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N.Y. building collapse: Feds probe responsiveness of gas company

US officials are investigating how the local utility responded to complaints of gas odors before the blast and building collapse killed seven. The nation's aging infrastructure poses a growing risk, experts say.

A firefighter applies water to rubble a day after a gas leak-triggered explosion, Thursday, March 13, 2014, in East Harlem, New York. Rescuers working amid gusty winds, cold temperatures, and billowing smoke pulled additional bodies Thursday from the rubble of two apartment buildings that collapsed Wednesday.

Julio Cortez/AP

March 13, 2014

Federal officials investigating the gas leak and deadly explosion that collapsed two Harlem tenements Wednesday are also examining how the Manhattan gas utility responsible for pipeline maintenance had responded to complaints of gas odors.

Firefighters Thursday sifted the wreckage for people still missing after the massive explosion, which killed at least seven people and injured scores.

A team from the National Transportation Safety Board, the federal agency that investigates serious pipeline accidents, arrived at the scene Wednesday evening, saying they would determine a timeline of events and look into how the utility handled the reports of gas odors.

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鈥淲e will be looking at Con Edison鈥檚 integrity management system,鈥 said the NTSB鈥檚 Robert Sumwalt at a Wednesday 聽press conference at the scene of the blast. 鈥淲e will be looking at their call system to see how they handle complaints.鈥

A number of witnesses said they smelled gas for several days before the blast, and just 18 minutes before the explosion a resident called the utility and complained of a strong gas smell.

鈥淲e want to understand the failure modes,鈥 Mr. Sumwalt said, adding that the federal investigators expect to make recommendations to 鈥渕ake sure that something like this never occurs again.鈥

But across the United States there have been an alarming number of other gas-related explosions, and experts say the nation鈥檚 aging infrastructure 鈥 as well as a decline in gas utility inspections and routine maintenance 鈥 is putting many regions of the country at risk.

鈥淚t鈥檚 becoming an epidemic,鈥 says Mark McDonald, a gas explosion expert onsite in Harlem Thursday afternoon. 鈥淚t鈥檚 happening way too often and much more often than it used to, that鈥檚 for sure.鈥

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And Mr. McDonald, who has investigated gas explosions around the country with NatGas Consulting and has been a leading expert witness in most major gas explosion litigation, had just driven to New York after being onsite investigating another major explosion in New Jersey.

聽Just last week, a gas leak in a suburban townhouse development in Ewing, N.J., engulfing dozens of houses in flames, killing a 62-year-old woman, and injuring seven others. At least 55 homes were damaged, including 10 that were completely destroyed.

These incidents, too, follow a month in which a number of other explosions rocked cities across the US.

鈥 On Feb. 22, two women in their 20s were seriously injured when a gas explosion , sending debris into the streets.

鈥 On Feb. 19, an when a gas leak 聽caused an East Baltimore row house to explode. The building collapsed onto the sidewalk where the small boy was walking home from school. Rubble from its two collapsed floors also injured 3 other bystanders.

鈥 On Feb. 14, two homes were destroyed and two people were injured in a small south-central Kentucky town in a fire in the aftermath of a that blew a crater 60 feet deep and 50 feet wide.

聽There was also a series of major natural gas explosions last year. Last October, a blast destroyed a house and in rural West Virginia, and in November, another major blast obliterated a downtown Springfield, Mass., strip club, injuring 18 people. In February last year, after a gas main break, killing a worker and injuring more than a dozen others.

Indeed, in 2013, there were at least 109 gas-related incidents, including 21 serious leaks and explosions that led to 9 deaths and 39 injuries, in the US Department of Transportation. The death toll from the Harlem blast alone could exceed these fatalities, and more than 60 injuries have been reported so far.

And while the nation鈥檚 old pipes may be to blame 鈥 the gas main leading to the Harlem tenements was a century-old cast iron pipe 鈥 experts say the nation鈥檚 utilities have been cutting staff and relying on private companies to inspect and maintain their infrastructure.

鈥淭he other factor is essentially deregulation,鈥 says McDonald, the gas explosion expert. 鈥淭he gas company staffing has been reduced by around 20 percent since deregulation was instituted both in states and nationally,鈥 he says. 鈥淥n the other end, customers have increased by more than 20 percent, so how do you add 20 percent more customers and at the same time cut staffing by 20 percent or so? It doesn鈥檛 make sense.鈥

The US consumed a total of 26 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in 2013, up nearly 20 percent since 2006, when it consumed 21.7 trillion cubic feet,

聽In January, the New York Public Service Commission to conduct an audit of the staffing levels in the state's core utility companies. This after Gov. Andrew Cuomo called for improvements following the generally poor performance of New York utilities鈥 in the aftermath of superstorm Sandy.

聽Experts say previous audits of utilities have found that consumers bear the brunt of lower staffing levels, which lead to more service interruptions and slower responses during system failures.

鈥淭he state gets their expertise from the companies, so there's a lot of conflict of interest, in my opinion,鈥 says McDonald. 鈥淪o I think the federal government has to take a more assertive role in enforcing all the regulations and all the rules. The state鈥檚 aren鈥檛 doing enough 鈥 and they鈥檙e very close to the companies.鈥

聽鈥淭he NTSB would be great 鈥 or some agency like that where there is no interaction with the companies and they could be a true watch dog,鈥 McDonald continues. 鈥淭he public is starting to put things together and say, wait a minute, what the hell is going on here? Because next it could be your backyard.鈥

[Editor's Note: The original version of this article misstated how much natural gas the US consumed in 2013 and 2006.]