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Chocolate Factory Explosion Leaves at Least Two People Dead and Five Missing Chocolate Factory Explosion Leaves at Least Two People Dead and Five Missing
(about 5 hours later)
At least two people were killed and at least five others remained missing after a powerful explosion ripped through a chocolate factory in West Reading, Pa., on Friday, sending a plume of smoke into the air and shaking houses blocks away, officials said. WEST READING, Pa. The authorities on Saturday searched for the cause of a powerful explosion that ripped through a chocolate factory in West Reading, Pa., on Friday, killing at least two people, sending a plume of smoke into the air and shaking houses blocks away.
The explosion at around 5 p.m. destroyed one building and damaged another at the R.M. Palmer Company chocolate factory in West Reading, about 60 miles northwest of Philadelphia, the police chief, Wayne Holben, said at a news conference on Friday. Officials said that at least five people remained missing, though one person was found alive in the rubble overnight.
The cause of the explosion was under investigation, he said. That discovery “provides hope that others still might be found,” Wayne Holben, the West Reading police chief, said. Search and rescue workers were clearing debris on Saturday and using dogs and specialized imaging equipment to find signs of life, he said.
Chief Holben said at a news conference on Saturday morning that two people were dead and at least five people were missing. The explosion, which occurred around 5 p.m., destroyed one building and damaged another at R.M. Palmer Company’s factory, Chief Holben said at a news conference on Friday. The cause of the explosion was under investigation, he said.
He said one person was found alive in the rubble overnight and that it “provides hope that others still might be found.” The chocolate factory is just west of the Schuylkill and one block from Penn Avenue, a busy thoroughfare lined with cafes, ice cream shops and restaurants in West Reading, a borough of about 4,500 people that is about 60 miles northwest of Philadelphia.
Search and rescue workers were clearing debris on Saturday and using dogs and specialized imaging equipment to find signs of life, Chief Holben said. A two-story factory building was flattened in the explosion, and on Saturday an excavator moved through mounds of damaged wood and warped metal where it once stood.
Earlier on Saturday, the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency said that five people had died in the explosion and six others were missing. Officials in West Reading disputed those numbers and the agency later amended its own figures. Frankie Gonzalez, 40, stood on a hillside overlooking the damage on Saturday afternoon, waiting for an update on his sister, Diana Cedeno, 45, a factory worker who has been missing since the explosion.
“We can confirm our numbers for now,” Chief Holben said. Mr. Gonzalez said that his family had waited at the hospital all night, unsure if Ms. Cedeno was even there. He said that Ms. Cedeno, who is married and has a 25-year-old son and a 20-year-old daughter, packaged candy at the factory.
A deputy coroner at the Berks County Coroner’s Office, Holly Stavarski, said on Saturday that at least two people had died. Mr. Gonzalez said other workers had told him that before the explosion, they had been warning each other that they smelled natural gas and reported it to plant managers. He said that his son and a nephew had worked at the factory within the past year and had also told their supervisors they smelled gas.
Ruth A. Miller, communications director for the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency, said in an email on Saturday after the news conference that the agency’s death toll was based on numbers reported to it by “the county.” Joseph Swope, a spokesman for UGI Utilities, a natural gas and electric company that serves the area, said that the company was cooperating in the investigation and that it was helping emergency workers on Saturday.
She said on Saturday afternoon that the county was now reporting at least two people dead and five others missing. “The explosion damaged some of UGI’s facilities at the site, so gas was turned off to aid the firefighting efforts,” he said. “UGI did not receive a call prior to the incident for a gas odor or gas leak.”
Reading Hospital received a total of eight patients, a spokeswoman, Jessica Bezler, said on Friday. She said one of the patients had been transferred, two had been admitted in fair condition and the others would be discharged. Joshua Ramos, 30, said he was waiting to hear about the condition of his friend, Ziomaru Ivette, 28, who was hospitalized with injuries from the blast.
The explosion sent a column of debris, flames and dust shooting into the air, as shown in a video that was captured by weather cameras and shared on Twitter by a reporter for Fox 29 News in Philadelphia. “They said she’s hanging in there,” Mr. Ramos said. “I hope she makes it. It’s heartbreaking.”
“The explosion was so big that it moved that building four feet forward,” Mayor Samantha Kaag, who is also a firefighter, said at the news conference on Friday after she responded to the scene. “Unfortunately, it wasn’t a great scene to come into. It was pretty scary.” On Saturday morning, state and local officials reported different death tolls from the explosion.
Chief Holben said on Friday that there was no danger to the surrounding area but the authorities were urging people to avoid the scene. He said that a command center had been set up to coordinate the local and state agencies that were responding to the explosion. The Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency said that five people had died and six others were missing. Officials in West Reading disputed those numbers and said that two people had died.
R.M. Palmer, founded in 1948, employs 850 people, according to its website, and is known for making seasonal chocolates, including hollow milk chocolate bunnies for Easter. Dean Murray, the West Reading borough manager, called the company “a staple of the borough.” Early on Saturday afternoon, Ruth A. Miller, the communications director for the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency, said in an email that Berks County had told the agency that two people had died and five people were missing.
“Our thoughts and prayers go out to everybody involved,” he said. At least 10 people had been admitted to Reading Hospital, a spokeswoman, Jessica Bezler, said in an email on Saturday. She said two of the patients had been transferred, two had been admitted in fair condition and the others were discharged.
The company did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The explosion sent a column of debris, flames and dust shooting into the air, as shown in a video that was captured by weather cameras and that Eddie Kadhim, a reporter for Fox 29 News in Philadelphia, shared on Twitter.
“The explosion was so big that it moved that building four feet forward,” Mayor Samantha Kaag, who is also a firefighter, said at the news conference on Friday after she responded to the scene.
In an interview, Ms. Kaag said she had felt the explosion at her house, four or five blocks from the factory.In an interview, Ms. Kaag said she had felt the explosion at her house, four or five blocks from the factory.
“I didn’t hear a boom,” she said. “I just felt it shake my house.”“I didn’t hear a boom,” she said. “I just felt it shake my house.”
R.M. Palmer was founded in 1948 and employs around 850 people, according to its website. It is known for making seasonal chocolates, including hollow milk chocolate bunnies for Easter.
Philip Wert, the vice president for the West Reading Borough Council, said at a news conference on Saturday that R.M. Palmer had been a “community partner” for decades.
“Whether it is donating candy for our Easter egg hunt and things like that, they have been an upstanding member of the community,” he said.
In a statement on Facebook, R.M. Palmer said it was devastated by the explosion and was focused on supporting its employees and families.
“We have lost close friends and colleagues, and our thoughts and prayers are with the families and friends of all who have been impacted,” the company said.
The company said that its phones, email and other communication systems were down and that it was relying on emergency medical workers and disaster recovery organizations to help relay information.
McKenna Oxenden contributed reporting.