February 25, 2010 4:43 PM

Workers: Grueling Shifts at Ct. Blast Site

(CBS/AP)  Two people affected by the explosion of a Connecticut power plant that was being built say workers had been spending more than 80 hours a week at the site.

The son of killed pipefitter Ray Dobratz told The Associated Press on Tuesday that his father had told him he was working 12 hours a day, seven days a week, for six months.

Erik Dobratz says his father told him others were also working long hours because they were under pressure to finish and were exhausted.

Paul Gaskins, who was working on a steam turbine at the time of the explosion, says they worked 12 to 13 hours every day. He says they were not rushed.

A spokesman for the contractor, O&G Industries Inc., would not comment. A message left at Keystone Construction, where Dobratz worked, was not immediately returned.

On Monday, officials confirmed that assigned to work at the plant the day of the blast had been accounted for and the death toll should stand at five. Limited search efforts were continuing as a precaution.

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Mayor Sebastian Guiliano sounded a note of caution Monday afternoon, however, saying rescue crews had been unable to get to all areas of the plant and he could not say for certain that no more victims would be found.

The blast in Middletown, about 20 miles south of Hartford, injured more than two dozen in addition to the five dead. It happened as workers were clearing gas lines of air, but the exact cause remained under investigation. Witnesses described the blast as a "sonic boom" that could be felt for 10 miles around.

Investigators from the town fire marshal's office returned to the scene Monday to try to begin determining the cause. Investigators from Occupational Safety and Health Administration were also at the site, which was closed to reporters.

"I lost a couple of good friends up there," Michael Rosario, a representative of the local Plumbers and Pipefitters union, said as he broke down crying Monday.

"We hug our families, kiss our children. ... We go to work and we want to come home at the end of the day, safe," he said. "That didn't happen for a few people yesterday."

The blast left huge pieces of metal that once encased the plant peeling off its sides. A large swath of the structure was blackened and surrounded by debris, but the building, its roof and its two smokestacks were still standing at the site, which is near Wesleyan University on a wooded and hilly 137-acre parcel of land overlooking the Connecticut River.

A team sent by the U.S. Chemical Safety Board, a federal agency that investigates industrial chemical accidents, arrived at the site Monday but was turned away by local police, said Daniel Horowitz, the agency's spokesman.

Melissa Brady, a spokeswoman for Middlesex Hospital, said it treated 26 patients, 21 of whom were released Sunday. Three were admitted to Middlesex and two with severe injuries were transferred, one to Yale-New Haven Hospital and one to Hartford Hospital. She said most had injuries characteristic of being thrown or in an explosion, such as broken bones and bruises.

They were all expected to survive, she said, and most of the injuries were to extremities.

Kleen Energy Systems LLC began construction on the plant in February 2008. It had signed a deal with Connecticut Light and Power for the electricity produced by the plant, and would be one of the biggest built in New England in the last few years.

The company is run by former City Councilman William Corvo. Messages left at Corvo's home were not returned. Calls to Gordon Holk, general manager of Power Plant Management Services, which has a contract to manage the plant, also weren't returned.

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment
by wjksea February 10, 2010 4:04 AM EST
by BrianWX328m February 10, 2010 12:03 AM EST
Good point. Not to mention that nuclear plants are clean. They produce NO carbon emissions. The greenies should love them. But, being that they hate progress and industry, they dont like those either.

Not quite as you would have it. The green movement at one time at least did like nuclear for some of those reasons. I'm sure you just don't have much regard for Jimmy Carter, but this country might have had more nuclear energy. Jimmy Carter is/was a nuclear physicist. Of course, the billionaire Texas oil lobbyists slandered him, mocked him incessantly through their stupid Sarah Palinesque tactics. This country has been driven into the tank by special interests.
Reply to this comment
by decotoguy February 10, 2010 2:08 AM EST
Is that company in a third world nation with no safety standards???
Are those workers REAL americans?
Did someone say they have a UNION????
It looks to me as a case of PURE GREED....BLIND GREED...
YEP,it must be america with real americans....and the only one with a
brain called in SICK....
Reply to this comment
by lirocky February 10, 2010 2:05 AM EST
I would have to agree that many of these workers probably were working there becasue they liked the long hours and big paychecks. They were not being rushed.
Reply to this comment
by SummarexStrikesBack February 9, 2010 11:39 PM EST
This proves why we need nuclear powerplants. Nuclear fuel does not explode.
Reply to this comment
by LCCLYDE February 9, 2010 10:37 PM EST
These guys were members of the United Association of Plumbers and Pipefitters.My prayers go to lost and injured workers and thier families.
Reply to this comment
by cbsblogger February 9, 2010 7:37 PM EST
Corporate CEOS won't step inside their boardroom without an ironclad lawyered up contract protecting every aspect and absurd lucrative fringe benefit of their employment and retirement.

Yet the fascist GOP scum such as Limbaugh and others claim that unions are Communist and anti American because they are working to provide labor contracts for their members.

The USA has obviously been manipulated into being upside down because the many in the public somehow support the few who are the unworthy greedy elitist, while chastising their hard working neighbors.
Reply to this comment
by wjksea February 9, 2010 7:04 PM EST
Corporate charters are carefully written. NOW THIS IS WHO IS "LAWYERED UP". The plutocrats want the wealth of labor but they detest the laborers because the human need of others is not a concern of sociopaths.
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by Skruffy1 February 9, 2010 5:20 PM EST
Hmmmm... high unemployment... yet workers are working 12 hours a day, 7 days a week. Were there no out-of-work people qualified for the jobs? Seems that if some workers are working 84 hours a week, presumably being paid overtime for hours over 40 a week, about the same number of additional workers as those working 12/7 could have had good jobs, and the company would have been able to avoid the costly overtime. Were the workers working 12/7 because they were greedy and WANTED the extra bucks, or were they chained to the job? Lots of unanswered questions.
Reply to this comment
by retm-w February 9, 2010 9:54 PM EST
It's cheaper to pay the overtime, then to pay additional workers benefits. Industries have been doing this for years, and yes greed on the part of the worker is part of it to. Some would rather work the overtime then see someone else have a job.
by mjlewis6 February 9, 2010 3:52 PM EST
I believe that as long as there is public bidding on a project such as this one...and corporations are involved, there are no 'corporate rights' regarding a right to remain silent....

Corporations have not been arrested or put in prison, but perhaps officers and CEOs ought to be locked up when there is sufficient time
to determine what happened and....they remain silent....!!!
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