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Top NYC engineer's welding may have sparked methane on sewage boat, killing him in blast
Top NYC engineer's welding may have sparked methane on sewage boat, killing him in blast

Yahoo

time27-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Top NYC engineer's welding may have sparked methane on sewage boat, killing him in blast

A top city Environmental Protection engineer killed in a weekend sewage-boat explosion may have accidentally blown himself up by welding near methane, sources told The Post on Monday. An investigation into the death of Raymond Feige, 59, preliminarily found he had been welding on the sludge vessel before the blast Saturday, sources said. Methane from sewage may have got trapped in a tightly enclosed space on the ship — and ignited when it came in contact with the welding torch's flame, according to the sources. The ensuing blast hurled Feige into the Hudson River, trapping him between the sludge boat and a pier outside the North River Wastewater Resource Recovery Facility near 135th Street in Upper Manhattan, authorities have said. Two other DEP employees were rushed to nearby hospitals for treatment after the blast. The potential that the blast had been caused by a welding accident was first raised by the US Coast Guard, which tweeted the incident was 'linked to hot work aboard a dock boat.' Hot work involves processes that can produce a flame or spark, such as welding.

1 Dead After Explosion on Boat Near Manhattan Sewage Plant
1 Dead After Explosion on Boat Near Manhattan Sewage Plant

New York Times

time24-05-2025

  • New York Times

1 Dead After Explosion on Boat Near Manhattan Sewage Plant

A worker at a sewage treatment facility died on Saturday after an explosion onboard a boat in the Hudson River near Upper Manhattan, the Fire Department said. The worker was an employee at the North River Wastewater Resource Recovery Facility, a sewage treatment plant just off the Henry Hudson Parkway near 138th Street. He and two other plant employees were transporting raw sewage on the boat at around 10:30 a.m. on Saturday when a compartment holding some of the waste exploded, David Simms, a deputy assistant chief with the Fire Department, said at a news conference on Saturday. The force of the explosion pushed one of the workers into the water, pinning him between the vessel and the pier and ultimately killing him, Chief Simms said. Another employee was taken to a nearby hospital, while the third refused medical treatment at the scene. The cause of the explosion was not immediately clear on Saturday. In addition to the death, the explosion left raw sewage on the deck of the boat, Chief Simms said. But a spokesman for the city's Department of Environmental Protection, which oversees the plant, said that operations were not affected and that there did not appear to be any environmental damage. On Saturday afternoon, workers from New York City Emergency Management, the Department of Environmental Protection and the Fire Department's hazmat team were on the scene 'managing operations and ensuring public safety,' the emergency management agency said. Police officers also responded after receiving a 911 call about a person in the water. The deadly explosion comes just one week after a Mexican Navy ship crashed into the Brooklyn Bridge, killing two crew members and injuring almost two dozen more. The North River facility, one of 14 wastewater treatment plants in the city, serves hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers on the West Side of Manhattan. In 2011, a fire severely damaged the plant and sent gallons of untreated waste into the Hudson and Harlem Rivers. The spokesman from the Department of Environmental Protection said the employee who died had served 33 years with the agency. Rohit T. Aggarwala, the department's commissioner, said in a statement that his team was grieving. 'He was a valued and experienced member of the Bureau of Wastewater Treatment, and his decades of service reflect his commitment to D.E.P.'s mission,' Mr. Aggarwala said. This is a developing story and will be updated.

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