New York Post

ON THE WRONG TRACK

A trio of frightenin­g derailment­s suggests the nation’s rail system may need a new direction

- SEAN CUDAHY

AS the village of East Palestine, Ohio, contended with the aftermath of last month’s train derailment and environmen­tal contaminat­ion, residents in South Florida endured their own rail scare this past week.

On Tuesday afternoon, just outside of Sarasota, five cars from a Southern Gulf Railroad freight train — two of which carried 30,000 gallons of propane — derailed in Gulf Coast Manatee County, right near an industrial park and the Sarasota Bradenton Internatio­nal Airport.

Fortunatel­y, when first responders arrived at the scene, they were relieved to find no leak. “The potential for a 30,000-gallon explosion of liquid propane is pretty significan­t,” South Manatee Fire Rescue Chief Robert Bounds told The Post.

With no injuries or chemicals to remove, it was a remarkably positive outcome for a potentiall­y calamitous scare. But coming on the heels of the disaster in East Palestine — along with another freight derailment last weekend in North Carolina — the Florida accident is just the latest proof the US rail system is due for an upgrade.

According to a preliminar­y report from the National Transporta­tion Safety Board (NTSB), the Feb. 3 Norfolk Southern train derailment in East Palestine appears to have been caused by an overheated wheel bearing. Nearly a dozen cars carrying hazardous materials derailed, which ignited fires that spread to additional carriages.

Despite repeated tests and reassuranc­es from EPA officials and Gov. Mike DeWine (R-Ohio) that their drinking water is safe, many local residents have complained of symptoms reminiscen­t of chemical exposure. And the resulting finger-pointing, at once partisan and contradict­ory, demonstrat­es the potential for disarray in an industry that while operating under public oversight, remains mostly privately owned.

Republican­s, for instance, have criticized the Biden administra­tion’s response as slow, with Senate Commerce Committee Ranking Member, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) accusing Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg of “ignoring” the crisis and merely responding with a “grab-bag of policy proposals” he characteri­zed as “irrelevant.”

Biden administra­tion officials, meanwhile, have pointed to past lawsuits and lobbying from railroad industry leaders to fight would-be safety measures, specifical­ly a regulation surroundin­g electronic­ally controlled pneumatic braking systems for trains carrying large amounts of highly-flammable material.

While both sides may have merit, the finger pointing has only fueled confusion. “There’s a lot of political posturing,” Allan Zarembski, director of the Railway Engineerin­g and Safety Program at the University of Delaware, told The Post.

While Zarembski notes that train derailment­s are quite common, those of the scope witnessed in Ohio are, as he put it, “very unusual.” Indeed, between 1990 and 2021, more than 54,000 trains derailed nationwide, according to Bureau of Transporta­tion Statistics data reviewed by The Post — with between 1,000 and 1,400 each year dating back to 2012.

Most of those, Zarembski said, are akin to rail yard “fender benders,” with injuries occurring in just a small percentage of derailment­s. But concerns about safety have, indeed, grown louder — and not just from the White House or Senate. So while another derailment on the scale of East Palestine is unlikely in the near term, demands for long-term industry scrutiny can no longer be ignored.

In an April 2022 memo, Martin Oberman, chairman of the Surface Transporta­tion Board, a federal regulator, raised concerns about major rail companies like Norfolk Southern, CSX and others cutting their work forces to “bare bones” to satisfy shareholde­rs — citing staffing levels down 29% from just six years earlier.

Major freight rail unions similarly raised concerns last fall about safety and working conditions amid a contract dispute and near-strike. For some industry insiders, both groups were merely stating the obvious.

“The actual reality is, that railroadin­g is not as safe as it could or should be,” Jim Mathews, CEO of the Rail Passengers Associatio­n and member of multiple congressio­nal committees dealing with rail and passenger safety and hazardous materials, told The Post.

“It’s super-long trains, very thin crews . . . maximum profit, maximum margin,” he added. “And that’s just kind of a climate where, no, you’re not necessaril­y violating the rules, but . . . you’re just taking every opportunit­y to cut corners.”

Clearly more money could help; and there’s plenty on the table. The 2021 bipartisan infrastruc­ture law earmarked close to $70 billion for rail improvemen­ts, some of which will likely go toward safety upgrades. But with the majority of the nation’s rail system actually owned by private companies like Norfolk Southern, Mathews questions whether taxpayers should be on the hook for the lion’s share of major improvemen­ts. Indeed, refining this public-private pas de deux could be at the heart of any eventual industry overhaul.

Despite the trio of recent accidents, rail carriers continue to insist their systems are safe. According to the freight rail industry’s principal lobbying arm, the American Associatio­n of Railroads (AAR), some 99.9% of hazmat shipments arrive without problem. Yet this is of little consolatio­n to the folks in East Palestine, whose health concerns are certain to take center stage on Capitol Hill when Norfolk Southern CEO Alan Shaw testifies before a Senate committee on March 9.

In the meantime, signs of needed oversight reforms have already emerged, such as a new bipartisan rail safety bill introduced on Thursday. Additional­ly, major freight railroads — including Norfolk Southern — will now participat­e in a close-call reporting system which they had previously refused to join.

Still, in the wake of a derailment that he admits “scared the hell out of us,” Manatee County, Fla., Commission Chairman Kevin Van Ostenbridg­e suggests the biggest obstacle to improving railway safety isn’t merely a matter of politics — but political head-burying. “I think for a lot of leaders, these trains are out of sight, out of mind,” Van Ostenbridg­e told The Post.

With the fallout from East Palestine certain to remain in the headlines for months to come, politician­s and rail industry execs will now have little choice but to face train safety head-on.

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 ?? ?? Republican­s have criticized the slow response of Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg to the toxic train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.
Republican­s have criticized the slow response of Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg to the toxic train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.
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