30-foot-wide sinkhole swallows Ephrata intersection, forces evacuations
30-foot-wide sinkhole swallows Ephrata intersection, forces evacuations
A 30-foot-wide sinkhole more than 20 feet deep swallowed a street intersection in Ephrata and forced the evacuation of two apartment buildings on Tuesday.

At some point overnight Monday, a 12-inch water main pipe broke under the street at West Pine Street and Park Avenue, Ephrata police Sgt. Philip Snavely said. Water spewed out, eroding the surrounding soil.

A motorist around 5 a.m. blew out a tire when he struck a jagged dip in the roadway, Snavely said. He reported the sagging street and police closed the intersection to traffic.

Around 6 a.m., a large part of the intersection collapsed, taking part of the streets and sidewalks with it, he said.

"It took out the whole intersection,"
he said. No one was injured. The collapse also caused a natural gas line to sag, though it did not rupture. Firefighters were dispatched to help at the scene.


Sinkhole

The precarious position of the gas line forced police to evacuate families from two nearby apartment buildings, Snavely said. All 12 apartments in the buildings are being rented, but not all the residents were home. He did not how many people were evacuated.

They were not allowed back in their homes until 11:30 a.m., he said. Water and gas were shut off to the area.

Ephrata fire Chief Allen Pettyjohn said the sinkhole spans the width of a street and is 20 or 30 feet long. Snavely added the sinkhole is 20 feet deep, but a cavern of unknown depth lies below the part of the sinkhole which can be seen.

Snavely said the sinkhole will not be fixed for at least two or three days. A call to the Ephrata Borough office and public works department was not immediately returned.

Pettyjohn could not remember a larger sinkhole in the borough in recent years.