OAKLAND, Calif. - A stretch of highway near the San Francisco-Oakland Bay 
Bridge collapsed Sunday after a gasoline tanker crashed and burst into flames, 
leaving one of the nation's busiest spans in a state of near paralysis. 
Officials said traffic could be disrupted for months. 
 
 
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    Aerial view of the freeway interchange that funnels traffic 
 off the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge collapsed onto another highway 
 ramp in Oakland, Calif., Sunday, April 29, 2007, after a gasoline tanker 
 truck overturned and caught fire, authorities said. [AP]
  
  | 
Flames shot 200 feet in the 
air and the heat was intense enough to melt part of the freeway and cause the 
collapse, but the truck's driver walked away from the scene with second-degree 
burns. No other injuries were reported. 
"I've never seen anything like it," Officer Trent Cross of the California 
Highway Patrol said of the crumpled interchange. "I'm looking at this thinking, 
'Wow, no one died - that's amazing. It's just very fortunate." 
Authorities said the damage could take months to repair, and that it would 
cause the worst disruption for Bay Area commuters since the 1989 Loma Prieta 
earthquake damaged a section of the Bay Bridge itself. 
Nearly 75,000 vehicles use the portion of the road every day. But because the 
accident occured where three highways converge, authorities said it could cause 
commuting problems for hundreds of thousands of people. 
Transportation officials said they already had added trains to the Bay Area 
Rapid Transit light rail system that takes commuters across San Francisco Bay, 
and were urging people to telecommute if possible. 
State officials said motorists who try to take alternate routes Monday 
instead of relying on public transportation would face nightmarish commutes. 
The tanker carrying 8,600 gallons of gasoline ignited around 3:45 a.m. after 
crashing into a pylon on the interchange, which connects westbound lanes of 
Interstate 80 to southbound I-880, on the edge of downtown Oakland about half a 
mile from the Bay Bridge's toll plaza. 
A preliminary investigation indicated he may have been speeding on the 
curving road, Cross said. 
The fire melted a second interchange from eastbound I-80 to eastbound I-580 
located above the first interchange, causing a 250-yard section of the roadway 
to collapse onto the roadway below, according to the highway patrol. 
Witnesses reported flames from the blaze reached up to 200 feet high. 
Late Sunday morning, the charred section of collapsed freeway was draped at a 
sharp angle onto the highway beneath, exposing a web of twisted metal beneath 
the concrete. 
The Bay Bridge consists of two heavily traveled, double-decked bridges about 
two miles long straddling San Francisco Bay. 
San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom said the accident showed how fragile the Bay 
area's transportation network is, whether to an earthquake or terrorist attack, 
and has the potential to have a major economic effect on the city. 
"It's another giant wakeup call," Newsom told reporters at the California 
Democratic Party convention in San Diego.