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Up to 15 Dead After Fire and Blast at Texas Fertilizer Plant

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WEST, Texas (Reuters) – A fiery explosion tore through a fertilizer plant and leveled dozens of homes in a small Texas town late on Wednesday, killing as many as 15 people, injuring more than 160 others and spewing toxic fumes that forced the evacuation of half the community, authorities said.

Police initially estimated that between five and 15 people had perished in the blast, which rocked the town of West, located about 20 miles north of Waco and 80 miles south of Dallas, shortly before 8 p.m. local time on Wednesday.

Public safety officials said they expected the death toll to climb as search teams combed through the rubble of the demolished plant and surrounding homes.

“I’ve never seen anything like this,” McLennan County Sheriff Parnell McNamara said. “It looks like a war zone with all the debris.”

Ground motion from the blast, triggered by a fire of unknown origin at the West Fertilizer Co plant, registered as a magnitude 2.1 seismic tremor and created a jolt felt in Dallas and beyond, the U.S. Geological Survey reported.

Waco Police Sergeant W. Patrick Swanton said investigators would examine whether the blaze was the result of foul play or a chemical reaction, adding that the blast site was being treated as a crime scene for the time being.

“We are not indicating that it is a crime, but we don’t know,” Swanton told reporters early on Thursday, some nine hours after the blast. “What that means to us is that until we know it is an industrial accident, we will work it as a crime scene.” He said there was no immediate evidence of a crime.

The explosion came two days before the 20th anniversary of a fire in nearby Waco that engulfed a compound inhabited by David Koresh and his followers in the Branch Davidian sect, ending a siege by federal agents.

About 82 members of the sect and four federal agents died at Waco.

West Mayor Tommy Muska told Reuters that five or six volunteer firefighters who were among the first to arrive at the fertilizer plant were missing.

Firefighters had been battling the fire and evacuating nearby residences and a nursing home for about 20 minutes before the explosion occurred.

Officials said flames that continued to smolder inside the plant initially posed two threats: the possibility of setting off further explosions and the emission of hazardous fumes into the town.

Swanton said a residual fire burning underneath additional chemical tanks had been brought under control, “and I don’t think that is any longer a threat.”

Texas Public Safety Department spokesman D.L. Wilson said about half the town, about eight to 10 blocks, had been evacuated and that “we might even have to evacuate on the other side of town” if winds shift.

But emergency management personnel downtown determined that there was no immediate danger to the public from the smoke from the fire, Swanton said.

Officials said a full assessment of property damage would not come until after dawn.

Wilson said 50 to 75 homes were damaged by the explosion and a fire that followed, and a nearby 50-unit apartment complex had been reduced to “a skeleton standing up.” Muska put the number of destroyed homes at between 60 and 80.

Wilson said 133 people had been evacuated from the nursing home, which was heavily damaged, but it was not immediately clear how many residents of the facility were hurt. A middle school in town also was heavily damaged.

‘KIDS SCREAMING’

Three hospitals in Waco and Dallas that were receiving the bulk of patients from the disaster reported treating more than 160 injuries combined.

“We are seeing a lot of lacerations and orthopedic-type injuries … things you would expect in an explosion,” said David Argueta, vice president of operations at Hillcrest Baptist Medical Center in Waco.

Jason Shelton, 33, a father of two who lives less than a mile from the plant, said he heard fire trucks heading toward the facility five minutes before the explosion and felt the blast as he stood on his front porch.

“My windows started rattling and my kids screaming,” Shelton said. “The screen door hit me in the forehead … and all the screens blew off my windows.”

Governor Rick Perry issued a statement saying his office had “mobilized state resources to help local authorities” deal with the incident.

A White House official said the Obama administration was aware of the situation and monitoring local and state response through the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

(Additional reporting by Steve Gorman, Tim Gaynor, David Bailey and Marice Richter; Writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by Cynthia Johnston, Lisa Von Ahn and Scott Malone)

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Editor’s Note: This post was originally published on April 18, 2013, and has been updated for quality and relevancy.

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2 Comments

2 Comments

  1. richard1941

    April 23, 2013 at 3:09 PM

    This event reminds me of the Bhopal, India disaster of December 1984.

    Union Carbide knew that dangerous gas was being handled at that plant, so they did the smart thing: they built the plant a safe distance from any population center. However, the workers did not want to come a great distance to work, and before long, a squatter’s village and then a town grew around the plant. There was nothing Union Carbide could do about that. Then, in December 1984, there was a gas leak and THOUSANDS died.

    I lay the present disaster on the greed of realtors and house flippers. Obviously, if there is a hazard in a fertilizer plant (I have not seen any news items that reliably describe the chemicals and hazards involved here) then it should be remote from population centers and there should be a development-free safety zone. Maybe that was the case at one time. But realtors are hungry for profits and are eager to develop rifle ranges, airports, and uninhabited safety zones into urban decay. And those who speculate by borrowing money to buy houses that they intend to flip are no better than the realtors.

    I apologize in advance to any realtors who read this for my use of the forbidden word “house” instead of the correct word, “home”. But my experience is that when you think you own a “home”, what you really have is a HOUSE THAT OWNS YOU. Taxes, maintenance, association fees, and (if you are really dumb) mortgage interest. The years go by, and it becomes more and more difficult to move. Even when your community slides into Marxist decay, as has been the case here in the CSA (California Soviet Authority).

    Time to bake some hardtack and watch Disney’s Ant and Grasshopper cartoon.

  2. Arthur Fore Jr

    May 6, 2013 at 10:31 PM

    A fact that many do not know about the Bhopal, India disaster: Union Carbide’s Plant Manager (don’t remember his name) established strict control over the hiring of people who had the task of monitoring a valve in a very important part of the plant. If a leak occurred, it could quickly become a matter of life and death for workers and near-by residents.
    However a local official ordered that people who had NO QUALIFICATIONS for such a task be employed. The man who was on duty when the leak occurred ran away without telling anyone or setting off the alarm.

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