Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Buttigieg warns railroad: Support Ohio community

- Josh Boak

WASHINGTON – Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg sent a letter Sunday to the CEO of Norfolk Southern, warning that the freight rail company must “demonstrat­e unequivoca­l support for the people” of East Palestine, Ohio, and surroundin­g areas after a fiery train derailment led to the release of chemicals and residents expressing concerns about their health.

“Norfolk Southern must live up to its commitment to make residents whole – and must also live up to its obligation to do whatever it takes to stop putting communitie­s such as East Palestine at risk,” Buttigieg wrote. “This is the right time for Norfolk Southern to take a leadership position within the rail industry, shifting to a posture that focuses on supporting, not thwarting, efforts to raise the standard of U.S. rail safety regulation.”

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine said Friday that the chemicals that spilled into the Ohio River are no longer a risk, even as people in the community say they have constant headaches and irritated eyes. The state plans to open a medical clinic in the village of 4,700 to analyze their symptoms, despite repeated statements that air and water testing has shown no signs of contaminan­ts.

Still, uncertaint­y persists about the consequenc­es of a derailment that occurred roughly two weeks ago. Peter DeCarlo, a professor of environmen­tal health and engineerin­g at Johns Hopkins University, told ABC News on Sunday that more testing is needed to determine which chemicals are present.

“We just don’t have the informatio­n we need to understand what chemicals may be present,” DeCarlo said. “We know it started as vinyl chloride, but as soon as you burn that all bets are off. You have a lot of chemical byproducts that can happen from a combustion process like that.”

Asked if he would move back to East Palestine if he were already living there, DeCarlo said: “I have two little boys. I would not.”

Norfolk Southern CEO Alan Shaw issued a statement on Saturday that he “returned to East Palestine today to meet with local leaders, first responders, and a group of Norfolk Southern employees who live in the area.”

“In every conversati­on today, I shared how deeply sorry I am this happened to their home,” Shaw said. The Atlanta-based company has created a website with updates, NSMakingIt­Right.com.

Buttigieg said the National Transporta­tion Safety Board is investigat­ing the cause of the derailment and that the Federal Railroad Administra­tion is also analyzing whether safety violations occurred and will hold Norfolk Southern accountabl­e if violations did occur. The Environmen­tal Protection Agency has said the company must document the release of hazardous contaminan­ts and outline cleanup actions.

But Buttigieg also said that Norfolk Southern and other rail companies “spent millions of dollars in the courts and lobbying members of Congress to oppose common-sense safety regulation­s, stopping some entirely and reducing the scope of others.” He said the effort undermined rules on brake requiremen­ts and delayed the phase-in for more durable rail cars to transport hazardous material to 2029.

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR/AP ?? Uncertaint­y persists about the consequenc­es of a Norfolk Southern freight train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.
GENE J. PUSKAR/AP Uncertaint­y persists about the consequenc­es of a Norfolk Southern freight train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.

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