đ° Full Story
Emergency crews in Garden Grove, California, worked over the Memorial Day weekend to avert a catastrophic failure at a GKN Aerospace storage tank holding about 6,000-7,000 gallons of methyl methacrylate.
The tank overheated and began venting vapors on May 22-23, prompting mandatory evacuations covering roughly 40,000-50,000 residents and a state of emergency declared by Governor Gavin Newsom.
Firefighters cooled the tank with water, brought in technical experts and conducted risky overnight inspections; by May 25 they reported a crack at the top of the tank that appears to have relieved pressure and reduced internal temperature (reported falling from readings near 100F to the low 90s). Officials said the threat of a boiling liquid expanding vapor explosion (BLEVE) has been eliminated, though evacuation orders and containment precautions remain while teams monitor for leaks.
Federal agencies including the EPA and FEMA have been integrated into the response, air monitoring has not detected hazardous concentrations, and local prosecutors have opened an investigation; residents have filed at least one class-action suit against the company.





đŹ Commentary