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  1. #1

    Unhappy Apprentice lineman killed- Michigan

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    not far from me today, an apprentice lineman for Midwest electric Co-op was killed today when he hit a 24" high pressure gas line with a trencher. acording to the news report, it was a 24" high pressure line from texas to michigan. the 2 co workers were un injured. may god be with this mans family and co-workers.

    heres the story:

    Updated UNION (NEWS 3) – A man was killed Tuesday during an explosion along a natural gas pipeline in southern Cass County near the Indiana border.

    Danny Young, 27, an apprentice lineman with Midwest Energy Cooperative, died after a trencher he was operating hit a high-pressure natural gas line in Union.

    Young was working as part of a three-man crew. Others were not injured.

    The explosion happened shortly before 10 a.m. near US-12 and Tharp Lake Road in Porter Township between Union and Edwardsburg.

    The blast was reportedly felt as far away as Middlebury, Indiana.

    As a safety precaution, police and fire officials evacuated residences and businesses within a half-mile radius of the explosion.

    Watch News 3 and wwmt.com for further updates.
    http://www.wwmt.com/engine.pl?statio...out_local.html
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  2. #2

    Unhappy

    My thoughts and prayers are with the faimly, I hit a gas line working in Texas last year, but I guess it was my day. We are here for a good time not a long time.Stay strong.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Pure Michigan
    Posts
    202

    Default

    Thank you for posting this Hemi. All of our boys pray for him and his family.
    I may be stupid, but at least I'm ugly

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    I Once Lived In Pendleton, Oregon Now I am All Over Wyoming & Utah! God I Love The Rocky Mountains!
    Posts
    38

    Angry All to often

    Another needless death, I hope whoever is responsible answers for this.
    That's Oregon Not Oregon!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    Edgewater Park, NJ
    Posts
    100

    Thumbs down

    Our thoughts and prayers are with him and his family through this difficult time. Please keep us up to date on this as more information arrives. Sounds like the prints or mark-outs (if any) were mis-informed. I would think a gas supply of this size and pressure would have well been within the guidelines of requiring such a pre-requisite before the trenching was to have begun.
    -Mike

  6. #6

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    According to some of the newspapers in that area it appears that the co-op did file a locate request with the state one-call system and they are claiming that they in turn notified the pipeline owner. Does not appear that the pipeline though was located and marked. The pipeline that was struck was pressurized at 850 psi. The blast was reportedly heard over 8 miles away and until gas pressure was reduced was blowing earth and debris over 200 feet into the air. Fortunatly the gas never ignited. Created a crater over 25 feet deep and 80 to 100 feet long. The blast also uncovered a second 22" gas pipline that was buried about 15 feet from the first and rescuers had to wait for the pressure to be reduced in that line as well before they could go in to retrieve the body.
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  7. #7

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    Those things are just underground bombs! The pressure that was charged to is incredible given it's volume. It harks back to the days of steam boiler explosions.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    Jersey
    Posts
    2,512
    Blog Entries
    1

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    Had an incident here in Jersy about 10 years ago where an operator hit a high pressure gas transmission pipe. He made it, unlike this brother, but the result was an apartment complex basically being burned to the ground.

    Condolences for this brother's family and prayers for him.
    "It is not the critic who counts:The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena" Teddy Roosevelt

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    s. florida
    Posts
    9

    Default

    seems like something this dangerous should be buried deeper. They built a pipeline to a power plant here in FL. a few years ago, the whole thing is marked with permanent markers. Even the fence posts above it are painted to match the markers.

  10. #10

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    I'm afraid this sort of accident will happen to often because we put more and more u/g in. Throw in all the live stuff and then the abanded, then make it worse with cut backs in manpower so locating is contracted out. Not to blame these poor guys but all they have to go by is mapping that probly hasn't been up dated very often. Went off the grew for awhile and did service work including locating. Went to do a locate for a contractor putting in fiber and their locater tried to tell me I didn't locate a primary but what he was on was tele. In Ia. you have to give 3 days notice before you dig and I've seen crews that had already done the work and left or were still on the job without waiting for locates to be done. No mater how this accident happened WE have to be on our toes and make sure we have our ducks in a row before we start any job.
    My thoughts and prayers are with the family
    This should not have happened

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