Anniversary of a Disaster: Edison’s Mohave Generating Station Explosion

On a blue-sky afternoon 25 years ago today, just as the second-shift crew was about to begin work at Southern California Edison’s Mohave Generating Station in Laughlin, Nev., a massive re-heat pipe exploded, unleashing high-pressure, superheated steam into the plant’s control room with such force that it knocked down a wall and sealed the exit doors shut. Sixteen people were severely burned in that explosion; six of them died. One was my 39-year-old brother, John Dolan.

I think about my brother often, partly because I have a son named for the uncle he will never know, and partly because the same type of industrial disasters continue to happen. This year, the Massey Energy coal mine disaster in West Virginia killed 29 people, and the BP oil rig disaster in the Gulf of Mexico killed 11 people.

The specifics and the death toll may vary, but the aftermath is always the same. First, there is the focused attention, the outrage, the compassion, the demands for answers and corporate accountability. And then there is the forgetting.

Finish reading the Los Angeles Times piece.

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