WAYNESBURG, Pa. – Through the hilly fields here in southwestern Pennsylvania, crews worked for months this year, cutting a trench through woods and past farms for a new natural gas pipeline.
Like many other lines crisscrossing the state’s Marcellus Shale regions, this pipe was big – a high-pressure steel line, 20 inches in diameter, large enough to help move a buried ocean of natural gas out of this corner of the state. It was also plenty big enough to set off a sizable explosion if something went wrong.
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We don't need no steenking regulation ...
1 comment:
By the time it blows up the public will have forgotten it's there and the pipeline people won't give a shit, like in San Bruno.
Word verification is 'taint'. Heh.
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