advertisement

Ex-transportation czar to oversee utility's safety efforts

LAWRENCE, Mass. (AP) - Former U.S. Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood will help oversee efforts to improve safety and reduce risk at NiSource, the utility company blamed for natural gas explosions and fires in Massachusetts six months ago.

The Indiana-based company announced Thursday that the former Republican congressman from Illinois will chair a new, five-member board charged with reviewing the company's rollout of a new safety management system across the seven states it serves.

As transportation secretary under Democratic President Barack Obama, LaHood oversaw the Pipeline and Hazardous Safety Administration that regulates natural gas and other pipeline systems.

NiSource, which is the parent company of Columbia Gas of Massachusetts, said the new safety system will provide a more structured and consistent way for it to anticipate and reduce risk. Similar systems are standard in the nuclear power and aviation industries, but aren't common in the natural gas industry, according to Joe Hamrock, the company's CEO.

"The safety practices we have tend to focus on learning from incidents that have happened, versus anticipating incidents that might happen," he said by phone Thursday. "So it's about enhancing that and adding a lot more rigor."

Federal investigators have said NiSource and its Massachusetts subsidiary lacked the internal procedures that could have prevented the Sept. 13 disaster, which killed one person, injured dozens of others and left thousands without gas service for months across Lawrence, Andover and North Andover.

Among the glaring errors cited in the National Transportation Safety Board's ongoing investigation is that an engineer had failed to account for a critical sensor line when drafting work plans for a routine pipeline replacement project in Lawrence.

The engineer also failed to have other company departments and engineers review the plans. The company did not have a field technician onsite during the construction work because it had largely discontinued the practice, the NTSB report found.

In the wake of the disaster, NiSource began taking a range of safety measures, including installing automatic shut off devices across all its low pressure gas systems to protect against over pressurization like that which triggered the explosions and fires in September.

Article Comments
Guidelines: Keep it civil and on topic; no profanity, vulgarity, slurs or personal attacks. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked. If a comment violates these standards or our terms of service, click the "flag" link in the lower-right corner of the comment box. To find our more, read our FAQ.