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NJ Gas Odor Spreads to Maryland

A natural gas smell was reported throughout the county, specifically along U.S. Route 40.

 

UPDATED (11:45 a.m.)—Harford County is experiencing an overwhelming odor of natural gas and officials believe it has to do with a leak at a plant in New Jersey.

Harford County Government spokesman Robert Thomas said in a statement at 10 a.m. Friday, the odor "poses no significant threat to public health" and it "should be leaving the area and dissipating during the day."

The same statement confirmed the leak in a West Deptford Patch story was the source of the odor in Maryland.

The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection said in a statement, "Petroleum products have a low odor threshold, meaning they can be smelled readily even at very low levels that do not cause serious health risks.

The statement also said, "Air monitoring also indicates there should be no health effects from the odors caused by the spill."

Harford County acknowledged the odor just before 9 a.m., when Emergency Operations Manager Rick Ayers put out the following Connect-CTY message to the entire county: "Harford County has received several 9-11 calls reporting gas leaks along the Route 40 corridor. At this time, we believe the source of the gas leak smell is from a plant in New Jersey. At this time, there has been no gas leak source identified in Harford County. New Castle, DE and Cecil County fire departments have also been running numerous calls for service. Thank you and be safe."

The Harford County Emergency Operations Center had received 35 calls for service relating to the smell as of 10 a.m.

The Susquehanna Hose Company and Aberdeen Volunteer Fire Department responded to numerous calls before 8 a.m. Friday, with residents and business owners complaining of the smell of natural gas. Harford County Volunteer Fire and EMS spokesman Dave Williams said there was a high call volume Friday morning.

Because of the volume of calls, volunteer agencies in Harford County are treating the incidents as non-emergencies unless the odor is in a building.

"Atmosphere conditions are just bringing everything down the Route 40 corridor," Williams told Patch.

A BGE representative confirmed to Patch early Friday morning that they are not conducting any business in the area that would lead to a significant gas leak.

Stay with Patch for updates.

TELL US: Do you smell natural gas? What was your first reaction? Leave a comment.

Related Topics: Harford County, Harford County Emergency Operations, Harford County Fire, Natural Gas, and Natural Gas Leak

Colin

9:15 am on Friday, February 24, 2012

If you go stand by the septic pond in the back of bellissimos youll smell the worst smell you ever smelt in your life

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Loretta Zazo

9:22 am on Friday, February 24, 2012

All day yesterday at work me and my co-workers kept saying we smelled something funny. The store next to us has been renovating and we thought it was them. But they didn't do any work yesterday. This was at the Outlet Center.

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Christine Zoll

9:33 am on Friday, February 24, 2012

I can smell it near the Festival in Bel Air

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Take Responsibility!

9:44 am on Friday, February 24, 2012

Calm down everyone, I had taco bell last night *blush*

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nose

10:02 am on Friday, February 24, 2012

I thought that smell was normal, Maryland has a lot of strange odors.

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MDPatriot

3:32 pm on Friday, February 24, 2012

......especially the smelly odors coming out of Annapolis!

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Joe White

6:40 pm on Friday, February 24, 2012

You think Maryland has some strong odors, try driving thru Bayonne, NJ sometime.

Leslie Schildgen

10:22 am on Friday, February 24, 2012

I thought Aberdeen Proving Grounds was glowing something up. Man it smelled like natural HUMAN gas

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Jeanne Latonick

10:27 am on Friday, February 24, 2012

The odor has traveled to New Castle County, Delaware (Hockessin)

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Aunt Kiki

12:12 pm on Friday, February 24, 2012

I live in Nj and when I got close to Paulsboro it was VERY STRONG on the up town side. I thought they had an undergroung gas main bust. Thank God the smell was not down by the river where I live. I hope they get it cleaned up soon. No one should have to smell that all day.

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jessica coomes

12:42 pm on Friday, February 24, 2012

I live in Stewartstown Pa and I can't believe how strong I can smell the gas here..

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Carrie

1:47 pm on Friday, February 24, 2012

Are they going to be responsible for all of the funding used to investigate these calls?

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Joe White

6:42 pm on Friday, February 24, 2012

There is no reference as to what it is, exactly.

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Don Horton

11:20 am on Saturday, February 25, 2012

Natural gas has no odor.....you can however smell the additive "MERKAPTAN" used for detedtion of leaks.

Don

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E. Weber

6:16 pm on Saturday, February 25, 2012

Here's a link to more information about the leak that we were all smelling. The product was crude oil. http://abclocal.go.com/wpvi/story?section=news/local&id=8556520

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Donna

10:17 pm on Saturday, February 25, 2012

We smelled the odor in Abingdon on Thursday evening. I even called a friend in Bel Air to ask if she smelled the odor. I was going to call BGE but the odor faded away.

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fonda

2:09 pm on Monday, May 21, 2012

I live in Portdeposit the smell was ewwww like raw sewer stinky ,

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