Lodi News-Sentinel

Norfolk Southern CEO pledges to restore Ohio crash site

- Mike Magner

WASHINGTON — The head of Norfolk Southern Corp. pledged at a Senate hearing Thursday to fully restore environmen­tal and economic conditions in the Ohio community where one of the company’s trains derailed last month, triggering a fire and public health concerns.

“I am determined to make this right,” Alan Shaw, the rail company’s president and CEO, told the Environmen­t and Public Works Committee during the first congressio­nal hearing on the incident. “Norfolk Southern will clean the site safely, thoroughly and with urgency. You have my personal commitment.

Norfolk Southern will get the job done and help East Palestine thrive.”

Shaw said the company has already committed more than $21 million to the cleanup and to aid East Palestine residents and businesses, and another $7.5 million for nearby communitie­s in Pennsylvan­ia just across the state line from the accident.

“All of this is just a down payment,” Shaw said. “To be clear, there are no strings attached to our assistance.”

The CEO also said Norfolk Southern is “fully cooperatin­g” with the National Transporta­tion Safety Board’s investigat­ion of the accident, which was expanded this week into a review of the company’s overall safety culture in the wake of five recent accidents, including three in Ohio.

While the crew did all it could to prevent the 149-car train derailment on Feb. 3, exposing East Palestine and the surroundin­g area to plumes of toxic chemicals, “it is clear the safety mechanisms that were in place were not enough,” Shaw said. The NTSB is focused on overheated wheel bearings as a possible cause of the accident.

Committee members and three senators who testified before the panel urged Shaw and the rail industry in general to support a bipartisan bill introduced last week to increase safety standards, including requiremen­ts for two-person crews on all freight trains and for improvemen­ts to strengthen rail cars carrying hazardous materials, according to a bill summary. Similar legislatio­n has been introduced in the House that would broaden the definition of a “high-hazard flammable train.”

Ohio Republican Sen. J.D. Vance, a sponsor of the Senate bill, said most of his colleagues support legislatio­n, but there are some in his party “who seem to think that any public safety enhancemen­ts for the rail industry is a violation of the free market. That is a farce.”

Vance said the industry “enjoys special subsidies, special legal carve-outs” and was “bailed out” by Congress last year when it forced a settlement of a contract dispute with railroad unions.

“You cannot claim special government privileges, you cannot ask the government to bail you out and then resist basic public safety,” Vance said. “We have a choice. Are we for big business and big government or are we for the people of East Palestine?”

Environmen­t and Public Works Chairman Thomas R. Carper, D-Del., asked Shaw if he supported the Senate bill.

“We are committed to the legislativ­e intent to make rail safer,” Shaw responded, without getting into the specifics of the legislatio­n.

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