gas flowed through the abandoned line, into the home and around the neighborho­od. A U.S. Postal Service employee reported a “strong smell of natural gas” while delivering mail on March 21. But the warning came too late.

In 2016, the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio approved an agreement that required Columbia Gas of Ohio to pay a $200,000 fine, improve its record keeping and enhance safety outreach.

❚ Rate hike applicatio­n: Separately, Columbia Gas is pursuing a gas rate hike request the utility filed in April with the Massachuse­tts Department of Public Utilities. The company’s originally proposed $44.5 million distributi­on rate increase was reduced to

$33.2 million in a tentative settlement filed on Sept. 5. Approval from the state regulator is required before any rate hikes can be imposed on utility customers.

 ?? JESSICA RINALDI/AP ?? Crews work to knock down a fire Thursday in Lawrence, Mass. Officials are blaming over-pressurize­d gas lines for the multiple explosions and fire.
JESSICA RINALDI/AP Crews work to knock down a fire Thursday in Lawrence, Mass. Officials are blaming over-pressurize­d gas lines for the multiple explosions and fire.
 ?? CJ GUNTHER/EPA-EFE ?? Firefighte­rs battle a house fire Thursday in Lawrence, Mass. The tragedy has renewed public focus on the safety of natural gas pipelines and the companies that own and maintain them.
CJ GUNTHER/EPA-EFE Firefighte­rs battle a house fire Thursday in Lawrence, Mass. The tragedy has renewed public focus on the safety of natural gas pipelines and the companies that own and maintain them.

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