This is absolutely horrible. I bet the fire fed back through the lines and into each house which had pilot lights!That's what it kinda looks like to me. I hate hate hate hate hate gas. Had a house once that the stove and the furnace were gas and I HATED IT!!! Scared me to death. But it seems in this case it wouldn't have mattered if you had it in your house or not - if the neighbor did.
I hope the people got out.
I hate gas too. I don't even know how to start our propane grill and don't want to. I had gas yrs ago and never used it, used microwave for all my cooking. Had a date and wanted to cook a decent meal and asked him to light the pilot and the stove blew up and burned his eyebrows and mustache and some of his hair off and he had some facial burns. Not a good date. It was terrible, had to call 911....that was some 32 or so years ago I still remember the fireball coming out of the stove, my date was trapped because there was a wall behind the stove door. Terrible. (He was ok later, in hosp for a week) Later that night my LR floor was littered with the packages from the EMT's ripping open bandages and stuff. Very surreal. First date I had after I left my first husband. Scary stuff
abbie.
Returning here & seeing post #153 above....
I began a thread in the Jury Room for this idea, not my own but something our family has implemented. Here is the basic plan for benefit of unregistered readers.
The American Red Cross & other such agencies, maintain reunification lists but, each family needs it's own plan. Here is how it works:
If possible, choose someone familiar with your extended family, preferably someone who lives in a different community. In our case, we selected a cousin who lives about 50 miles away. Each person, children as well as adults, knows to call the "it" person if they are seperated from the family in an emergency. "It" becomes a clearinghouse for information on the location & well-being of everyone who calls.
It really is that simple. We cannot be certain we'll have our own cellphones, as demonstrated last night. Those people had no time for anything except trying to escape the fireball. In disaster situations, groups can be scattered into different hotels or shelters, even different cities. This is the fastest way to re-connect.