'Human Error' Caused Strip Club Blast

Utility worker pierced a pipe before the Massachusetts explosion
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Nov 25, 2012 1:55 PM CST
Worker Pierced Pipe Before Strip Club Blast
Inspectors stand in debris, Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012, at the site of a gas explosion that leveled a strip club in Springfield, Mass., on Friday evening.   (Jessica Hill)

A utility worker responding to reports of a natural gas leak in Springfield, Mass., punctured a pipe and an unknown spark ignited a massive explosion that injured 18 people, the state fire marshal announced today. Friday night's natural gas blast was caused by "human error," State Fire Marshal Stephen Coan said at a news conference. He didn't name the Columbia Gas Go. worker who pierced the high-pressure pipe. The blast flattened a strip club, heavily damaged a day care center, and scattered debris over several blocks.

Some officials called it a miracle that no one was killed. The cause of the spark that ignited the explosion is still unknown. Most of the injured were part of a group of gas workers, firefighters, and police officers who ducked for cover behind a utility truck just before the blast. Part of the neighborhood already had been evacuated because of reports of a gas leak and odor. Preliminary reports showed the blast damaged 42 buildings housing 115 residential units. Three buildings were immediately condemned, and 24 others require additional inspections by structural engineers to determine whether they are safe. (More strip club stories.)

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