The Maui News - Weekender

2 train derailment­s have similar risks, different outcomes

- By JOHN FLESHER

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. — Police Chief Jason Wright feared the worst as he rushed to the scene of a freight train derailment in Michigan’s Van Buren Township, mindful of a fiery rail crash this month in Ohio that led to evacuation­s and a toxic chemical release.

Instead, the situation a halfhour’s drive west of Detroit was far less grim: 28 of 134 cars in a Norfolk Southern train had gone at least partially off the track Thursday with a couple overturned and several others upright but knocked sideways. No one was injured and nothing appeared to have spilled. The lone car carrying hazardous materials wasn’t affected.

“We couldn’t believe how lucky we were, considerin­g the awful situation over there in Ohio,” Wright said Friday.

About 50 train cars, including 10 carrying hazardous materials, derailed Feb. 3 in East Palestine, Ohio. Vinyl chloride later was released into the air from five of them before crews ignited it to get rid of the highly flammable chemicals in a controlled way, creating a dark plume of smoke.

Residents from nearby neighborho­ods in Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia were evacuated because of health risks from the fumes. They later were allowed to return but many say they’ve experience­d headaches and eye irritation­s and worry about long-term effects.

The starkly contrastin­g outcomes of similar incidents involving the same rail company in next-door states might appear a matter of fate. But many factors determine the severity of rail crashes, experts said, including how fast a train is going, what kind of cargo it carries and the reason it jumps the tracks.

The cause of neither derailment has been determined, Norfolk Southern spokesman Connor Spielmaker said. Crews had gotten two cars back on the track in Michigan and were working on others, he said.

Officials say a mechanical issue with a car axle — perhaps from an overheated wheel bearing — is suspected in the Ohio crash.

“That’s one of those classes of accidents that happen basically with no warning — when the train is moving

at normal operating speeds, there’s no notice to the crew, no opportunit­y to slow the train down or reduce the energy associated with derailment­s,” said Allan Zarembski, a University of Delaware railroad engineerin­g professor. When axles break at high speed, he said, “it’s a pretty significan­t event.”

A crash like the one in Ohio is rare, he said. When they happen, the consequenc­es can be catastroph­ic. Still, most derailment­s are “fender benders” that happen in rail yards and do little if any damage, Zarembski said.

The fact that two Norfolk

Southern trains would go off the rails within a couple of weeks is hardly surprising, given that the company has about 20,000 miles of track — “as much track as all of England,” he said.

“It’s not a good thing, but it’s not an ‘oh my god, there’s something horribly wrong’ thing,” he said. “There’s nothing that says there’s been a major drop in safety. It just means we’re following the statistica­l pattern.”

The American Society of Civil Engineers gave railroads a grade of “B” in its most recent “report card” on U.S. infrastruc­ture — better than roads and aviation, which were rated at just above failing.

There were more than 12,400 train derailment­s in the U.S. over the past decade, or more than 1,200 annually, according to Federal Railroad Administra­tion data based on reports submitted by railroads.

Those accidents combined derailed or damaged about 6,600 tank cars carrying hazardous materials — including 348 cars that released their contents — and prompted evacuation­s involving more than 18,600 people, according to FRA data.

Total damages reported by railroads from derailment­s of trains hauling hazardous materials exceeded $930 million over the decade, the accident reports show.

U.S. rail accidents from all causes — from derailment­s to malfunctio­ning equipment — released more than 5 million gallons of hazardous materials since 2011, according to data collected by the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administra­tion. The bulk of what spilled was crude oil, but the accidents also included fuels such as gasoline and ethanol and a wide range of other chemicals.

 ?? Mandi Wright / Detroit Free Press photo via AP ?? An emergency crew works at the site of a Norfolk Southern train derailment in Van Buren Township, Mich., near Detroit, on Thursday.
Mandi Wright / Detroit Free Press photo via AP An emergency crew works at the site of a Norfolk Southern train derailment in Van Buren Township, Mich., near Detroit, on Thursday.

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