Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Brockovich steals show at seminar in Ohio town

- By Justin Vellucci

EAST PALESTINE, OHIO » It started with a joke, though the message behind the evening was anything but.

“My name is Erin Brockovich, not Julia Roberts,” quipped the environmen­tal advocate who Roberts played in the 2000 film bearing her name Friday night in an auditorium here — the site of a dramatic Norfolk Southern train derailment Feb. 3.

“I feel your angst and I feel your frustratio­n. And I want to share something with you: You are not alone.”

“You own this narrative — not an agency that wasn’t here, and certainly not Norfolk [Southern],” Brockovich added. “You know how you feel . ... You know if you’re sick. You know if you smell something. You know if the water’s a funny color.”

Brockovich became an environmen­tal activist after fighting Pacific Gas & Electric Co. over contaminat­ed drinking water in Hinkley, Calif., in the 1990s.

On Friday, she became the latest big name to descend upon this town of 4,700 residents near the Pennsylvan­ia line, just days after a visit from former President Donald Trump.

A total of 38 Norfolk Southern cars derailed from a 150car train; dozen of those cars caught fire.

At least 10 of those rail cars were carrying dangerous chemicals like vinyl chloride.

The multibilli­on dollar rail giant followed the train wreck with a planned burn — a form of detonation — on five of the cars with hazardous chemicals, sending ominous plumes of dark smoke into the sky.

Residents within a mile of the planned burn were evacuated. They returned after a few days to a cause celeb, with media from throughout the tri-state area.

Hundreds of residents packed the two-hour East Palestine Justice event Friday night, at one point standing in a line to enter East Palestine High School that snaked around TV cameras and down West Grant Street.

One man carried a sign saying “We want justice, NOT drinking water!”

The event Friday was billed as an “educationa­l seminar” organized in part by a law firm from Akron, Ohio.

But Brockovich stole the show, commanding the stage throughout technical glitches as she spoke in sweeping terms about the Feb. 3 train derailment.

“You have questions, you have issues (but) you’re going to be told not to worry — and that’s rubbish,” Brockovich said. “Superman’s not coming. No one is coming … to magically fix what’s happened to you.”

The answer? Apparently, lawyers.

Attorney Mikal Watts presented a 160-slide PowerPoint deck to the East Palestine crowd, and, in his own words, his job was “to tell you the informatio­n as it is.”

Watts discussed hazardous chemicals like vinyl chloride that went up in smoke during Norfolk Southern’s controlled burn of the train cars. He noted train derailment­s worldwide, which number an estimated 3,397, wracking up $378 million in damages, in recent years, he said.

Last year, Norfolk-Southern had 770 train car derailment­s involving hazardous materials, Watts claimed. That’s up from 79 similar accidents in 2012, a dramatic spike, he said.

Representa­tives from Norfolk Southern did not speak at Friday’s event.

Watts discussed, and showed still photos from, a surveillan­ce video shot 17 miles down the railroad tracks in Salem, Ohio, which appeared to show the Norfolk Southern train that derailed in East Palestine was already on fire.

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