Fiery explosions at a Texas fertilizer plant in a small town north of
Waco sent about 120 people to hospitals and apparently destroyed dozens of
homes and businesses.
Area hospitals reported treating slightly more than 120 people injured
by the West, Texas, blasts.
Texas Department of Public Safety spokesman Gail Scarborough had
earlier put the number of injured near the plant even higher -- 200 people, 40
of them critically.
Another official with the Texas Department of Public Safety said there
were deaths, though he did not immediately know how many. ABC News has not
confirmed any deaths.
Besides the injuries, 75 to 100 houses and business were completely
destroyed in and around the plant, Scarborough said.
"It's total chaos," West City Councilwoman Cheryl Marak said,
according to ABC News Radio. "There's ambulances and fire trucks and
police cars from everywhere."
An official with Hill Regional Hospital in Hillsboro, Texas, reported
the facility treated 66 patients, 38 with serious injuries.
Baptist Hillcrest Medical Center in Waco had treated 29 wounded, said
the center's CEO, Brett Esrock, and was expecting 20 more.
"They are coming in ambulances cars, vans, pretty much
anything," Esrock said.
Most of Baptist Hillcrest's patients had minor-to-moderate injuries
such as cuts, abrasions, broken bones and respiratory distress -- though there
was at least one critical injury, Esrock said.
Marak told ABC News affiliate WFAA that the blast killed her pets
and heavily damaged the local middle school.
"I was watching the flames and then it was just like a huge, huge
explosion and two houses, I mean, it demolished both of those," Marak
said, according to ABC News Radio. "I think everything around us is pretty
much just gone."
Keith Williams, a local resident, said his house also was completely
destroyed, according to ABC News Radio.
"All the ceilings are out," Williams said. "The windows
are out. The brick's knocked off the house. My big garage out back is half
blowed in."
He also saw "people with all their houses tore up across the
street from me, on each side of me."
The West Fertilizer Plant exploded around 8 p.m. local time, and there
were subsequent explosions around 10 p.m., WFAA reported. The cause of the
explosions was unconfirmed, but a dispatcher was heard warning crews to move
away from chemicals in unexploded tanks.
Firefighters initially went to the scene of a structure fire at the
plant.
"They are still on scene, assessing the scene, treating the
injuries, taking injured to the hospitals," Dani Moore, a spokeswoman for
State Highway Patrol told ABC News Radio.
At least 10 buildings in the town of West were on fire, including a
school located next to the plant, WFAA reported initially.
The town of West has a population of about 2,800.
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