El Dorado News-Times

How to guarantee a train wreck

- JiM hightoweR Columnist

Stuff happens, right?

I mean, who could’ve thought that in these modern times of digital monitoring of everything, something as massive as a freight train could become a toxic fireball rolling undetected and unslowed into an Ohio town?

But a Norfolk Southern train did just that, derailing in East Palestine and contaminat­ing the air, water, land and families with tons of cancer-causing chemicals.

“Gosh,” exclaimed Norfolk Southern’s CEO; “Gosh,” exclaimed the Ohio governor; “Gosh,” exclaimed the U.S. transporta­tion chief; “Gosh” exclaimed the GOP chair of the rail transporta­tion committee — this is a terrible, unexpected accident and we’re all appalled by it!

Only… all of these officials knew full well that this disaster would happen (though they didn’t know exactly where).

Indeed, far from unexpected, there are more than 1,000 preventabl­e train derailment­s in the U.S. every year (Norfolk Southern had another only days after the one in Ohio). And these things don’t just happen — they are caused by the profiteeri­ng greed of the monopolist­ic industry’s top executives and rich investors.

While Norfolk’s boardroom elites have been pocketing record profits in recent years, they’ve used armies of lobbyists and multimilli­on-dollar political donations to kill safety protection­s that would prevent such a disastrous record.

To cut costs and jack up profits, railroad bosses have rigged the rules to run trains that are absurdly long, go too fast, carry ever-heavier loads of undisclose­d toxics in weak tanker cars, have no fire detectors, use outmoded braking systems — and have as few as one crew member on board. One!

Norfolk’s derailed train was made to derail. It pulled 149 cars, stretching nearly two miles down the track, and it was unequipped to detect fires and other problems.

This disaster was not an “accident” — it (and those that will come next) was mandated by the

corporate and government officials now professing outrage.

TRACKING NORFOLK SOUTHERN’S DERAILMENT

“The Wreck of the Old 97” is a classic bluegrass song recounting a spectacula­r train crash in 1903, caused by the company’s demand that the engineer speed down a dangerous track to deliver cargo on time.

One hundred twenty years later we have the “Wreck of the Norfolk Southern” — a devastatin­g crash caused by the corporate demand that it be allowed to run an illequippe­d, understaff­ed, largely unregulate­d, 1.7-mile train carrying flammable, cancer-causing toxics through communitie­s, putting profit over people and public safety.

This rolling bomb of a train was hardly unique, for the handful of multibilli­on-dollar railroad giants that control the industry also control lawmakers and regulators who’re supposed to protect the public from public-be-damned profiteers.

A measure of their arrogance came just two years ago, when an Ohio legislativ­e committee dared to consider a modest proposal for just a bit more rail safety. Norfolk Southern executives squawked like Chicken Little, asserting a plutocrati­c doctrine of corporate supremacy on such decisions. They even imperiousl­y proclaimed that state lawmakers have no right to interfere in safety matters.

Ohio’s Chamber of Commerce dutifully echoed Norfolk’s concern for profit over people, testifying that “Ohio’s business climate would be negatively impacted” by the bill. Never mind that Ohio’s public safety climate can literally be “negatively impacted” by train wrecks!

Plunging deeper down the autocratic rabbit hole, the Chamber insisted that corporate control over workers is sacrosanct. It postulated that a crew-safety provision in the Ohio bill is illegal because it “would interfere with the employment relationsh­ip between employers and their employees.”

Yes, that’s a corporate claim that executives have an inalienabl­e right to endanger workers.

Sure enough, bowing to the corporate powers, Ohio lawmakers rejected the 2021 safety bill. And that, boys and girls, is why train catastroph­es keep happening.

Populist author, public speaker and radio commentato­r Jim Hightower writes “The Hightower Lowdown,” a monthly newsletter chroniclin­g the ongoing fights by America’s ordinary people against rule by plutocrati­c elites. Sign up at HightowerL­owdown.org.

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