3 dead in small plane crash that set 2 homes ablaze in Northern Calif neighborhood

By AP
Wednesday, February 17, 2010

3 dead in small plane crash into Calif home

EAST PALO ALTO, Calif. — A small plane crashed Wednesday in a residential neighborhood shrouded in heavy fog, killing all three aboard, igniting fires and scattering debris onto a house where a children’s day care center operated, authorities said.

There were no reports of injury on the ground, and fires caused by the crash were soon extinguished.

The Cessna 310 crashed around 7:55 a.m. shortly after takeoff from the Palo Alto Airport, according to the Federal Aviation Administration. The crash site is one mile northwest of the airport.

Identities of the victims aboard the aircraft were not immediately known.

Menlo Park Fire Chief Harold Schapelhouman said the plane struck a power transmission line and broke apart, sending debris raining down on the working-class Silicon Valley neighborhood.

A wing fell onto one house, where a children’s day care operated, and the rest of the plane struck the front retaining wall of another house down the street before landing onto two vehicles on the street, he said.

The occupants of the homes have been accounted for, although authorities can’t be sure of the fatality count until crews begin clearing the wreckage, Schapelhouman said.

“Either by luck or the skill of the pilot, the plane hit the street and not the homes on either side,” he added. “That saved people in this community.”

Pamela Houston, an employee of the day care in the house struck by the wing, said she was feeding an infant when she heard a loud boom that she initially thought was an earthquake until she “saw a big ball of fire hit the side of the house.”

Houston said she screamed to the others in the house — the owner, the owner’s husband and their three children — and the group safely escaped before the home went up in flames.

“There are not even words to describe what it felt like,” she said. “I am very thankful to God that he allowed us to get out.”

The plane is registered to Air Unique Inc. No one answered the phone number listed for the Santa Clara company Wednesday morning. The plane was headed to the Hawthorne Municipal Airport in Southern California, the FAA said.

The city of Palo Alto, which provides power through a municipal utility agency, said most of the city and surrounding area had lost power due to Wednesday’s plan crash. Neither the city nor Pacific Gas & Electric, which owns the transmission lines used by the city power agency, had an estimate for when power would be restored.

“We have multiple crews on scene investigating,” said Joe Molica, a PG&E spokesman. “The crash appears to have affected three transmission lines that serve the city of Palo Alto’s municipal utility.”

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