Boston Herald

Second Ohio derailment raises ire in Congress

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A second freight train derailment in Ohio within a month is giving new impetus for rail safety legislatio­n in Congress, as Democrats and Republican­s prepare to grill Norfolk Southern CEO Alan Shaw when he testifies to a Senate committee Thursday.

“The big railroads have weakened safety rules or resisted safety rules for years,” Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown said on ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday. “But you’d think a disaster that happened in East Palestine would have gotten their attention.”

Saturday’s train derailment happened outside Springfiel­d, Ohio — about 180 miles west of East Palestine, where a derailment last month spilled toxic chemicals into the rural community along the OhioPennsy­lvania border.

Initial reports indicate that there were no hazardous materials spilled in the Springfiel­d incident, and officials quickly lifted a shelter-in-place order. But Brown said he wants to know if there were any residual contaminan­ts left in the 20 mostly empty train cars that went off track.

“The railroad’s got a lot of questions they’ve got to answer and they really haven’t done it very well yet,” he said.

Brown is the lead sponsor of a rail safety bill that would require more disclosure of hazardous materials traversing states, inspection­s of wheel bearings and mandate minimum crew sizes. And it would increase penalties for violations.

Brown’s bill has co-sponsors from across the political spectrum, including Republican­s J.D. Vance of Ohio, Marco Rubio of Florida and Josh Hawley of Missouri as well as Democrats Bob Casey and John Fetterman of neighborin­g Pennsylvan­ia.

Ohio Republican Rep. Mike Turner, who represents the area around Saturday’s derailment, added his own frustratio­n with the rail industry, calling the spate of Ohio derailment­s — now four in the last five months — “outrageous.”

“What we’ve seen, you know, recently with the risk to communitie­s is unacceptab­le,” he said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” And the fact that we’re having derailment after derailment shows really the lack of investment, the disinvestm­ent, in our infrastruc­ture, and that needs to change.”

Still, some ideologica­l rifts were apparent. Brown blamed the derailment­s in part on stock buybacks,

CEO pay and workforce reductions — issues unlikely to get agreement from Republican­s.

Joe Manchin, a conservati­ve Democrat from West Virginia, said opposition to pipelines had put more stress on the rail system. “Pipelines would help alleviate a lot of this problem with the oil that we need in our country,” he said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

Vance told Fox News on Friday that attempts to blame President Donald Trump’s administra­tion — which killed a train braking rule designed to prevent incidents like the one in East Palestine — were “complete partisan hackery.”

 ?? BILL LACKEY — SPRINGFIEL­D-NEWS SUN VIA AP ?? Multiple cars of a Norfolk Southern train lie toppled on one another after derailing at a train crossing with Ohio 41 in Clark County, Ohio, Saturday, March 4, 2023.
BILL LACKEY — SPRINGFIEL­D-NEWS SUN VIA AP Multiple cars of a Norfolk Southern train lie toppled on one another after derailing at a train crossing with Ohio 41 in Clark County, Ohio, Saturday, March 4, 2023.

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