As more residents returned Monday to the San Bruno, Calif., neighborhood scarred by last week’s gas-pipeline explosion, a former federal safety chief called for new rules to protect residences from potential pipeline disasters, The Wall Street Journal reports.
Brigham McCown, the former head of the federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, called for creation of a national commission to examine the problem of high-pressure fuel pipelines that pass through or near residential areas, schools and other public facilities.
McCown, now a lawyer in private practice in Dallas who represents pipeline companies, told the Journal that among the options would be to create “a no man’s land” around some pipelines or restrict lines of certain sizes from neighborhoods.”
San Bruno officials said the confirmed death toll from the blast remained four, but the coroner’s office was examining other skeletal remains found at the site. The officials said four people were still missing following Thursday’s PG&E Corp. pipeline explosion.
The New York Times reported over the weekend that federal and state authorities are investigating not only what caused the 54-year-old pipeline to rupture and explode, but also whether PG&E responded appropriately to what residents described as continuous complaints about possible leaks.
The Times also said that the utility has had several safety incidents in Northern California in recent years. The toll includes an explosion in a house near Sacramento on Christmas Eve 2008 that killed a man and injured his daughter and granddaughter.
PG&E, separately, announced that it was establishing a relief fund of up to $100 million to help displaced San Bruno residents. According to the Los Angeles Times, residents would start receiving checks of up to $50,000 by the end of the week, and the company also presented a $3 million payment to the city to begin the rebuilding.


