El Septundo was born with oil. The great flight fire leaves the citizens.

The city of El Sekundo could not be more than the pressure of the city raided by the city.
In 1911, the Standard Oil Coms Worksheet as its second hygiene home, and El Seghundo (Spanish “by a second”) was born.
Decades, a quotation and home have met, especially without the drama. Chevron, the oil giant now owners, over 16,000, his coastal and near Lax has made it a rest and business residence and business.
The biggest lashes of Thursday broke out minutes of panic for residents living in parts of El Seghundo and Manhattan Beach, as the fire broke the sky at night. Or the fire slipped down and the officials said there were no injuries and damage to speaking, some residents said on Thursday was a wake wire.
On Friday morning, citizens seemed to return to the daily life – they took dogs, talks and neighbors. But one title continued to rise.
Building groups are not restored to build a housing development project in Alma and Rosecrans Avenue in Manhattan Beach.
The citizens traveled in the past-day markets with a cup of coffee with one hand and pets in another. Bicyclists make their way in Vista Del Mar.
In El Senuary, groups repairing roads, trees, and schools were up to date. But one time, just as the spirit went down, the bright rubber smell.
Citizens here say that fire crash is concern but too much is a smell that they cannot see. Chihuahua, Fundi, near the cleaning area, a 38-year-old Nevada Solis, said he did not hear of fire until the morning.
Fire Views in Chevron Streech in El Seghundo
(Robbin Goddrard / Los Angeles Times)
He said only his concern was the spiritual poison of the spirit.
He said after moving to this small coast in the last five years, he started getting heads.
“Sometimes the spirit has no smell,” he said.
The citizen Jerry Pacheco, 42, and watered his lawn in his apartment from a blocking area away from the closet from El Selevard and Virginia Street. He said occasionally there without any smelly smelly of the methane from analysis.
“If I drink enough, there will be a waft of methane,” he said. “It’s like a gas that causes grass.”
The refinement produces approximately one third of all car oils and 40 percent of the Jet oil eaten in South California. Local authorities meant eruption, while they were amazing, not threatened by the public, as well as paramedics from the local towns and Chevron people were able to find the situation. The authorities said they were not injured or injured the city. However, at least one employee has been charged on Friday damaged in the fire, although the suit does not include information.
Blaze appeared in the process of processing in the southeast corner of the sunshine. The cause was not clear and under investigation. David Campbell, Director and USW Local 675, said the fire in the Isomaax cleaning, converting gas eafs to the high products like jet fuel.
Angela Bissland, 45, was home to his three children, a year of age 13, 12 and 8, when their evening was distracted by their home home living near Rosecrans Avenue and Supveda Boulevard.
“You hear the car collision all the time,” she said. “I was not prepared for that kind of noise.”
Smalled, Bisland has gone out of the outside of what happened.
“That’s when I see them to burn fire,” said Chevron Breech.
Bisland told his children to put their shoes before they catch a dog and pull out their place in Manhattan beach. He said he moved and moved them again.
Bisland said he drove south and was drawn to a random park in custody until it was safe to return.
He said the explosion and fire had hidden his, 8, who was afraid of fire.
Apart from neighbors, helicopters were preached on the center as Bisland and several companions walked on the afternoon.
Bisland said he stayed at his home in the last five years and never found nothing like Thursday night.
He said that when he had environmental and health problems about cleanliness, much of him said that he did not feel safe from the other side of Chevron.
Steve Pugh was walking in the afternoon near 5th Street and Palm Avenue, Block away from Chevron Analyticy, briefly standing in contact with the television newspaper.
Pugh said he was his way home when something was going to explore on this explosion.
“It was a great explosion.”
Pugh said he was looking at his partner, hoping he was not fallen, but he was out, looking for the big flames of sanctified in the night sky.
Pugh said he heard in Sosakhe before the time of the roaring sound like a train for 30 minutes. Pugh is living at Manhattan beach for 75 years and only see the heat from the edge of the glossed flare.
Pugh said he felt safe safe next to that cleaning area and lasted about six blocks at his home. Asked if there was something worried about the quality of the spirit, he checked an Air-Air Air-Air Air app for external accessing.
“Everything is green,” he said.