Mass. Officials Order Additional Safety Measures After Gas Leak
LAWRENCE, Mass. (AP) — Massachusetts officials say the utility company blamed for last year’s destructive gas explosions faces millions of dollars in fines if it fails to complete additional safety measures following a major gas leak that prompted evacuations last week.
The state Department of Public Utilities has ordered Columbia Gas to submit by Monday a plan to address 2,220 old service lines abandoned during its systemwide pipeline upgrade in Lawrence.
The agency also ordered the company to inspect more than 700 homes by Oct. 18 and hire an independent auditor to review its upgrade work. It says Columbia Gas will be fined of up to $1 million per violation if the orders aren’t carried out.
A company spokesman says it’s working to comply with the orders and apologizes for the inconvenience to customers.
Related News
From Archive

- Trench collapse kills one construction worker in Houston, Texas
- Intrepid Fiber breaks ground on fiber optic network in Superior, Colo.
- Kinder Morgan moves forward with $1.7 billion natural gas pipeline project in Katy, Texas
- Shrewsbury, Mass., expands sewer inspections and cleaning efforts
- Excavator collides with I-95 overpass in Henrico, Va., causing multi-vehicle crash
- Final construction phase kicks off for Indianapolis deep rock tunnel
- Texas contractor penalized by OSHA for repeated trench safety violations
- Trench collapse kills one construction worker in Houston, Texas
- Nevada OSHA fines Elon Musk's Boring Company over safety violations in Vegas tunnel project
- WES tunnel boring machine retrieved from Oregon river after seven-month project
Comments