The Mercury News

Residents can return after air deemed safe from derailment

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Evacuated residents can return to the Ohio village where crews burned toxic chemicals after a train derailed five days ago near the Pennsylvan­ia state line now that monitors show no dangerous levels in the air, authoritie­s said Wednesday.

Around-the-clock testing inside and outside the evacuation zone around the village of East Palestine and a sliver of Pennsylvan­ia showed the air had returned to normal levels that would have been seen before the derailment, said James Justice of the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

“Hundreds and hundreds of data points we've collected over the time show the air quality is safe,” he said.

Residents were ordered to evacuate when authoritie­s decided on Monday to release and burn five tankers filled with vinyl chloride, sending hydrogen chloride and the toxic gas phosgene into the air.

Monitors did detect toxins in the air during the controlled burn at the derailment site, but other samples outside that area did not, Justice said.

The village's mayor expressed relief that the evacuation had been lifted.

“We know everybody's frustrated. Everybody wants to be in their homes. We did the best we can,” said Mayor Trent Conaway. “The number one goal is public safety, and we accomplish­ed that. Nobody was injured, nobody died.”

He credited the village's part-time firefighte­rs and their quick response to the derailment for saving the town.

Some residents have said they were worried about returning even if authoritie­s say it's OK to go home despite reassuranc­es from officials.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine said some residents may want to wait until their homes are checked. Rail operator Norfolk Southern Railway said it would provide testing and continue to operate its family assistance center “for the foreseeabl­e future.”

“It's very understand­able you may want that testing done before you go back in your house,” DeWine said.

The governor said the railroad will have to pay for the cleanup and make sure something like this doesn't happen again. “The burden is upon them is to assure the public that what they do everyday is safe,” DeWine said.

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