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At least 16 hurt in gas explosion at K.C. restaurant

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Sharon Fisher was in the House of Elan Med Spa next door to JJ’s when the explosion hit.

“I put my hands over my head, dropped to the floor, looked up and saw glass flying in pieces from the ceiling,” Fisher said. “The walls started buckling. I could see daylight when it stopped. We ran out of there as fast as we could.”

The corner restaurant was mostly flattened, save for a small part of the facade.

Witnesses said there were relatively few patrons inside JJ’s at the time of the explosion. The streets around the restaurant had been blocked off while MGE workers investigated the heavy smell of natural gas. The workers instructed everyone inside the restaurant and bar to evacuate.

Joe Whisler of Westwood had met friends there after work Tuesday.

“I’m OK, but I was just 15 minutes from dead,” he said later.

Four employees of JJ’s, who were hugging each other and crying after the blast, said they had started canceling reservations for the evening at 5 p.m. because the smell was so bad. When the gas company told them to leave, they said, they had to run. Some were in the alley when the explosion occurred.

JJ’s owner Jimmy Frantze was driving back to Kansas City from Oklahoma on Tuesday night.

“It was 28 years of a great restaurant, and then it has to end like this,” Frantze said. “I want to check on my employees. I want to make sure they are all right.”

Mayor Sly James and City Manager Troy Schulte went to the Plaza in the aftermath.

“The Fire Department and first responders have done a remarkable job,”

James said. “I was just praying there weren’t people in JJ’s like there are so many times on a Tuesday evening at 5:30. ... At 5:30 on a Tuesday night that place would often be packed.”

About 100 firefighters were called to the four-alarm blaze, Kansas City Fire Chief Paul Berardi said. The gas was shut off and the fire was under control shortly after 8 p.m.

Mark Ebbitts, who works at nearby Shelton Travel Service, also stopped at JJ’s after work. He said the streets in the area were blocked off between 5 and 5:30 p.m. because of the smell and he saw Missouri Gas Energy workers inside JJ’s with gas detectors. Ebbitts said an alarm went off, but the gas workers did not appear to panic.

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