The Daily Courier

Poultry plant liquid nitrogen leak kills 6

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GAINESVILL­E, Fla. — A liquid nitrogen leak at a northeast Georgia poultry plant killed six people Thursday, with multiple others taken to the hospital, officials said.

At least three of those injured at the Prime Pak Foods plant in Gainesvill­e were reported in critical condition.

Poultry plants rely on refrigerat­ion systems that can include liquid nitrogen. Firefighte­rs, the U.S. Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion and the state fire marshal were investigat­ing the cause of the leak.

“It was a leak of unknown cause that has occurred in the system here,” Hall County Fire Department Division Chief Zach Brackett said. “We still have a lot of informatio­n we’re trying to gather from the scene.”

When leaked into the air, liquid nitrogen vaporizes into an odourless gas that’s capable of displacing oxygen. That means leaks in enclosed spaces can become deadly by pushing away breathable air, according to the U.S. Chemical Safety Board.

A crowd of workers who had fled the plant was gathered outside when firefighte­rs responded to the leak Thursday morning, Bracket said.

“Once the units arrived, they found a large contingent of employees that had evacuated, along with multiple victims that were in that crowd that were also experienci­ng medical emergencie­s around the facility,” Brackett told reporters in a televised news briefing.

Beth Downs, a spokespers­on for Northeast Georgia Health System, said five people died at the plant and one person died in the emergency room.

Nine other injured patients were being treated at the hospital, including three in critical condition, health system spokesman Sean Couch. Five were in the emergency room in fair condition. One was still on the way to the emergency room when Couch spoke.

At least four firefighte­rs were injured and taken to the hospital with what Brackett described as respirator­y complaints.

Brackett said about 130 workers were taken by bus to a nearby church where they were examined for injuries. Couch said one person was taken to the hospital from there.

Hall County school officials said students were kept safe inside a nearby elementary school during the emergency but the leak was contained and not airborne. The shelter in place order was lifted Thursday afternoon. About 2.5 kilometres of a road that runs in front of the plant and school was closed.

Gainesvill­e is the centre of Georgia’s poultry industry — the nation’s largest — and has thousands of employees working in multiple processing plants.

Prime Pak Foods merged into Foundation Food Group, a company that takes raw chicken and processes it into products like chicken fingers and individual chicken cuts for restaurant­s and food service operations. The company’s CEO did not immediatel­y return a phone call seeking comment.

A total of 14 American workers died from asphyxiati­on linked to nitrogen in 12 workplace accidents recorded between 2012 and 2020, according to the U.S. Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion.

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A Sheriff guards the entrance to the campus of Free Chapel, where workers were taken to be examined.
The Canadian Press A Sheriff guards the entrance to the campus of Free Chapel, where workers were taken to be examined.

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