Incident Report

Subject:                   Baton Rouge evacuations as crews 'vent and burn' I-10 tanker

Date of Email report:   Fri 24/08/2012

Report Detail:

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Louisiana authorities plan to evacuate an area near Interstate 10 where a tanker carrying flammable isobutane crashed in order to perform a controlled "vent and burn" of the chemical. Police are going door-to-door within several hundred yards of the crash site to either evacuate residents or advise them to "evacuate in place," according to the Baton Rouge Advocate. Safety officials are planning a "vent and burn" operation to remedy the situation, which involves poking holes in the disabled tanker and burning the fuel on-site. WAFB-TV reports that the closure has snarled traffic for an entire day in Baton Rouge.

Louisiana State Police Col. Mike Edmonson said authorities will attempt to blow two holes in the tank, ignite the isobutane and conduct a controlled burn. The truck was carrying 8,700 gallons of the chemical. Police said the accident happened when a car flipped early Wednesday morning after the driver lost control and hit a retaining wall. A tanker truck stopped for the accident and was rear-ended by another 18-wheeler. Baton Rouge Fire Department spokesman Barry Mounce said the evacuation area will be a few hundred yards around the accident site. Shelters are being set up for evacuees.

 

Additional Documentation:

 

BATON ROUGE - Workers removed a dangerous load from a disabled tanker truck last night in a most spectacular fashion.

I-10 reopened this morning in both directions after being closed for more than 24 hours following a crash involving the tanker truck.

Late Wednesday night, a state hazardous material response team performed a "vent and burn" procedure on a tanker truck which had been disabled since early that morning.

The tanker had been leaking a fuel similar to liquified propane, and officials had determined it was too dangerous to move the rig or offload the material.