Emergency crews were monitoring a pipeline that ruptured during a freak storm in Pennsylvania, anxiously waiting to see if about 207,000 liters of gasoline would reach drinking water supplies serving thousands of residents.
The storm early on Friday dumped up to 17.8cm of rain on western and central Pennsylvania, triggering mudslides, turning roads into rivers and sweeping away at least two homes. Hundreds more were damaged in Centre County, home to Pennsylvania State University’s main campus. One man was killed when a tree crashed into his home.
Another 6mm of rain had fallen by Friday night.
Photo: AP
The flooding caused a Sunoco Logistics gasoline pipeline to rupture, spilling an estimated 206,683 liters into a tributary of the Loyalsock Creek and threatening the local water supply.
Sunoco Logistics said crews were using skimmers to remove gasoline from impacted waterways and erecting containment booms downstream.
The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection on Friday night said the pipeline area was difficult for staff and equipment to reach, and it was working with transportation officials to safely access it.
The department said it would wait until the water receded to locate where the break took place.
Pennsylvania American Water late on Friday shut down its treatment plant along the Susquehanna River in Milton, downstream of the spill, as a precaution.
It said the department had warned that a gasoline plume was nearing the vicinity.
The company said it expects to have adequate water supplies by redirecting water from another treatment plant and using water it has stored.
Customers have been asked to conserve water.
Two other water systems, serving customers in Sunbury and Shamokin Dam, also are potentially impacted by the spill, according to the state environmental officials.
Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf ordered the state’s National Guard to help in the recovery efforts after the storm left a trail of destruction stretching 241km. The toll included downed power lines, destroyed vehicles and damaged railroad beds.
The Lock Haven Express reported a popular retired teacher was killed on Thursday night in Clinton County when a tree crashed into his home. The man had been on the second floor and was tossed from his home by the impact, landing on his back in the driveway.
Winds there reached up to 161kph, US National Weather Service meteorologist Craig Evanego said.
About 100 residents were forced from their homes in the Bald Eagle Valley, including about three dozen residents of a personal care home, Centre County Commissioner Steven Dershem said.
In Lycoming County, emergency crews used boats to help residents from their homes and survey the damage to roads and bridges.
Firefighters banged on doors in Old Lycoming Township near Williamsport, evacuating residents in the middle of the night.
“We thought nothing was going to happen, then all of a sudden, a few minutes later, the whole road was covered in water,” resident Brent Getger told WNEP-TV.
The storm took most residents by surprise.
Mark Collister was trapped in his Old Lycoming Township mobile home on Thursday night when a stream spilled chocolate-colored water from its banks and blocked the road.
“We knew we were going to get the rainstorm, but not as quick as it was,” he said.
Jim Heverly, who lives less than 15m from Lycoming Creek and was forced to evacuate, called it the worst flood to hit his neighborhood in more than a decade.
At least one bridge across the Loyalsock Creek in Montoursville was wiped out, Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency spokeswoman Ruth Miller said.
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