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News / Nation & World

Neighbors of Calif. gas leak wary of fix

Residents worry about health, safety as repairs near end

By BRIAN MELLEY, Associated Press
Published: February 5, 2016, 8:23pm

LOS ANGELES — With a possible end in sight to a massive 15-week gas leak, anxious residents displaced from a Los Angeles neighborhood are skeptical a fix is near and worry they may be forced to return too soon to unhealthy homes.

Barbara Fass, who temporarily moved out of her Porter Ranch home of 26 years because of the overwhelming stench of gas, said she’s ready to put the “big inconvenience” behind her as soon as possible, but she wants to be assured that her home will be safe when she returns.

Oily residue that rained down during previous unsuccessful attempts to plug the leak coated her husband’s car and their house reeked like petroleum at times.

“I’d like to think it’s fixed,” Fass said Friday. “You’re just going with what the gas company says and they haven’t been that trustworthy. It’s kind of scary.”

Wade Crowfoot, an adviser to Gov. Jerry Brown, told a community meeting Thursday that Southern California Gas Co. could plug the leaking well by the end of next week, though a utility spokeswoman cautioned that’s a tentative timetable.

The leak first reported in October has displaced thousands of residents — many of whom have complained about headaches, nosebleeds and nausea. Public health officials blame those and other symptoms on the odorant added to the gas and say they don’t expect long-term health effects.

The gas company apologized for being slow to let the public know about the leak. It didn’t begin offering free relocation services until ordered by public health officials nearly a month after the leak was detected Oct. 23.

At that point, many residents were angry at the company and pushing state regulators to shut down the storage facility, where natural gas is pumped a mile-and-a-half underground into empty oil wells. It’s the largest natural gas storage facility in the West and a major source of energy for Southern California.

Under an agreement in December with the Los Angeles city attorney, the company offered to put affected residents up in hotels and has offered short-term rentals of houses and apartments. The agreement would allow the company to stop paying for short-term housing, such as hotels, two days after the state declares the well permanently sealed.

Although the company said it would honor longer-term leases and is renegotiating when it will stop paying for hotels, the 48-hour provision had people on edge Friday when it became clear that the gas company was ahead of its projection to stop the leak by the end of February.

Lenny Sempertegui, who has been living with his wife and 1 1/2 -year-old son in a small Burbank apartment since the end of December, said he was told the three-month lease he signed would be honored, but he doesn’t have anything in writing.

Sempertegui said he would hope to stay in the apartment at least an additional week after the well is capped “because who knows what’s going to happen?”

He was waiting outside an office SoCalGas set up to handle requests for help and said he has no faith in the gas company.

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