San Antonio Express-News

Biden praises efforts to rebuild at site of Ohio train derailment

- By Josh Boak and Darlene Superville

EAST PALESTINE, Ohio — President Joe Biden on Friday surveyed the federal cleanup in East Palestine, Ohio, more than a year after an explosive fire following the derailment of a train loaded with hazardous chemicals and saw up close the lingering hostility from victims still angry that he waited so long to visit them.

The White House has said Biden was waiting for the right moment to make the trip. He visited after being invited by the village’s mayor.

Addressing residents, Biden said he wants them to understand “that we’re not going home, no matter what, until this job is done, and it’s not done yet.” He did not explain why he didn’t visit sooner nor did he address the community’s collective hurt.

He praised what he said were “Herculean efforts” and announced federal grants to study the shortand long-term effects of what happened.

Signs of the community’s still-hurt feelings were evident. Some people shouted profanity at Biden as his motorcade whisked him into town from an earlier stop in Darlington Township, Pa., where he greeted local officials and first responders. A sign invoked the illness of the president’s late son, Beau, who died of brain cancer.

Biden arrived at the site of the derailment and saw what resembled a constructi­on site. Rigs, trucks, generators and covered metal tanks resembling above-ground swimming pools dotted the landscape. Local officials, including the mayor,

briefed the president.

“The president has always said when the time is right and when it made sense for him to go, he would go,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-pierre said. “And so, that’s what he’s doing.”

Jean-pierre said in response to a question before the trip that Biden has “no concerns about drinking the water” in the town, where chemicals and hazardous waste spread because of the fire. She noted that EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan drank the water during an earlier visit.

“It’s been a year of challenge, but a year of solidarity,” Regan said in a statement. “I’m proud of East Palestine, a community that has embodied resilience, hope and progress.”

During Biden’s visit, there would be a separate rally for former President Donald Trump, the frontrunne­r for the Republican presidenti­al nomination. Trump won nearly 72% of the vote in Ohio’s Columbiana County, which includes East Palestine. He visited several weeks after the derailment.

Mike Young, the rally’s coordinato­r, described the grass-roots event as “antibiden.” He said he delivered

water to the community after the disaster and the president should have been an immediate presence on the ground.

“The sentiment from residents has been: Where were you a year ago?” Young said. “Too little, too late. And now Biden shows up at election time.”

Mark Happel, a constructi­on worker who lives in East Liverpool, Ohio, and plans to vote again for Trump, said communitie­s surroundin­g East Palestine were in danger from the chemicals and smoke. He said the biggest issue he sees is the sickness — people coughing, lung issues and colds.

“East Palestine will bounce back, but the ongoing health issues is everybody’s concern,” Happel said.

The EPA engaged in an intense cleanup and says the community’s air, water and soil are now safe.

Norfolk Southern said it has spent roughly $1.1 billion in its response to the derailment. Since the fire began on February 3, 2023, and caused hazardous chemicals to mix, the company says it has invested $103.2 million in the community, including $21 million distribute­d to residents.

 ?? Andrew Harnik/associated Press ?? President Joe Biden tours the East Palestine Recovery Site on Friday in East Palestine, Ohio.
Andrew Harnik/associated Press President Joe Biden tours the East Palestine Recovery Site on Friday in East Palestine, Ohio.

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