DALLAS -- A series of explosions at a gas facility sent flaming debris
raining onto highways and buildings near downtown Dallas on Wednesday and
seriously injured at least three people.
A lone Dallas police officer watches explosions as they rise
high above the Jefferson Street bridge near Reunion Arena in downtown
Dallas, Texas, on July 25, 2007. Explosions followed by black, billowing
smoke erupted from a gas plant identified as Southwest Industrial Gasses
Inc., injuring two people. [Reuters]
|
Authorities evacuated a half-mile (0.8 kilometer) area surrounding the
Southwest Industrial Gases, Inc. facility and shut down parts nearby Interstates
30 and 35. Video footage showed numerous small fires burning in the area as
stacks of gas cylinders caught fire and exploded.
The canisters held acetylene and propane gas, said Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality spokeswoman Andrea Morrow. It was not immediately clear
what caused them begin exploding around 9:30 a.m.
By noon, fire crews were hosing down the charred metal wreckage to extinguish
any lingering flames. Earlier, about a dozen cars burned in a nearby parking lot
and a grassy areas of a highway median.
"I thought it was artillery. It was just coming just boom, boom, boom," said
witness Tony Love, a former Army soldier.
Parkland Hospital spokesman Robert Behrens said two people injured by the
explosions had been brought to his hospital in serious condition. A third man
was taken to Methodist Dallas Medical Center, hospital spokeswoman Sandra
Minatra said. She did not give out his condition.
According to the industry Web site gasworld.com, Southwest Industrial is a
distributor that carries a range of gases, including acetylene, helium and
hydrogen, as well as welding equipment. Calls to a phone listing for the company
were not answered.
At the edge of the evacuation zone is Dallas County's main jail and criminal
courts building, but operations continued there uninterrupted, said Deputy
Michael Ortiz of the Dallas County Sheriff's Department.
Carol Peters, a spokeswoman for Oncor Electric Delivery, said about 30
buildings near the blasts were without power and would stay shut off until fire
crews extinguished the blaze.