All clear given after blowout along natural gas pipeline in southwestern St. Helena Parish; felt 1.5 miles away
PINE GROVE — Residents were allowed to safely return home after emergency officials ordered an evacuation in southwestern St. Helena Parish on Saturday due to a pipeline blowout. Shaking was felt a dozen miles away.
"My entire house shook like a bomb went off," said Donald Fry, who lives about a quarter-mile away from the blast site. "We're getting out of here in case there is a gas leak."
Law enforcement officers said the scene was along Nesom Road between Pine Grove in St. Helena Parish and Watson in northern Livingston Parish.
Carey Dover, who lives west of Greensburg, about 10 miles from the blast site, wrote to WBRZ to report feeling the blast.
"I felt the boom and it rattled floors and windows," Dover wrote. "I am between 12 to 15 miles as the crow flies."
"I called the St. Helena Sheriff's Office literally within 1.5 minutes after the boom to find out it was a pipeline explosion," Dover wrote. "I thought it was the pipeline behind our property. That's how close it sounded."
Jacob Pucheu, Sergeant over Regional I Public Affairs for the Louisiana State Police, explained that the incident was a pressure-related blowout, not an explosion.
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"Explosion means there's fire, and there was no fire involved with this today," Pucheu explained.
According to officials, a pressure buildup in a natural gas line caused the blowout around 12 p.m., causing residents within a 1.5-mile radius to be evacuated with the help of the St. Helena Fire Department, St. Helena Emergency Response, the St. Helena Parish Office of Emergency Preparedness and the Livingston Parish Sheriff's Office.
About 20 minutes after the explosion, residents said it seemed the pipeline was still leaking.
"It sounds like a jet engine," Fry said as he drove away.
Sergeant Pucheu said this isn't the first time something like this has happened.
"It's pretty common. We actually deal with this pretty frequently throughout the state," Pucheu said. "Our hazmat hotline gets calls frequently, and our emergency services troopers respond and make sure the scene is safe."
Multiple agencies responded to secure the area and shut down the line, including the Department of Environmental Quality, the Louisiana State Police Hazardous Materials Section and the Florida Gas Transmission Company.
"Anytime [things] happen like this, it takes multiple hands on deck to get and make sure everything's safe," Pucheu said.
It was deemed safe for residents to return to the area just before 1 p.m.
There were no reports of injuries.