11. November 2010 · Comments Off · Categories: Family, Home, News, Tech, Video · Tags: , , , , , , ,

7:39 P.M.The News-Press and news-press.com are following a Lee County gas line explosion on Colonial Boulevard near Treeline and State Road 82 involving a construction worker.

All of TECO?s 8,000 customers in Lee and Collier counties will be without gas for several days as the Tampa-based gas company begins the lengthy process of restoring service.

Company representatives will have to personally visit each customer to cut gas service, company spokesman Rick Morera said. And after they fix the break and return pressure to the lines, technicians must go to each home or business turn the gas valves on and re-ignite pilot lights. The law prohibits customers from igniting the lights themselves.

?This is going to be a difficult and lengthy repair,? Morera said. The company will prioritize hospitals and schools when it begins the restoring service and may bring in help from other companies in the state.

Region-wide service cuts are rare, Morera said, though the company had a similar service interruption in Jupiter in May when more than 10,000 customers lost service for several days.

No one has gas, according to Arturo Brawn, manager at Cantina Laredo off Big Pine Way in the Bell Tower Shoppes.

But, he?s still cooking his enchiladas.

?I still have a full restaurant because the majority of my equipment is electrical,? Brawn said. ?We have stoves and steamers that keep the food hot and we can still make any type of enchilada.?

He said he spoke to the city this evening and was told the issue with would be fixed by the end of the night.

Brawn said the restaurant will be closing at their normal time.

The only hiccup is he?s running out of corn tortillas and will be switching to flour ones soon and they can?t serve steaks because they cannot use the grill.

?I?m at the door asking people, ?where are you going?? we?re the only ones serving food,? Brawn said.

7:27 p.m. update

TECO has confirmed 8,000 customers this evening in Lee and Collier counties are without gas.

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The company doesn?t know how long they?ll be without their supply. They have to assess the damage.

Those customers are commercial and residential, according to a TECO spokesperson.

Several restaurants at Bell Tower Shops are taking a hit in sales after their gas supply was cut.

Restaurants as far south as Bahama Breeze at U.S. 41 and Six Mile Cypress have reported gas outages.

Carrey Smith, a server at Taste of New York, said the impact on business there will be huge.

?All of our customers pretty much left,? Smith said.

The restaurant is still serving cold subs and salads.

Bistro 41 and Blue Pointe both confirmed their gas supply was out, but managers there declined to comment.

Arturo Braun, manager at Cantina Laredo, said the restaurant is managing with electric equipment.

?We?re still open, but we?re serving a limited menu,? he said.

6:49 p.m. update

The Fort Myers Police Department has identified the victim of this afternoon?s construction accident as Mario Santos, 30, of Bonita Springs.

The westbound lanes of Colonial Boulevard are expected to remain closed until midnight. The eastbound lane has reopened. Drivers are asked to avoid the area.

Fort Myers police suggest drivers take Gateway Boulevard or Daniels Parkway.

6:32 p.m. update

Several restaurants at the Bell Tower could not serve hot dishes tonight due to having their gas supply cut off by the explosion. Patrons are advised to call ahead to see when service will be restored.

6:01 p.m. update

After the fire broke out, passerbys in the Publix Plaza gathered to watch the flames.

Most scattered after a couple of hours.

Businesses in the area have not reported any impact as of 4 p.m.

Inside Publix, in the deli section, Nichole Shepherd, 19, of Lehigh Acres said the explosion sounded like a sonic boom that reverberated the walls.

?I didn?t know what it was,? Shepherd said. ?And it seemed like no one else heard it because it gets pretty loud back there.?

It did cause a box of cups to fall from a shelf right in front of one of her co-workers.

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Ken Bennett, fire marshal for the Lehigh
Acres Fire District, said that the best way to address a gas fire was to turn off the gas and let it burn out.

Authorities earlier in the afternoon did just that.

?Believe it or not, unless there?s a hazard nearby that forces you to put it out right away, that?s the safest thing to do,? Bennett said. ?It eventually dies down, once there?s no gas, but in the mean time it?s under a lot of pressure.?

Bennett said it usually takes the flames at least an hour to die down and burn up the fuel.

4:53 p.m. update

The severely injured construction worker jumped from the bulldozer, according to Fort Myers police.

4:45 p.m. update

The eastbound lanes of Colonial Boulevard have reopened. The westbound lanes remain closed.

The seriously injured construction worker is being taken from Lee Memorial to a hospital in Tampa.

4:19 p.m. update

TECO Peoples Gas reports at this time approximately 300 residential and 50 commercial customers are without service. TECO has approximately 3,500 customers in Lee County

Compressed natural gas (CNG) trailers, which will help stabilize pressure on the system, are en route.

3:57 p.m. update

Steve Byrne, a Fort Myers firefighter, said “it sounded like a jet engine. It was pretty intense. When we got there, it was roaring.”

The flames shot up 50 feet or higher when it was burning, he said.

Firefighters were pumping water from a hydrant at the CVS store down the street to a fire truck, which then used the water to help extinguish the blaze.

3:22 p.m. update

Capt. Chris Bevan of the Fort Myers Fire Department said the gas was shut down about 30-60 minutes ago. Now, the fire department is spraying the backhoe with water to make sure everything is out.

Also, the worker who was injured suffered burns to over 50 percent of his body, Bevan said.

3:41 p.m. update

Fort Myers police say a second victim, also a Posen construction worker, was treated and released on scene with minor injuries.

3:22 p.m. update

TECO Peoples Gas reports that the pipeline break has been contained.

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As soon as access can be gained, construction of a bypass around the break will be attempted.

A small number of customers are out of service at this time.

Posen Construction is required to contact OSHA to investigate the fire.

3:04 p.m. update

The injured worker is in critical condition at Lee Memorial Hospital.

Fort Myers police are waiting to notify the construction worker?s family before releasing his identity.

Flames aren’t visible anymore as the fire appears to have been almost completely extinguished. Thick black smoke continues to pour out of the ground where the explosion occurred.

3:02 p.m. update

Lee County transportation director Paul Wingard said Posen employees were mixing stone into the dirt – a vital step in stabilizing the soil below the roadbed.

“There must have been a gas line close to the surface,” Wingard said.

This is not the first accident on the site for Posen.

Posen employee Tom Maines, 58, was injured on the same site in late June after a piece of a crane boom fell on him. Crews were working on the boom on the south side of Colonial Boulevard near the Home Depot, county officials had said.

Lee County hired Posen in March 2009 on a $16.7 million contract to widen the road between Interstate 75 and State Road 82. The company is also widening Summerlin Road as part of a $25.1 million contract with the county.

The Summerlin project is 10 months behind and millions of dollars over budget after crews there were forced to rebuild an overpass and environmental regulators found asbestos chunks in the fill.

The injured construction worker was with Posen Construction, the main contractor on the widening of State Road 82.

Fort Myers police suggest drivers take Gateway Boulevard or Daniels Parkway since Colonial Boulevard is closed.

Russ Reed with FPL came out with another worker to look out for their feeder, which lies just west of the fire that continues spouting off billows of smoke and flames.

“It doesn’t look like it’ll affect it,” Reed said. “But, we’re going to watch it and make sure to keep everybody in service.”

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If the wires burn down, it would directly affected the area locally, which includes the Publix plaza and CVS.

2:50 p.m. update

Kenny Winstead, a witness who was driving by, said he heard the explosion that sounded like a sonic boom.

“God help who was on it,” he said, referring to the backhoe that is completely engulfed in flames.

He said you could still hear hissing from the gas line.

2:47 p.m. update

At 1:46 p.m. today, the Fort Myers Police Department responded to a construction accident near the intersection of State Road 82 and Colonial Boulevard, according to the Fort Myers Police Department. Upon arrival police learned a construction worker on a bulldozer severed a natural gas line and caused an explosion. The construction worker was transported to Lee Memorial Hospital trauma alert. Right now Colonial Boulevard is shutdown between State Road 82 and Treeline Avenue.

The fire department also is on scene. Police expect the road to remain closed while repairs are made to the gas line.

Rick Morera, a spokesman for TECO, a Tampa utility, confirmed that construction equipment pierced an 8-inch gas main. The company doesn?t know how many customers will be affected by the explosion.

A Marine Corps veteran at the Blockbuster video store in the Crossroads Plaza at State Road 82 and Lee/Colonial Boulevard heard the explosion.

“It was like a Humvee blew up,” said Chance Hood, 36, who estimated the explosion occurred about 250 yards away. “We didn’t know what it was.”

Hood said the explosion shook the plaza.

The Lee County Sheriff’s Office is directing traffic. Traffic heading east toward Lehigh Acres is blocked at Colonial Boulevard.

2:26 p.m. update

Motorists are asked to avoid the area of State Road 82 and Colonial Boulevard because of a gas line explosion. Both directions of Colonial are closed starting at Treeline Boulevard. Both directions of State Road 82 are closed at Forum Boulevard and Gateway Boulevard. Both directions of Lee Boulevard are closed at State Road 82.

The Lee County Sheriff?s Office is now assisting the Fort Myers Police
Department with the investigation.

2:08 p.m.update

Reports of heavy equipment hitting a gas line, sparking a fire, have caused Colonial Boulevard to be closed at Treeline to SR 82 both directions. SR 82 is closed between Gateway Blvd and Forum Blvd both directions. The Fort Myers Police Department responding.

This is a developing story. Check back for more updates, photos and video.

Explosion cuts gas service to 8,000

Haynes Corp. is revving up for an expansion in Collier County.

The company is the only independent domestic manufacturer of precision diesel fuel injection systems for heavy-duty engines.

Collier County commissioners on Wednesday voted unanimously to allow the manufacturer to tap county incentives for an expansion here, though the jobs it will create won’t meet the average wage requirements for the government assistance programs.

With the vote, the company plans to move its California operations here, bringing 20 jobs to the Naples area.

The county’s incentive programs are designed to diversify the local economy and create high-wage jobs.

Tammie Nemecek, president and CEO of the Collier County Economic Development Council, urged commissioners to approve the assistance, saying the jobs wouldn’t come here otherwise.

“But for this incentiv they are not going to bring this California operation here,” she told commissioners.

The company’s headquarters currently has 45 employees. After consolidating its operations in Norwalk, Calif., Haynes would have 65 employees in the Naples area.

To support the expansion, the company plans to put up a new 30,000 square foot building next to its headquarters off Mercantile Avenue. The investment is estimated at $1.85 million, including the purchase of new manufacturing equipment. Construction is expected to start next spring.

The new jobs in Naples will be offered to the company’s California employees and outsiders, with preference given to applicants who agree to live in Collier County.

David Jackson, the county’s executive director of business and economic development, said the incentive programs as they’re currently designed aren’t working and need to be updated to reflect today’s economy. A plan for change is in the works and will come to commissioners for approval this fall, he said.

He said every job that’s created tickse, away at the county’s high rate of unemployment, which hovers above state and national averages. In June, Collier had a jobless rate of 12.3 percent, up from 11.3 percent in May, according to the Florida Agency for Workforce Innovation.

Without the county incentives, Haynes would have considered relocating to California or Jackson, Mich.

The new jobs in Collier would pay an average wage of $34,320. The rules for the county’s incentive programs require an average wage of $58,928, or 50 percent above the county’s average private sector wage, which is estimated at $39,258.

The 45 retained jobs pay an average of $42,078. These are corporate jobs, as well as jobs in manufacturing and production.

Haynes would receive $161,550 in county incentives after creating the new jobs. That money will come back to the county in property, gas and sales taxes, with most – if not all – of the company’s employees living in Collier, Jackson argued.

At first, Commissioner

Jim Coletta said he was reluctant to approve the waiver allowing Haynes to get the incentives, fearing it would set a bad precedent. But he felt more comfortable with it after hearing that changes to the incentive programs are in the works and will be brought to the board in September or October.

In today’s economy, Coletta said he understands the goal is “just trying to provide jobs for people.” But when the economy improves the focus should be more on attracting high-wage jobs, as it has been for years.

“The economy fluctuates, whatever we have has to be able to meet the conditions as it changes,” Jackson said.

County commissioners have only granted a waiver one other time.

Haynes will get $2,000 for every job it creates, $79,550 to offset impact fees for the construction of its new building, and $1,000 for every job that’s kept by a Collier County resident.

Haynes was founded in Jackson, Michigan in 1960 by Laurance Haynes as a manufacturer’s representative for diesel engines and related parts. It grew through a series of acquisitions.

In 1988, the company acquired the Bendix diesel fuel injection product line. That included a manufacturing plant in Naples, which greatly enhanced its manufacturing and engineering capabilities.

The company’s products include fuel injection pumps, injector assemblies, plungers and barrels. Its customers include John Deere and General Electric.

A few years ago, Haynes’ owners looked at bringing the California operations to Naples, but they didn’t because of a bad business climate, Nemecek said.

“There has been a significant change in the attitude of the community toward business,” she said.

That helped change the company’s mind about expanding here.

Connect with Laura Layden at www.naplesnews.com/staff/laura_layden.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Haynes Corporation planning expansion bringing 20 jobs to Collier County

To report a crime or suspicious activity in your neighborhood, call the Naples Police and Fire Department at 213-4844, the Collier County Sheriff’s Office at 774-4434, the Lee County Sheriff’s Office 239-477-1000 or the Marco Island Police Department at 389-5050.

? ‘Run, ma, run’: Mother, son charged with shoplifting

? Collier detectives bust Estates marijuana grow house

? Fingerprint on whiskey bottle lands Marco Island man in jail

? Wrong turn: Woman arrested after parking in handicapped spot

? Teen arrested on drug charges after shooting at ‘invisible people’ with stolen gun

? Money didn’t talk: Man offers bribe to Lee sheriff’s deputy to avoid DUI arrest

? Signature theft: Hall of Fame sports memorabilia reported stolen from Lee County office

? Click here to view the Collier County Sheriff’s Office’s Cold Case Facebook page

Domestic violence arrests

? Miles Maxwell Dacko, 24, of the 5100 block of Teakwood Drive, Golden Gate Estates, was arrested Tuesday by Collier deputies at Teakwood Drive. He was charged with putting his girlfriend in a choke hold and biting her right bicep.

? Lee Marvin Hill, 23, of the 2000 block of Rookery Bay Drive, East Naples, was arrested Tuesday by Collier deputies at Rookery Bay Drive. He was charged with kicking a speaker box at his girlfriend and going after her with a box cutter.

? Christopher Deon Elbert, 20, of the 5500 block of Wilmar Lane, East Naples, was arrested by Collier deputies on Tuesday at 2001 Sunshine Boulevard. He was charged with punching the face of his wife.

Drug arrests

? Patricia Ann Palermo, 46, of Tarpon Springs, was arrested by Collier deputies on Tuesday at the intersection of Estey Avenue and Airport-Pulling Road. She was charged with possession of Xanax, possession of Methadone, possession of narcotic paraphernalia, driving with an unassigned tag, and failure to register a motor vehicle after a traffic stop.

? Thomas C. Simmons, 19, of the first block of Liberty Lane, East Naples, was arrested by Collier deputies on Tuesday at the intersection of 23rd Avenue Southwest and 46th Terrace Southwest. He was charged with possession of Xanax, possession of a controlled substance, and possession of marijuana after a traffic stop.

? Claudine J. Sisca, 38, of the 1500 block of Weybridge Circle, North Naples, was arrested by Collier deputies on Tuesday on U.S. 41 North. She was charged with possession of Lorazepam, possession of oxycodone, and possession of narcotic paraphernalia.

? Michael J. Retino, 31, whose address on Whistlers Cove Circle in East Naples was not released, was arrested by Naples police on Tuesday on Fifth Avenue South. He was charged with possession of cocaine, after the drug was found inside his wallet after he was booked in the Collier County jail on a separate charge.

DUI arrests

? Julia Ann Birdman, 47, of Fort Myers, was arrested Tuesday by Lee deputies on McGregor Boulevard in Fort Myers.

n James T. Koporc, 19, who is homeless in Naples, was arrested by Collier deputies on Tuesday near the intersection of U.S. 41 East and Broward Street.

Police Beat is compiled and written by the Naples Daily News staff/ contributors from oral and written reports by Naples police, Collier Sheriff‘s Office, Lee County Sheriff’s Office, Marco police and other agencies. Arrests indicate suspicion of crime, not guilt.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Police Beat: July 7, 2010

To report a crime or suspicious activity in your neighborhood, call the Naples Police and Fire Department at 213-4844, the Collier County Sheriff’s Office at 774-4434, the Lee County Sheriff’s Office 239-477-1000 or the Marco Island Police Department at 389-5050.

? Woman throws coffee on Marco police officer, report says

?Mom wakes up daughter with punch in the face for missing beer

Drug arrests

? Neil Allen Perkins, 37, of the 8600 block of Saddlebrooke, East Naples, was arrested by Collier deputies on Friday following a traffic stop near his home. Perkins, a passenger in the vehicle, was charged with possession of crack cocaine, narcotics paraphernalia and concealed brass knuckles.

? Enrique J. Lopez, 29, of the 3100 block of U.S. 41 East, in the Bayshore area of Naples, was arrested by Collier deputies on Friday following a traffic stop near Jennings Street and Floridian Avenue. Deputies reported that the known gang member was charged with possession of cocaine with the intent to sell and possession of drug paraphernalia after police say they discovered a fake gun with crack in it and a ledger of names and money owed for crack cocaine.

? Warren Robert Krupp, 20, of the 12700 block of Kedleston Circle, Fort Myers, was arrested by Collier deputies on Thursday night after a traffic stop near mile marker 95 on Interstate 75. Krupp was charged with possession of less than 20 grams of marijuana, Adderall and a fake license.

DUI arrests

? Andrew J. Mendo, Jr., 69, of the 3000 block of Linwood Avenue, Naples, was arrested by Collier deputies on Friday near Airport-Pulling and Vanderbilt Beach roads and charged with driving with a suspended license and second offense DUI.

? Tammy Fenton Stults, 38, of the 7900 block of Fairway Preserve Way, North Naples, was arrested by Collier deputies on Friday at 961 9th St. SW., Golden Gate Estates, and charged with DUI second offense when she drove her car into the ditch, getting it stuck. Stults was arrested for DUI four times.

? Erin Esther Stevens, 20, of the 3400 block of Winifred Row Lane, East Naples, was arrested by Collier deputies on Friday following a traffic stop on I-75 near the Immokalee Road exit in North Naples.

Domestic assault arrests

? Sean P. Long, 26, of the 4500 block of Gulfstream Drive, East Naples, was arrested at home by Collier deputies on Friday and charged with battery after they say he grabbed his girlfriend as she attempted to assist him in detoxing from prescription medications. When Long grabbed her in an attempt to get the pills that she was withholding from him, the girlfriend’s 7-year-old son went to a neighbor’s house to call for help.

? Edwin A. Herrera, 34, of the 4700 block of Whistler’s Green Circle, Golden Gate, was arrested by Collier deputies on Friday and charged with intentionally causing bodily harm to another after police say he punched his girlfriend in the mouth when she acquired about an alcoholic gift given to him at work. The argument occurred in their vehicle in the area of 40th Terrace Southwest and Green Boulevard.

? Jean Alias Delorme, 21, of the 5300 block of Holland Street, Naples Manor, was arrested at home by Collier deputies on Friday and charged with slapping his sister in the face when he asked her to clean and she said she already had cleaned.

? Juan Ramirez, 29, of the 100 block of West Dixie Avenue, Immokalee, was arrested by Collier deputies at his home on Friday and charged with punching his wife of nine years in the face and scratching her neck and arms after he returned from the bar.

? Inosente A. Abundez, 44, of the 5200 block of Warren Street, Naples Manor, was arrested at his home by Collier deputies and charged with battery on Friday. Police said he slapped his wife in the face, causing a loose tooth and mouth laceration while accusing her of sticking her finger in his friend’s butt.

Police Beat is compiled and written by the Naples Daily News staff/ contributors from oral and written reports by Naples police, Collier Sheriff‘s Office, Lee County Sheriff’s Office, Marco police and other agencies. Arrests indicate suspicion of crime, not guilt.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Police Beat: June 19, 2010