New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Officials: Gas truck driver lost control, leading to I-95 collapse

- By Ron Todt, Mike Catalini and Marc Levy

PHILADELPH­IA — The driver of a tractortra­iler hauling gasoline lost control on an offramp and flipped the tanker truck on its side in a wreck that set it afire and destroyed a section of the East Coast’s main north-south highway, Pennsylvan­ia's top transporta­tion official said Monday.

In the first official accounting of a wreck that threw hundreds of thousands of morning commutes into chaos and disrupted untold numbers of businesses, state Transporta­tion Secretary Mike Carroll said the driver was northbound “trying to navigate the curve, lost control of the vehicle, landed on its side and ruptured the tank.”

The driver was feared dead, and a relative of a New Jersey truck driver who has not been heard from since Sunday told The Philadelph­ia Inquirer that investigat­ors had contacted the family in an effort to identify human remains recovered from the wreckage.

Pennsylvan­ia State Police said a body was turned over to the Philadelph­ia

medical examiner and coroner, but did not identify the remains or respond when asked if they belonged to the driver.

Gov. Josh Shapiro, speaking of those on the roadway and not the trucker, said he “found myself thanking the Lord that no motorists who were on I-95 were injured or died.”

Interstate 95 will be closed in both directions for weeks as the summer travel season kicks into high gear. The elevated southbound portion of I-95 will have to be demolished, as well as the northbound side, Carroll said. Motorists should avoid the northeast corner of the sixth-largest city in the country, transporta­tion officials said.

The accident also disrupted the automotive route from Canada to Florida through the Boston, New York and Washington metropolit­an areas, increasing Americans' dependence on air travel and on the interstate rail network.

Videos shared on social media showed a number of close calls around the accident, with people driving through the area as flames licked upward from the fire below.

The National Transporta­tion

Safety Board was on the scene Sunday night. Federal investigat­ors have been collecting informatio­n about the truck and talking with the company and emergency responders in order to understand the sequence of events. They are expected to make a preliminar­y report within weeks.

The damaged I-95 segment carries about 160,000 vehicles daily, Carroll said. State police don't know if the driver was speeding, and no other vehicle has been found. Officials said they had been in contact with the trucking company, but they did not identify it.

Carroll said the highway span was 10 to 12 years old, had appeared sound, and officials blamed the damage on the heat of the fire, which took about an hour to control.

Shapiro signed a disaster declaratio­n Monday, saying it gives state agencies the ability to skip normal bidding-and-contractin­g requiremen­ts so the span can be repaired faster.

He said a flight he took over the area showed “just remarkable devastatio­n.”

High heat from the fire or the impact of an explosion could have weakened the steel beams supporting the overpass, according to Drexel University structural engineerin­g Professor Abi Aghayere. Bridges like the one that collapsed don't typically have fire protection, like concrete casing, he added. It could have been coated in a fire-retarding paint, but even then the beams could have been weakened.

“It just gives you time,” he said.

Among many transporta­tion changes across the region, the Southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia Transporta­tion Authority said it was operating three extra morning and late afternoon trains on its Trenton, New Jersey, line, and adding capacity to regularly scheduled lines during peak hours following the collapse.

The collapsed section of I-95 was part of a $212 million reconstruc­tion project that wrapped up four years ago, state Transporta­tion Department spokesman Brad Rudolph said. PennDOT rated the 104-foot span as in “good” condition earlier this year, with another inspection set for 2025.

Shapiro, a Democrat, said the complete rebuild of I-95 would take “some number of months,” and in the meantime officials were looking at “interim solutions to reconnect I-95 and get traffic through the area."

Joseph L. Schofer, a retired professor of civil and environmen­tal engineerin­g from Northweste­rn University, said a big challenge for PennDOT in quickly replacing the bridge could be getting heavy-duty steel beams of a hundred feet or more.

Ensuring the precise length necessary — either by finding the constructi­on records or taking measuremen­ts — and finding a fabricator to make them could take time, he said.

“You can’t go online to Amazon and order it and have it delivered the next day,” said Schofer, who also hosts a podcast on infrastruc­ture.

In California, a similar situation happened with a highway ramp in Oakland. It was replaced in 26 days, he said.

“Now that’s almost a miracle,” Schofer said. In Atlanta, an elevated portion of Interstate 85 collapsed in a fire, shutting down the heavily traveled route through the heart of the city in March 2017. It took authoritie­s there 43 days to replace it, Schofer said.

In Pennsylvan­ia, officials were also concerned about the environmen­tal effects of runoff into the nearby Delaware River.

After a sheen was seen in the Delaware River near the collapse site, the Coast Guard deployed a boom to contain the material. Ensign Josh Ledoux said the tanker had a capacity of 8,500 gallons (32,176 liters), but the contents did not appear to be spreading into the environmen­t.

 ?? Mark Makela / Getty Images ?? Workers inspect and clear debris from a section of the bridge that collapsed on Interstate 95 after an oil tanker explosion on Monday in Philadelph­ia.
Mark Makela / Getty Images Workers inspect and clear debris from a section of the bridge that collapsed on Interstate 95 after an oil tanker explosion on Monday in Philadelph­ia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States