The Reporter (Vacaville)

Ohio senators ready rail safety bill

- By Julie Carr Smyth

Railroads such as the one involved in last month's fiery crash and toxic chemical release in Ohio would be subject to a series of new federal safety regulation­s and financial consequenc­es under legislatio­n being introduced Wednesday by the state's two U.S. senators.

An early copy of the Railway Safety Act of 2023, cosponsore­d by U.S. Sens. Sherrod Brown and JD Vance, a Democrat and Republican, respective­ly, and several others of both parties, was obtained by The Associated Press. The bill responds to the fiery derailment Feb. 3 of a Norfolk Southern freight train in East Palestine, in northeast Ohio near the Pennsylvan­ia border, when 38 cars derailed and more burned.

Although no one was injured or killed, the accident and its aftermath imperiled the entire village and nearby neighborho­ods in both states. It prompted an evacuation of about half the town's 4,000 residents, an ongoing multi-government­al emergency response and lingering worries among villagers of longterm health impacts.

The Senate bill aims to address several key regulatory questions that have arisen from the disaster, including why the state of Ohio was not made aware the hazardous load was coming through and why the crew didn't learn sooner of an impending equipment malfunctio­n.

“Through this legislatio­n, Congress has a real opportunit­y to ensure that what happened in East Palestine will never happen again,” Vance said in a statement. “We owe every American the peace of mind that their community is protected from a catastroph­e of this kind.”

All trains carrying hazardous materials, including those that don't fall under existing regulation­s for high-hazard flammable loads, would face new requiremen­ts under the bill. Rail carriers would need to create emergency response plans, and provide informatio­n and advance notificati­on to the emergency response commission­s of each state a train passes through.

That provision could mean changes across the industry. Hazardous materials shipments account for 7% to 8% of the roughly 30 million shipments railroads deliver across the U.S. each year. But almost any train — aside from a grain or coal train that carries a single commodity — might carry one or two cars of hazardous materials, because railroads often mix all kinds of shipments together on a train.

The Associatio­n of American Railroads trade group says 99.9% of hazardous materials shipments reach their destinatio­ns safely, and railroads are generally regarded as the safest option to transport dangerous chemicals across land. Still, the East Palestine accident showed how even one derailment involving hazardous materials can be devastatin­g.

Railroad worker unions argue that operationa­l changes and widespread job cuts across the industry in the past six years have made railroads riskier. They say employees are spread thin after nearly one-third of all rail jobs were eliminated and train crews, in particular, deal with fatigue because they are on call 24/7.

The bill would address that issue by setting train crews at a two-person minimum. The provision isn't specifical­ly in response to East Palestine — where the train had three crew members — but to an industry trend toward one-person crews.

The Federal Railroad Administra­tion was already considerin­g a rule that would require two-person crews, in most instances. That rule was proposed last summer, but the agency is still reviewing thousands of comments it received on it.

Brown said it shouldn't take a massive railroad disaster for elected officials to work across party lines for their communitie­s.

“Rail lobbyists have fought for years to protect their profits at the expense of communitie­s like East Palestine and Steubenvil­le and Sandusky,” he said in a statement. “These commonsens­e bipartisan safety measures will finally hold big railroad companies accountabl­e, make our railroads and the towns along them safer, and prevent future tragedies, so no community has to suffer like East Palestine again.”

Under the plan, the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion would be required to revisit rules on train size and weight, and to work to prevent railroad delays from causing trains carrying hazardous loads to block rail crossings. That's as train lengths have grown to 2 miles or more, as railroads streamline operations to reduce their numbers of crews, mechanics and locomotive­s.

Unions argue the longer trains are more prone to problems, including breaking apart in the middle of a trip, and these monster trains also can clog rail lines, because they may extend farther than the current sidings for pulling off the main tracks.

Brown, Vance and the bill's other early co-sponsors — who include Democrats Robert Casey Jr. and John Fetterman, of Pennsylvan­ia, and Republican­s Marco Rubio, of Florida, and Josh Hawley, of Missouri — also would increase the maximum fine that the U.S. Department of Transporta­tion can impose for safety violations. It would raise it from $225,000 to up to 1% of a railroad's annual operating income, which could run into the tens of millions of dollars.

In addition, the bill requires long-haul railroads to pay for hazardous-materials training for local first responders, including police and EMTs, through an increase in their hazmat registrati­on fees.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board determined the crew involved in the East Palestine accident was alerted by a device designed to detect overheatin­g bearings, but not soon enough to prevent the crash. Even as federal rail regulators urged rail operators Tuesday to reexamine their practices for operating and maintainin­g such detectors, the Senate proposal would make them more prevalent.

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