The Evening Leader

Railroad CEO to testify in Congress about the East Palestine derailment

-

The CEO of Norfolk Southern railroad will testify in Congress next week about last month’s fiery Ohio derailment and the precaution­s the railroad takes to prevent similar crashes.

The railroad said Wednesday that Alan Shaw had agreed to appear before the Senate Committee on Environmen­t and Public Works next Thursday. He is likely to face tough questions about whether the railroad has been investing enough in safety as it slashed jobs and streamline­d operations in recent years to rely on fewer, longer trains.

Already, several lawmakers have proposed a series of rail safety reforms in response to the Feb. 3 derailment that forced the evacuation of half the town of East Palestine, Ohio, near the Pennsylvan­ia border because of concerns about the toxic chemicals that were on fire. The National Transporta­tion Safety Board has said that an overheatin­g bearing likely caused the derailment that sent 38 cars, including 11 carrying hazardous materials, off the tracks.

Shaw has said the railroad is committed to helping the town recover from this derailment, and Norfolk Southern has committed millions to that effort. But he has said that major safety reforms should wait until after the NTSB investigat­ion is complete, which might take more than a year.

Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, told reporters on a call Wednesday that he wanted to hear Shaw commit to paying for both the short-term and long-term effects of the wreck.

“We want to hear his commitment to make this community whole, to make this so that people can get back to their lives the way they were -- that means reimbursem­ent for all the expenses,” Brown said.

Norfolk Southern said Shaw and other railroad officials “continue to engage in discussion­s with Members of Congress and other committees about additional requests to testify, while balancing his commitment­s to the remediatio­n process and the community.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States