Daily News (Los Angeles)

Biden sets door-to-door checks

- By Farnoush Amiri and Matthew Daly

President Joe Biden on Friday directed federal agencies to go door-to-door in East Palestine, Ohio, to check on families affected by the toxic train derailment that has morphed into a heated political controvers­y.

Under Biden's order, teams from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Environmen­tal Protection Agency and Federal Emergency Management Agency will visit homes beginning Saturday. Workers will ask how residents are doing, see what they need and connect them with appropriat­e resources from government and nonprofit organizati­ons, the White House said.

Biden directed employees to get to as many homes as possible by Monday. Officials said the immediate goal was to visit at least 400. The president said that at present he has no plans to personally visit Ohio.

His order came as House Republican­s opened an investigat­ion into the Feb. 3 derailment, blaming Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg for what they contend was a delayed response to the fiery wreck. The focus on DOT came even though the EPA took charge of the federal response this week and ordered Norfolk Southern railway to pay for the cleanup and chemical release.

Rep. James Comer, chairman of the House Oversight Committee, became the latest lawmaker to jump into what has become a political proxy war as each party lays into the other after the derailment and chemical leak that led to evacuation of the small Ohio community.

“Despite the U.S. Department

of Transporta­tion's responsibi­lity to ensure safe and reliable transport in the United States, you ignored the catastroph­e for over a week,” the Kentucky Republican said in a letter to Buttigieg.

“The American people deserve answers as to what caused the derailment, and DOT needs to provide an explanatio­n for its leadership's apathy in the face of this emergency,” he said in the letter.

A preliminar­y report released Thursday by the National Transporta­tion Safety Board stated that the crew operating the Norfolk Southern freight train didn't get much warning before dozens of cars went off the tracks and there is no indication that crew members did anything wrong.

Republican­s are framing the incident as a moral failing at the hands of the Biden administra­tion, noting Buttigieg's failure to visit the site until nearly three weeks after the wreck.

Democrats point to rollbacks former President Donald Trump made during his term that weakened rail and environmen­tal regulation­s. EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan visited the site last week and again on Tuesday.

Biden on Friday rejected the notion that his administra­tion hasn't been present in providing assistance.

“We were there two hours after the train went down. Two hours,” Biden said at the White House. “I've spoken with every single major figure in both Pennsylvan­ia and in Ohio. And so the idea that we're not engaged is simply not there.”

The Oversight letter requests documents and communicat­ions concerning when DOT leaders learned of the derailment and whether they received any guidance about what the public response should be, as well any recent changes to agency train maintenanc­e and procedures.

A day earlier, Buttigieg made his first visit to the crash site and hit back at Trump, who had visited the day before and criticized the federal response.

On Friday, Buttigieg chided Comer for referring in his letter to “DOT's National Transporta­tion Safety Board,” saying he was “alarmed to learn” the committee chairman “thinks that the NTSB is part of our Department.

NTSB is independen­t (and with good reason). Still, of course, we will fully review this and respond appropriat­ely.”

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre excoriated “political stunts that we're seeing from the other side.”

Norfolk Southern said the NTSB report showed the train's heat detectors worked as intended and the crew operated “within the company's rules.” Neverthele­ss, the company said it would “need to learn as much as we can from this event” and “develop practices and invest in technologi­es that could help prevent an incident like this in the future.”

Meanwhile, worried residents packed a high school auditorium Friday as activist Erin Brockovich and attorneys warned of long-term health and environmen­tal dangers from chemicals released after a fiery train derailment in East Palestine.

Brockovich, who gained fame and was portrayed in a film for battling Pacific Gas & Electric Co. over groundwate­r contaminat­ion in Hinkley, told the audience to fight for recognitio­n and trust their instincts.

 ?? MATT FREED — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Volunteer Larry Culler helps load water into a car in East Palestine, Ohio, as cleanup from the Feb. 3Norfolk Southern train derailment continues on Friday.
MATT FREED — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Volunteer Larry Culler helps load water into a car in East Palestine, Ohio, as cleanup from the Feb. 3Norfolk Southern train derailment continues on Friday.

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