DISASTER Philadelphia: Tanker fire underneath I-95 causes entire northbound overpass to collapse

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB

Truck Driver Nathan Moody Died of Blunt Head Trauma, Thermal Injuries in Philadelphia I-95 Crash


A truck driver whose remains were retrieved from the rubble after his vehicle caught fire under a section of an Interstate 95 overpass in Philadelphia on Sunday died from blunt trauma to the head, inhalation and thermal injuries, the local medical examiner revealed Tuesday night. His death was ruled an accident. The driver was previously identified as Nathan Moody, a 53-year-old whose family said had more than 10 years of trucking experience. “He wanted to raise his girl to know what a good Dad was, to know what a hardworking Dad was,” Issac Moody told Fox 29 Philadelphia. “He didn’t drink, he didn’t smoke, he damn-sure didn’t use any drugs.”

Moody had been driving a tanker truck that was carrying around 8,500 gallons of gasoline when he lost control of his vehicle while attempting to exit the interstate, officials said. Fire from the subsequent explosion caused an elevated section of the road to collapse. No other injuries were reported, and no other vehicles were believed to have been involved in the crash.
 

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB
There removing large quantities of dirt near by from the ongoing widening of 95, So source for the fill will be easy.




Officials unveil Interstate 95 collapse repair plan in Philadelphia: 'This is our championship'​


Officials unveiled on Wednesday a plan to repair an elevated section of Interstate 95 in Philadelphia that collapsed when a tanker truck caught fire in the underpass.

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro said the "most efficient" way to get the impacted lanes reopened will be to backfill and pave over the Cottman Avenue underpass and then work to build a new bridge.
"Once complete, cars and trucks can return to this stretch of 95 and then we will work together to build a permanent bridge, while making sure we keep six lanes of traffic open at all times," Shapiro said at a press conference.
A 24/7 livestream feed that will allow the public to watch the reconstruction in real time will be set up over the weekend, according to the governor.
PHOTO: Workers inspect and clear debris from an elevated section of Interstate 95 that collapsed the previous day in Philadelphia on June 12, 2023.

Workers inspect and clear debris from an elevated section of Interstate 95 that collapsed the previous day in Philadelphia on June 12, 2023.
Mark Makela/Getty Images

Shapiro didn't give a timeline on when the repaving of the underpass will be complete, but he stressed that it will be done "as quickly as possible." The materials to fill the underpass will arrive on Thursday, he said.
"This is our championship," he added. "We are ready to go and I am proud as hell to be on the team with all of these guys and gals standing behind me here today."
The governor had told reporters on Sunday evening that "the complete rebuild" is expected "to take some number of months."

The bridge collapsed on Sunday morning as a tanker truck carrying 8,500 gallons of gasoline attempted to navigate a left-hand turn after exiting at the Cottman Avenue offramp of I-95 in Pennsylvania's largest city, according to officials. Losing control through its turn, the truck fell on its side and ruptured its own tank. Once ignited, the fuel burned at a high enough heat to structurally compromise the concrete and steel I-beams of the overpass, officials said.
PHOTO: An investigator surveys the aftermath of an elevated section of Interstate 95 that collapsed, in Philadelphia, June 12, 2023.

An investigator surveys the aftermath of an elevated section of Interstate 95 that collapsed, in Philadelphia, June 12, 2023.
Matt Rourke/AP

The northbound lanes of the affected segment collapsed, while the southbound lanes are compromised and will also need to be replaced. Crews have since removed most of the collapsed structure along with the tanker truck that was trapped beneath, officials said. They are now working to demolish the structurally unsound southbound portion of the roadway. The full demolition will be finished by Thursday, according to Shapiro.

The Pennsylvania State Police said Monday that a body was recovered from the wreckage and turned over to the Philadelphia County Medical Examiner and Coroner. While authorities have yet to identify the remains, the family of Nathaniel Moody told ABC News that he was the driver of the tanker truck and had died in the crash. Moody leaves behind a son and two daughters, his family said.
I-95 is one of the busiest travel corridors in the United States and serves as the main north-south highway on the East Coast. An average of more than 160,000 vehicles travel across the impacted section in Philadelphia every day, according to the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation.
 

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB
PennDOT reveals bridge repair plans: "Fill it in and pave it over."

So why was the exit ramp there in the first place if you can just permanently close it?

PennDOT logic.:strs::strs::strs::strs::strs::strs::strs::strs::strs:
This is probably the least worse idea.
Even from a cost perspective. There are probably well over a 100 phily police out directing traffic daily.
Not just for the sections of surface road they put the detour on but many others from people trying to find different ways around this mess.
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
PennDOT reveals bridge repair plans: "Fill it in and pave it over."

So why was the exit ramp there in the first place if you can just permanently close it?
Much less traffic on any given exit ramp than on the main body of an interstate freeway.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
A friend driving to work today said on Facebook the traffic wasn't nearly as bad as he had expected, but I suspect those 100-plus cops directing traffic had something to do with that.
 

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB
A friend driving to work today said on Facebook the traffic wasn't nearly as bad as he had expected, but I suspect those 100-plus cops directing traffic had something to do with that.
Yes, and I think there doing a good job of forcing thru traffic over to 295 in NJ. So at the Delaware/PA state line then up above somewhere between PA/NJ crossing back over. It would probably add 30 miles if you were trans-versing the area but better then side streets in Philly.

Mon and Tue when I drove it the actual volume of cars on the road was way down.
 

vernrun

Constitutional Patriot
Owner/operator was driving for a company with a history of similar crashes....I found this on NewsBreak: Tanker truck company had a fiery crash 8 years ago not far from collapsed Philly bridge

History of crashes by tanker company TK Transport
 

bluelady

Veteran Member
Owner/operator was driving for a company with a history of similar crashes....I found this on NewsBreak: Tanker truck company had a fiery crash 8 years ago not far from collapsed Philly bridge

History of crashes by tanker company TK Transport
Could you copy it here? They make you click a lot of things to get to the actual story.
 

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Owner/operator was driving for a company with a history of similar crashes....I found this on NewsBreak: Tanker truck company had a fiery crash 8 years ago not far from collapsed Philly bridge

History of crashes by tanker company TK Transport

Tanker truck company had a fiery crash 8 years ago not far from collapsed Philly bridge
Ryan W. Briggs and Jason Laughlin, The Philadelphia Inquirer
6 - 7 minutes

PHILADELPHIA — A New Jersey tanker truck company linked to a fiery crash that destroyed a section of I-95 this week was involved in a similar incident in 2015 — just a few miles away from the site of Sunday’s blaze.

Tanker trucker Nathan Moody is presumed to have lost control of his rig while exiting an off-ramp near the Cottman exit on I-95, triggering a crash that ignited some 8,500 gallons of gasoline and torched a section of highway. Relatives said Moody, a truck owner-operator, worked for TK Transport Inc, a gas-supply company based in Pennsauken, New Jersey.

Eight years ago, another driver working for TK Transport lost control of his tanker truck while coming off a ramp near the Betsy Ross bridge. The truck burst into flames, causing nearly $1 million in damages and shuttering the busy highway ramp.

The driver, who ran from that inferno, blamed the February crash on “black ice,” but officials later concluded he had been speeding. He was later found to have multiple driver’s licenses.

TK Transport, a subsidiary of Chester Springs, Pennsylvania-based Penn Tank Lines, gave little comment at that time. Two different company representatives said they were not allowed to speak when reached by reporters this week.

During the 2015 crash, reporters found that federal records showed the company was “not authorized” to haul hazardous materials across state lines. As of this week, an online company profile maintained by the US Department of Transportation’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration indicated that TK Transport was still “not authorized” to operate in an interstate capacity.

Enforcement records maintained by the FMCSA also show that Penn Tank Lines paid a $62,650 last year to settle a series of violations related to the mishandling of hazardous materials, including breaches of regulations related to driver training and tanker truck safety.

That TK Transport wasn’t authorized to transport across state lines concerned Bob Mongeluzzi, a Philadelphia lawyer with Saltz, Mongeluzzi & Bendesky who has handled transportation-related liability cases, including other trucking cases and the 2015 Amtrak derailment in the city.

“That certainly surprises me,” he said. “Under the regs, assuming the posting is accurate, they would not be able to operate in interstate commerce.”

Such carriers could still legally lend their vehicles to authorized companies for interstate transport. But if the company is indeed not authorized to transport goods across state lines, he said, that could be a major factor in any liability cases that stem from the crash.

“Pitch number one would be: The accident wouldn’t have occurred,” if the company had abided by the licensing restriction, Mongeluzzi said.

Less surprising, Mongeluzzi said, was information from the FMCSA that TK Transport vehicles and drivers had not been subject to inspections for at least the past two years, according to federal records.

There are millions of commercial trucks in the country, he said, and there are far too few inspectors to keep track of them all.

“There’s been a constant tension between too much regulation and not enough regulation. Sometimes that’s a political issue, sometimes it’s a finance issue,” he said. “It is the carriers themselves, the private companies, that have the obligation to make sure they are in compliance with the rules.”

Depending on the circumstances that caused the crash, Moody’s family could potentially sue TK Transport if the driver was an independent contractor and not directly employed by the company.

The condition of the vehicle, and whether it was well maintained, would be key questions in such a suit, Mongeluzzi said. Tractor trailers have the equivalent of an airplane’s black box in them to record the details of trips, and data gathered from that device will be critical to an investigation. Whether that device survived the fire any better than the highway bridge, though, is uncertain.

“The problem, and I’ve had this because I’ve handled a multitude of fire cases, (is) they can be incinerated,” Mongeluzzi said.

A company of its size, the lawyer said, likely has liability insurance with a cap around $10 million, which pales compared to the repair costs for the highway or the costs to businesses and commuters.

“You’re talking about literally billions of dollars,” he said. “There is no way that a TK Transport could possibly have the insurance coverage for the assets to pay for that.”

Officials have released few official details about the crash as investigators have picked through the molten tanker chassis and other scorched remnants left by the conflagration.

At a news conference with federal officials on Tuesday, Pennsylvania State Police Capt. Gerard B. McShea confirmed that an unnamed company had contacted law enforcement to assist in identifying the driver, and has since been cooperative with the investigation.

Isaac Moody, of Willow Grove, said his first cousin Nathan Moody, who is listed on public records as age 53, lived in New Jersey and had obtained a hazmat license to work short distance supply runs to gas stations within the region – as opposed to long haul trucking – in order to spend more time with his 7-year-old daughter.

“He always said he wanted that girl to grow up with her daddy,” he said. “That little girl was everything to him.”

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summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
It sounds like TK Transport will be bankrupt and out of business very shortly. And any creditors will be SOL, because the state will take everything they have as partial recompense for the costs.

Summerthyme
 

CTFIREBATTCHIEF

Veteran Member
Then...

Biden makes a bizarre joke to crickets in the audience, then asks, "Alright, where we going?"
RT 22secs
View: https://twitter.com/RNCResearch/status/1670102545392627713?s=20
*shaking my head*

Hey "pudding cup" a man DIED at that scene the other day, died horribly I might add and you're acting like you are Shecky Greene at the Tropicana? I'd say that you should be ashamed of yourself but you're too damn demented to understand just how much of an asshat you really are.

This mans stupidity truly knows no bounds
 

Publius

TB Fanatic
Thats imposable Penn-state cannot fix any roadway without it dragging out for years and elected officials getting kick-backs in the form of campaign donations.
 

anna43

Veteran Member
It sounds like TK Transport will be bankrupt and out of business very shortly. And any creditors will be SOL, because the state will take everything they have as partial recompense for the costs.

Summerthyme
Potentially they could file bankruptcy and avoid paying anything to anybody beyond insurance coverage and the sale of company assets. I doubt the state would have higher standing with their bankruptcy claim than most other creditors and likely below secured creditors and employee wages/benefit claims.

The damages are sad but not as sad as a man losing his life. Money will eventually fix the damages, but nothing will replace the man for his family.
 

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Potentially they could file bankruptcy and avoid paying anything to anybody beyond insurance coverage and the sale of company assets. I doubt the state would have higher standing with their bankruptcy claim than most other creditors and likely below secured creditors and employee wages/benefit claims.

The damages are sad but not as sad as a man losing his life. Money will eventually fix the damages, but nothing will replace the man for his family.
The state would not.
Most trucking companies don't even own the trucks anymore so that's out as well.
 
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