New York Post

RAILWAYMEN FALLING ILL

Unions report sickness at derail cleanup

- By JORGE FITZ-GIBBON jfitz-gibbon@nypost.com

Workers cleaning up the toxic train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, are getting sick, leaders of the nation’s largest rail unions said Wednesday as they pressed the Biden administra­tion for more safety measures.

The presidents of a dozen unions met with administra­tion officials to voice their concerns as a new, independen­t study found that the chemicals spilled in East Palestine during the Feb. 3 derailment could pose long-term health risks.

“My hope is the stakeholde­rs in this industry can work towards the same goals related to safety when transporti­ng hazardous materials by rail,” Mike Baldwin, president of the Brotherhoo­d of Railroad Signalmen, said of the meeting with Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg and Federal Railroad Administra­tion head Amit Bose, according to CNBC.

“Today’s meeting is an opportunit­y for labor to share what our members are seeing and dealing with day to day,” Baldwin said.

The meeting comes after labor leaders said workers at the site of the Norfolk Southern derailment have fallen ill with “migraines and nausea.”

“I have received reports that [Norfolk Southern] neither offered nor provided these workers with appropriat­e personal protective equipment, such as respirator­s that are designed to permit safely working around vinyl chloride, eye protection and protective clothing such as chemical retrain suits,” the American Rail System Federation wrote in a letter to Buttigieg obtained by CNBC.

The unions also wrote letters to East Palestine Mayor Trent Conaway and Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, according to the outlet.

A Norfolk Southern spokespers­on told the news outlet that the com“coordinate­d pany our rehazardou­s sponse with mate profession­als rial who were on site continuous­ly to ensure the work area was safe to enter and the required PPE was utilized.” Earlier on Wednesday, a group of bipartisan senators on Capitol Hill introduced The Railroad Safety Act of 2023, which proposes safety measures meant to prevent future environmen­tal disasters like the Ohio derailment.

It’s unclear what impact the union meeting with national transporta­tion officials will have.

Meanwhile, residents near the site of the derailment have also reported falling ill.

The Feb. 3 derailment forced the emergency evacuation of roughly 5,000 local residents, with the EPA later ordering Norfolk Southern to clean up its own mess.

Buttigieg has faced mounting criticism after he waited 10 days to make his first public statement about the disaster. He did not tour the site until Feb. 23, nearly three weeks later.

President Biden said last week he has no plans to visit the site.

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 ?? ?? TOXIC: Leaders of workers cleaning up the train derailment in Ohio (below) are telling Secretary Pete Buttigieg (bottom) of ill health.
TOXIC: Leaders of workers cleaning up the train derailment in Ohio (below) are telling Secretary Pete Buttigieg (bottom) of ill health.

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