Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

States told to allow train wreck waste

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The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency on Friday ordered states to stop blocking contaminat­ed waste from the fiery train derailment in Ohio from being sent to hazardous waste storage sites around the nation.

A handful of politician­s and states have sought to block shipments from East Palestine, including Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt, who last week said he had stopped waste from the derailment from coming into his state.

EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan said there was no reason for states to block shipments of the type of waste that certified facilities handle routinely.

“This is impermissi­ble and this is unacceptab­le,” he said.

In a letter sent to all states, the EPA said blocking the shipments would probably violate a federal law dealing with the interstate transport of waste as well as the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constituti­on, which the agency said limits states’ power to stop the movement of hazardous waste.

Although it’s not clear what steps the EPA might take if states don’t cooperate, the agency told railroad Norfolk Southern on Friday that it expects the company to take legal action if it is unable to ship the waste to certified disposal facilities.

The EPA already ordered Norfolk Southern to cover the costs of cleaning up from the Feb. 3 derailment that toppled 38 rail cars. No one was hurt, but concerns over a potential explosion led state and local officials to approve releasing and burning toxic vinyl chloride from five tanker cars and forced the evacuation of half the village.

Ohio this week filed a lawsuit against the railroad to make sure it pays for the cleanup and environmen­tal and economic damage along with groundwate­r and soil monitoring in the years ahead.

Norfolk Southern has said it is committed to cleaning up the site and helping the community recover.

Many residents remain worried about what they might have been exposed to and how it will affect the area in the years ahead. Government officials say tests over the past month haven’t found dangerous levels of chemicals in the air or water in the area.

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