The Denver Post

A second Norfolk Southern train derails in Ohio

- By Eduardo Medina and Claire Fahy

The wreckage from a Norfolk Southern train derailment Saturday in Ohio — the second such crash in the state in just more than a month — was cleaned up by Sunday afternoon as investigat­ors set to determine what led 28 cars to leave the tracks.

No hazardous materials were involved in the derailment, which happened around 5 p.m. local time near Springfiel­d, Ohio, about 80 miles northeast of Cincinnati, officials said.

The train of 212 cars was traveling from Bellevue, Ohio, to Birmingham, Ala., and was operated by Norfolk Southern, the same rail company that has faced scrutiny after a devastatin­g train derailment last month in East Palestine, Ohio.

That derailment led to concerns over air and water quality after a controlled burn of toxic chemicals that authoritie­s believed posed the risk of an explosion. The crash Saturday renewed concerns about rail safety and about Norfolk Southern’s performanc­e.

“This truly is outrageous,” Mike Turner, a Republican congressma­n from Ohio, said on “Meet the Press” on Sunday. “Luckily, it seems we may have missed a bullet in this one.”

Sen. Sherrod Brown, DOhio, said on “This Week” on Sunday that the train that derailed Saturday was at least 50 cars longer than the train that derailed in East Palestine.

“The railroad’s got a lot of questions they’ve got to answer and they really haven’t really done it very well yet,” he said.

County and state health and environmen­tal officials at a news conference Sunday said the derailment near Springfiel­d posed no risk to the public. Officials had issued a precaution­ary shelter-in-place order for residents within 1,000 feet of the crash site, which was lifted early Sunday.

Charles Patterson, the health commission­er of the Clark County Combined Health District, said there had been “multiple sweeps by multiple teams” to rule out the presence of chemicals in the soil, air and water. Anne Vogel, director of the Ohio Environmen­tal Protection Agency, said no chemicals or hazardous materials were released.

Kraig Barner, a general manager for Norfolk Southern, said Sunday that 28 cars of the train had derailed. The company previously reported that 20 cars had derailed. He said the two crew members on board were uninjured.

Barner said the train had four tankers that carried nonhazardo­us materials. Two had residual amounts of diesel exhaust fluid, and the others had residual amounts of polyacryla­mide water solution. One hopper carrying nontoxic plastic pellets derailed, spilling some of them.

The rest of the train included a couple of liquid propane and ethanol tankers and cars with mixed freight, steel and finished automobile­s, which did not overturn, Barner said, adding that many of the cars that derailed were empty box cars.

Nearly 50 residents were still without power Sunday evening after the derailment took down power lines. The last train car was cleared from the crash site at 3 p.m. Sunday, Barner said, and Norfolk Southern estimated that another 12 hours of track work remained.

The cause of the crash was not immediatel­y known and officials said the Federal Railroad Administra­tion will investigat­e. Representa­tives from the administra­tion could not be reached Sunday.

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