Gas leak causes carbon monoxide risk in Baltimore home, Baltimore MD
Firefighters responded to a natural gas leak inside a Baltimore residence. They detected elevated carbon monoxide levels and ventilated the home. The source was identified as the stove, and the gas supply was shut off. The gas line was damaged by city workers during work.
Audio|Source: Baltimore City Fire
01:31
Transcript:
00:00
And Jim 43 respond, Boxerator 43-21, 13-23, Maradine Drive.
00:08
Between Paul Kirk Road, Lockraven Boulevard, through natural gas leak inside, engine, excuse me, injunctuary, 43-21, 1323, Maradine, Drines, for natural gas leak inside,
00:21
that's 1218.
00:27
Understatement, one of my location.
00:32
Okay, engine 20.
00:34
Engine 20, do you know who hit the gas line?
00:37
Can you repeat?
00:39
Do you know who gets a gas line?
00:44
It's definitely a gas line.
00:46
Is it struck by a contractor?
00:49
It was struck by Baltimore City workers.
00:54
Okay. 1219.
00:56
Engine 20, do you want the whole hat in that box?
01:03
Not of this time. If you can have that one,
01:07
reach out to me.
01:09
Okay, stand by.
01:16
We arrived on scene,
01:19
CO levels above 45 parts per million.
01:21
At this time, we're ventilating the dwelling.
01:24
We found the source to be the stove. We shut off the gas and ties to the stove.
01:29
We're still ventilated, just like you know.
Disclaimer:
This transcript was automatically generated and may contain inaccuracies. Please verify the information independently.
Location mentioned:
Baltimore, MD
This shows a Google Street View of the area near the location, which might not be the exact address.
Correct
Incorrect