Albuquerque Journal

Union Pacific agrees to more thorough inspection­s

Deal made after derailment

- BY MATTHEW BROWN ASSOCIATED PRESS

BILLINGS, Mont. — The nation’s largest freight railroad has agreed to more thorough inspection­s and maintenanc­e improvemen­ts after a fiery oil train derailment in Oregon and the discovery of more than 800 potential safety violations across its sprawling network.

Details on the agreement between the Federal Railroad Administra­tion and Union Pacific Railroad were obtained by The Associated Press.

Sixteen tank cars from a Union Pacific train hauling North Dakota crude through the Columbia River Gorge derailed in early June along a curve in the tracks near Mosier, Oregon. The accident sparked a massive fire that burned for 14 hours and prompted the evacuation of nearby areas.

No one was injured. But federal officials said the railroad wasn’t following its own inspection rules to ensure the track was safe. A closer examinatio­n of the tracks would have caught a series of broken bolts that allowed the rails to move too far apart where the accident occurred, officials said.

The investigat­ion into the accident is continuing.

The more than 800 potential violations against Union Pacific were found as part of a two-year examinatio­n of tracks across the U.S. used to haul crude. They include some of the same lax inspection problems blamed in the Mosier derailment, federal officials said.

Enforcemen­t actions against the company have not been finalized.

Spokeswoma­n Calli Hite says Union Pacific is committed to making its lines safer and has fixed the problems identified by the government as potential violations. She characteri­zed the agreement disclosed Friday as the result of a collaborat­ive effort with federal railroad officials.

“All of the issues, the 800 that were noted, have been addressed,” she said. “We did everything as soon as we talked to them and knew we needed to do it.”

Federal Railroad Administra­tor Sarah Feinberg said the agreement raises the bar on safety.

“This compliance agreement requires Union Pacific to go above and beyond existing regulation­s,” she said.

The oil industry has become heavily reliant on trains in recent years because of limited pipeline capacity in the booming oil patch of the Northern Plains and the oil sands region of western Canada.

Omaha, Nebraska-based Union Pacific operates more than 32,000 miles of track across 23 states.

The safety measures included in the agreement with the FRA will apply to all rail lines used to haul oil and other hazardous liquids, passengers, explosives, radioactiv­e materials and poisonous gases. That includes about 22,500 miles of tracks, Hite said.

They include an inventory of all curves in the track that are three degrees or greater across that network and walking inspection­s every 120 days on tracks that have the type of bolts involved in the Mosier accident. Those inspection­s have to occur every 30 days in the part of the network that includes the Columbia River Gorge.

Previously, Union Pacific said it would voluntaril­y take some of the same steps within the gorge, a designated national scenic area popular with boaters and windsurfer­s along the Oregon-Washington border.

The safety agreement was welcomed by Oregon elected officials including Gov. Kate Brown and U.S. Senators Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley. All have called for a halt to oil trains traveling through the gorge.

Wyden and Merkley said in a statement Friday that “banning oil trains…. is the only way to completely eliminate future derailment­s.”

The Democratic lawmakers added that they would closely monitor the railroad agency after President-elect Donald Trump takes office next month to ensure the terms of the Union Pacific agreement are upheld.

At least 27 oil trains have been involved in major derailment­s, fires or oil spills in the United States and Canada in the past decade, according to an AP analysis of accident records.

The trains travel through more than 400 counties across the U.S. to reach refineries on the West, East and Gulf coasts, according to the AP analysis.

 ?? SOURCE: WASHINGTON STATE DEPT. OF ECOLOGY ?? Burned oil tank cars lay scattered after a train derailed and burned near Mosier, Ore., in June. The nation’s largest railroad has agreed to more thorough inspection­s.
SOURCE: WASHINGTON STATE DEPT. OF ECOLOGY Burned oil tank cars lay scattered after a train derailed and burned near Mosier, Ore., in June. The nation’s largest railroad has agreed to more thorough inspection­s.

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