Feb 18, 2008 7:00 pm US/Eastern
Explosion at Texas Oil Refinery Hurts 4
BIG SPRING, Texas (CBS) ―
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A witness sent this photo of the explosion, taken from 9 miles away from the refinery.
Claudene Cooper
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This photo, taken from along I-20 in Big Spring, shows the intensity of the flames.
Rick Nunez, Big Spring Herald
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A witness sent this photo of the explosion, taken from 9 miles away from the refinery.
Claudene Cooper
An explosion rocked an oil refinery Monday in a violent blast that
shook buildings miles away and injured at least four people, the mayor
said.
All workers were accounted for about an hour after the explosion, said Blake Lewis, spokesman for refinery owner Alon USA.
Lewis initially said one worker was injured, but Big Spring Mayor
Russ McEwen later said four were hurt. McEwen said one of the workers
was sent to a burn unit.
The fire sparked by the blast was under control Monday morning,
Lewis said. The Dallas-based company does not know what caused the
explosion, he said.
The blast sent black smoke billowing into the sky, closed schools, shut down a major interstate and left residents rattled.
"It was extremely scary. You shook you were so scared," said Laura
McEwen, the mayor's wife who lives about two miles from the refinery.
"Our walls shook. It jolted your bed. It was like an earthquake."
John Moseley, managing editor of the Big Spring Herald whose
downtown office is also about two miles from the refinery, said, "I
thought it would knock the walls down."
Two elementary schools were evacuated, then classes were canceled at
all nine campuses in the Big Spring school district, assistant
superintendent Carie Dunnam said.
Classes also were canceled at Howard College, according to the two-year junior college's Web site.
The explosion forced open the doors of the school district's
administration building about four miles from the plant, Dunnam said.
"Literally pieces of my ceiling came on top of my head," she said.
Bus routes were affected by road closures and that emergency
officials were warning of the potential for more explosions, Dunnam
said. Parents were asked to pick up their children, she said.
The refinery employs about 170 people and has the capacity to put out about 70,000 barrels a day.
Interstate 20 was shut down near the plant, Big Spring police spokesman Roger Sweatt said.
"There's some fire and a whole bunch of smoke," Sweatt said.
Big Spring is about halfway between Dallas and El Paso.
Lewis initially said one worker was injured, but Big Spring Mayor
Russ McEwen later said four were hurt. McEwen said one of the workers
was sent to a burn unit.
The fire sparked by the blast was under control Monday morning,
Lewis said. The Dallas-based company does not know what caused the
explosion, he said.
The blast sent black smoke billowing into the sky, closed schools, shut down a major interstate and left residents rattled.
"It was extremely scary. You shook you were so scared," said Laura
McEwen, the mayor's wife who lives about two miles from the refinery.
"Our walls shook. It jolted your bed. It was like an earthquake."
John Moseley, managing editor of the Big Spring Herald whose
downtown office is also about two miles from the refinery, said, "I
thought it would knock the walls down."
Two elementary schools were evacuated, then classes were canceled at
all nine campuses in the Big Spring school district, assistant
superintendent Carie Dunnam said.
Classes also were canceled at Howard College, according to the two-year junior college's Web site.
The explosion forced open the doors of the school district's
administration building about four miles from the plant, Dunnam said.
"Literally pieces of my ceiling came on top of my head," she said.
Bus routes were affected by road closures and that emergency
officials were warning of the potential for more explosions, Dunnam
said. Parents were asked to pick up their children, she said.
The refinery employs about 170 people and has the capacity to put out about 70,000 barrels a day.
Interstate 20 was shut down near the plant, Big Spring police spokesman Roger Sweatt said.
"There's some fire and a whole bunch of smoke," Sweatt said.
Big Spring is about halfway between Dallas and El Paso.
Lewis initially said one worker was injured, but Big Spring Mayor
Russ McEwen later said four were hurt. McEwen said one of the workers
was sent to a burn unit.
The fire sparked by the blast was under control Monday morning,
Lewis said. The Dallas-based company does not know what caused the
explosion, he said.
The blast sent black smoke billowing into the sky, closed schools, shut down a major interstate and left residents rattled.
"It was extremely scary. You shook you were so scared," said Laura
McEwen, the mayor's wife who lives about two miles from the refinery.
"Our walls shook. It jolted your bed. It was like an earthquake."
John Moseley, managing editor of the Big Spring Herald whose
downtown office is also about two miles from the refinery, said, "I
thought it would knock the walls down."
Two elementary schools were evacuated, then classes were canceled at
all nine campuses in the Big Spring school district, assistant
superintendent Carie Dunnam said.
Classes also were canceled at Howard College, according to the two-year junior college's Web site.
The explosion forced open the doors of the school district's
administration building about four miles from the plant, Dunnam said.
"Literally pieces of my ceiling came on top of my head," she said.
Bus routes were affected by road closures and that emergency
officials were warning of the potential for more explosions, Dunnam
said. Parents were asked to pick up their children, she said.
The refinery employs about 170 people and has the capacity to put out about 70,000 barrels a day.
Interstate 20 was shut down near the plant, Big Spring police spokesman Roger Sweatt said.
"There's some fire and a whole bunch of smoke," Sweatt said.
Big Spring is about halfway between Dallas and El Paso.
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