Efforts continue to stabilize area where Pennsylvania woman fell to her death in sinkhole
UNITY TWP, Westmoreland County — A sinkhole where a woman fell to her death last month is now being filled with hundreds of cubic yards of grout in a bid to stabilize the site.
The work in the village of Marguerite started just days after emergency responders found the remains of 64-year-old Elizabeth Pollard on Dec. 6, four days after she went missing while searching for her cat. The sinkhole was near a restaurant about half a mile from her home.
Crews have since pumped more than 3,300 cubic yards of grout into the site, the Pittsburgh-Tribune-Review reported, but it’s not yet known when the work will be completed. The work was put on hold this week due to snow and extremely cold temperatures, but officials hope to resume working soon.
State environmental officials have said the crews are digging between 12 and 16 boreholes strategically placed across the property. Each is being pumped with a cement-like grout mixture that will slowly spread over a roughly 25-foot area as it hardens, forming wide pillars to support the earth above.
Officials have said the sinkhole apparently began as a manhole-sized gap and may have only recently opened above where coal was mined until about 70 years ago. Hunters and restaurant workers in the area in the hours before Pollard’s disappearance told police they hadn’t noticed the sinkhole.