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Police: 1 Dead, 7 Hurt In 2nd La. Plant Blast

State Police Trooper Jared Sandifer said Saturday officials from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration were coming to the CF Industries facility as soon as the site was safe. Sandifer said the state police's hazardous materials unit was at the plant overnight.

DONALDSONVILLE, La. (AP) -- Federal investigators are expected in south Louisiana over the weekend at the site of an explosion that killed one worker at chemical plant in Donaldsonville — the second such blast in the area in as many days.

State Police Trooper Jared Sandifer said Saturday officials from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration were coming to the CF Industries facility as soon as the site was safe. Sandifer said the state police's hazardous materials unit was at the plant overnight.

"Once they deem it safe, they will pull out and let OSHA and company officials do their work," Sandifer said.

Police said Ronald "Rocky" Morris Jr., 55, of Belle Rose, La., was killed in the Friday blast. He had worked at the plant for 34 years, company officials said.

CF Industries identified its injured employees as Courtney Julien, Melvin Singleton, Jeramy Worsham and Kade Yarbrough. Three contractor employees also were hurt.

The company said in a statement Saturday that one of its employees remained hospitalized in stable condition and all the other workers were released from Baton Rouge-area hospitals.

CF Industries manufactures ammonia and other nitrogen fertilizers at the Donaldsonville facility. Officials said there were no hazardous materials at the site.

The company said the blast occurred about 6 p.m. Friday in a section of the plant that had been shut down for maintenance and that there was no fire, chemical release, or threat to the community.

Lou Frey, vice president and general manager of the Donaldsonville Nitrogen Complex, said it involved a rupture in a small vessel or "header" as nitrogen was being offloaded from a tank truck. CF officials said everything was secure at the plant.

"Our focus is on our number one priority — the health and safety of our employees and the community," Frey said in a statement. "We are deeply saddened by the loss of one of our employees."

At a Friday night news conference at the plant site, Louisiana State Police Superintendent Col. Mike Edmondson described the incident as a "catastrophic failure" of a manifold that is used to distribute gas to the facility.

He said authorities are investigating whether it was a result of over pressurization or some other cause.

"We don't know if it was mechanical; we don't know if it was caused by over pressurization. We'll find that out as we work with plant and as we talk to the personnel," Edmondson said.

CF Industries' website says the plant can produce roughly 5 million tons of nitrogen for agricultural and industrial uses annually.

Just miles away Thursday, an explosion at a chemical plant in Geismar owned by Williams Cos. Inc. led to two deaths and injured dozens of others. Donaldsonville and Geismar are both in Ascension Parish and straddle the Mississippi River, between New Orleans and Baton Rouge.

Deerfield, Ill.-based CF Industries manufactures ammonia and other nitrogen fertilizers at its Donaldsonville plant. Edmondson said there was no ammonia at the plant at the time of the incident.

"There was no hazardous material at the site," Edmondson said.

Friday's deadly blast wasn't the first at the company's Donaldsonville plant. Three workers were killed and nine injured by an explosion and fire at the facility in May 2000.

Later that year, the Labor Department's Occupational Safety and Health Administration imposed a fine of nearly $150,000 against CF Industries. OSHA cited the company for 14 alleged safety and health violations, 12 of which were described by the agency as serious. The company didn't contest the citations and agreed to pay the penalties.

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