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Andrew Bohan
11-10-2004, 12:03 AM
http://www.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2004/11/10/ba_fire_023_mjm.jpg

A fireball several stories high roared out of the ground near downtown Walnut Creek on Tuesday, killing two construction workers, injuring six, and leaving two workers missing after a crew accidentally cut an underground gasoline line.

The blast occurred near the intersection of Newell Avenue and South Broadway, where two crews contracted by Mountain Cascade Inc. of Livermore were installing a large water main for the East Bay Municipal Utility District.

One group of workers was welding in a trench, and a second group was digging another trench with a backhoe that apparently broke a fuel line that brings gasoline from Concord to a tanker-truck filling station in San Jose, said EBMUD spokesman Charles Hardy.

Ellen Sabaduquia, 54, of Walnut Creek was driving on Broadway at 1:30 p.m. when the inferno shot out of the ground a few feet from her Toyota minivan.

She watched in horror as two screaming men emerged from the hole, engulfed in flames.

"I thought I was in Fallujah for a moment," Sabaduquia told The Chronicle, her voice trembling. "It almost looked like slow motion from a horror movie."

Sabaduquia said she wanted to get out and pick up the workers, but the flames were too ferocious and she was forced to throw her vehicle into reverse.

The six workers who were injured were all burned -- three critically, authorities said. Three more were airlifted to Doctors Medical Center in San Pablo in critical condition with burns over 40 to 60 percent of their bodies, said hospital spokeswoman Paula Ferron.

Two victims were airlifted to John Muir Medical Center in Walnut Creek with burns so severe they were transported again to a burn center at UC Davis, according to a hospital spokeswoman.

Initial reports by authorities had three workers dead, but later in the evening police said that they had confirmed two fatalities. Authorities did not disclose the names of the victims nor the identities of the workers who were missing.

The accident sparked a series of underground explosions, sent a huge column of black smoke into the sky, burned one home and damaged several others on Doris Avenue, and prompted the evacuations of Las Lomas High School and Muirwood Elementary.

"This is the worst day of my life," said Bill Williams of Mountain Cascade, general contractor for EBMUD's $180 million Walnut Creek-San Ramon Valley Improvement Project to increase water flow in the area.

Williams fielded phone calls Tuesday afternoon from worried wives and scanned work rosters to try to figure out who was unaccounted for.

The explosion was heard in a 1-mile radius, rattling shops at nearby Broadway Plaza and causing students to jump in their seats. The force was so intense it blew out the windows of several apartments on Creekside Drive across the street and charred the cab of an 18-wheeler parked near the construction site.

Initially, firefighters were prevented from approaching the searing hot flames, so they were forced to keep the public away and wait for the gasoline to burn out.

Firefighters capped the pipeline at cutoff valves in Concord and Alamo, and the inferno receded about 90 minutes later, said Steve Maiero, battalion chief of the Contra Costa Fire Protection District.

They discovered two bodies in or near the hole, Maiero said.

The gasoline line, owned by Kinder Morgan Energy Partners of Houston, was marked on maps that construction workers were using, according to Eugene Braithwaite, director of operations for the company's northern region.

Kinder Morgan is under investigation in a separate incident in which 85,000 gallons of fuel spilled from one of its pipelines into the Suisun Marsh last April.

Braithwaite said as soon as it was safe, Kinder Morgan would assess how to clean up the Walnut Creek pipe break, possibly using vacuum pumps to remove any residual fuel.

A few Doris Avenue residents spent the night with friends or in hotels with help from the Red Cross. Among them were Enos and Leto Chabot, who lost the back half of their two-story home at 2053 Doris Ave. The fireball rose 90 feet from the construction pit, up a concrete wall and burned their entire backyard, melting the windows on their back wall.

The couple were having lunch at the Hick'ry Pit restaurant nearby when they heard the boom, and they returned home to find their neighbors evacuated to a street corner a few blocks away.

"The important thing is we're OK," said Leto. "We have insurance, but this will take months to get fixed."

After the initial scare, students at Las Lomas High were glad for the unexpected day off. Sarah Jones, 16, was in her physics class when she heard what she thought was someone dropping something on the roof.

Students were instructed over the loudspeaker to stay inside, then told to evacuate to Civic Park. They could see the plume of black smoke from the parking lot.

"I don't think we were so much scared as confused," Jones said. "Because nobody told us what was going on."

The evacuation went smoothly, however, because nearly all the students had cell phones and could call their parents to come get them. Only about 50 of the school's 1,700 students made it to Civic Park, and the rest went to downtown coffee shops and juice bars to wait for their parents.

As darkness fell, authorities used a robot to shoot close-up photographs of the accident scene.

TiNMAN
11-10-2004, 12:46 AM
i use to work out there with my pops near broadway, thats fuckin horrible man. if you look closely, i think you can see one of the victims near the concrete barrier on the asphalt side. im not sure. sad news,

Annoying Eric
11-10-2004, 01:35 AM
Jesus all these recent stories about things blowing up... That's crazy.

nismo2491
11-10-2004, 11:42 AM
sad to hear that
KEvin

mrmephistopheles
11-10-2004, 03:51 PM
"I thought I was in Fallujah for a moment,"

Like she has even half a clue what a warzone is like. I haven't even been to a warzone, and I'd feel retarded making a statement like that. If ANYTHING, she should've likened it to the Kuwait oilfield fires.

Anyway, that sucks for the people involved. 2ppl missing = 2 ppl burned to ash.