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US: “Get The Hell Out Of There” – Ohio’s Apocalyptic Chemical Disaster Rages On

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US: “Get The Hell Out Of There” – Ohio’s Apocalyptic Chemical Disaster Rages On​

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During a press conference, the NTSB referenced a video from Salem, Ohio, about 20 miles from East Palestine which shows sparks and flames emitting from beneath the train. The apparent structural issue with the train was captured on a security camera when it was travelling through Salem. According to Michael Graham, board member on the NTSB, two videos they had obtained were indicative of mechanical issues attributed to the rail car axles which likely led to the derailment.

The second video obtained from when the train was passing through Salem was recorded by a processing plant nearby a hotbox detector which scans the temperature of the axles as trains pass by. According to Graham, the wayside defect detector reading resulted in an alarm alerting the crew of a mechanical issue shortly before the derailment in East Palestine. Consequently, that alert forced the train to execute an emergency brake application which may have been the cause of the derailment. Presently, the NTSB is reviewing the trains data and audio recordings in order to examine the cause of the derailment and which hotbox detector indicated a mechanical error preceding the accident. The NTSB is expected to issue a preliminary report on its findings within 30 days.
While the US government is dispensing millions of dollars in resources to treat balloons as an existential crisis, a small town in Ohio finds itself engulfed in what actually looks like the apocalypse. Perhaps by design, all of the drama surrounding violations of US airspace by Chinese spy initiatives has done well to keep what is becoming one of the worst environmental disasters in recent memory from getting any headlines.

The chaos began early last week when a train of more than 100 cars derailed in East Palestine, Ohio near the state’s border with Pennsylvania with roughly 5,000 residents. The accident launched fifty of those hundred freight cars from the tracks. Twenty of the freight cars on the train were carrying hazardous materials, ten of which were detailed. While the accident had no fatalities, of those ten cars, five contained pressurized vinyl chloride, a highly flammable carcinogenic gas.
In order to address the volatile scenario around the crash site, the Ohio Emergency Management Agency executed its plan of venting the toxic gas with a controlled burn in order to evade an uncontrolled explosion which presented the risk of catastrophic damage. “Within the last two hours, a drastic temperature change has taken place in a rail car, and there is now the potential of a catastrophic tanker failure which could cause an explosion with the potential of deadly shrapnel traveling up to a mile,” Gov. Mike DeWine warned in statement explaining the decision to take action to avert widespread devastation.

However, that operation sent large plumes of smoke containing vinyl chloride, phosgene, hydrogen chloride, and other gases into the air as the flames from the controlled burn raged on for days. Phosgene in particular is a highly toxic gas that can cause vomiting and respiratory trouble. The toxicity of phosgene gas is so potent that it was previously used as a chemical weapon during the First World War.

The hazardous airborne chemicals prompted officials to issue mandatory evacuation and shelter-in-place orders within a one-mile radius of where the train derailed. Those orders forced nearly 2,000 residents of East Palestine out of there homes. Despite the public safety risk in proximity to the crash site, over 500 people within the parameters of the evacuation order refused to leave their homes. However, those orders were lifted on February 8th, allowing residents to return to the area adjacent to the disaster.
Following the controlled burn, local authorities received multiple concerning reports from residents outside of the mile-long radius of the evacuation area conveying that the emergency posed by the disaster was far from over. One local farmer reported the sudden deaths of many of the animals on the premises of his farm, Park Dairy. The farmer, Taylor Holzer, also works with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources as a registered foxkeeper. Following the disbursement of chemical agents into the air from the controlled burn, many of the foxes on Holzer’s farm experienced fatal effects from the air quality surrounding the area.
“Out of nowhere, he [a fox] just started coughing really hard, just shut down,” Holzer recalled to local media outlet WKBN 27 News. “This is not how a fox should act. He is very weak, limp. His eyes are very watery and weepy. Smoke and chemicals from the train, that’s the only thing that can cause it, because it doesn’t just happen out of nowhere,” he added.
“The chemicals that we’re being told are safe in the air, that’s definitely not safe for the animals…or people.”
Holzer’s concerns were echoed by reports from other residents who described similar conditions near their own properties. One of those residents was Katlyn Schwarzwaelder, the operator of a local dog kennel in nearby Darlington, Pennsylvania. The catastrophe caused her to leave her home despite the fact that it lies more than 10 miles away from the site of the controlled burn. After fleeing to Boardman, Ohio, 15 miles away from the derailment, Schwarzwaelder stated she received multiple reports of dead chickens, fish, and other animals from friends and acquaintances. One affected resident told Schwarzwaelder that they let their 2-year old dog out to use the bathroom only for it never to return. When they embarked upon a search for their missing pet, they found it dead in their yard.

Testimony from Holzer, Schwarzwaelder, and others paints a drastically different picture than the official narrative tailored by officials who assured residents that the situation was under control. The poor air quality presents short and long term health risks to the public considering the carcinogenic effects of the chemicals. Carcinogens like vinyl chloride can cause cancer in organs including the liver, according to Kevin Crist, a professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering who also serves as the Director of Ohio University’s Air Quality Center.

Although officials in charge of the emergency response utilized techniques like dispersion modeling in order to calculate and mitigate the risk of airborne chemicals, the chemicals disbursed following the derailment pose other significant risks of contamination. Chemicals also spilled into the Ohio River toward West Virginia, prompting officials from the neighboring state to shut down water production in the area and turn to alternative sources for water supply. Soil contamination is another significant risk that leaves officials weary of broader implications affecting public health than those associated with the air pollution alone.

However, the magnitude of those risks hasn’t been apparently recognized by the leadership across various states affected by the disaster. According to Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro, there were no concerns regarding the air and water quality in the area. Nevertheless, the governor reiterated that a shelter-in-place order remained in effect for Pennsylvanians within two miles of East Palestine. Officials from the Environmental Protection Agency took a similar tone, stating nothing unexpected was seen following the controlled burn. James Justice of the EPA summed up his agencies position by saying “So far, so good and we’re going to continue to monitor until the fire’s out,”.
While the immediate risks presented by a possible explosion following the train’s derailment may have been averted, the emergency response may become an instance of a cure being worse than the disease it seeks to remedy. The accidents also brings the state of safety regulations surrounding rail transport of hazardous freight into a new light. Over the last five years alone, eight train derailments have occurred in the Pittsburgh metro area, leading to calls for increased oversight over the industry.

Despite the inherent risk that comes with transporting chemicals like vinyl chloride, the US Department of Transportation approved a rule to expand the scope of what hazardous materials can be transmitted by rail. The rule made it permissible for liquefied natural gas to be shipped by train without additional safety regulations. This enables freight trains to transport 100 more tank cards with up to 30,000 gallons of the natural gas extracted from shale fields.

“The risks of catastrophic liquefied natural gas releases in accidents is too great not to have operational controls in place before large blocks of tank cars and unit trains proliferate,” the National Transportation Safety Board wrote in a comment if support of the proposed rule. In response to that comment, critics of the rule highlighted how a potential explosion of just twenty-two tank cards filled with liquefied natural gas holds the same amount of explosive energy as the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima in the waning days of the Second World War.

In spite of that, the magnitude of this story has been seemingly scrubbed from the public view as national media outlets continue to run sensationalist headlines about issues that look innocuous in comparison. It is an instance of history being rewritten in real time, setting a precedent that would allow victims of other widespread devastation to be swept under the rug. However, the scenes of the horror engulfing this small town in America’s heartland may prove to make this disaster impossible to ignore, rightfully putting the spotlight on the shortcomings of state and federal agencies tasked with emergency response management whose continued lack of accountability enables them to fail the American public time and time again.
 
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Latest news on Ohio disaster

February 16, 2023 The latest on the Ohio toxic train disaster​

By Aditi Sangal, Adrienne Vogt and Matt Meyer, CNN
Updated 5:15 PM ET, Thu February 16, 2023
Ohio Rep. Bill Johnson urged residents to contact his office if they need to be connected with authorities or if they are having issues getting their questions answered.
“No community should have to go through something like this," he said. "But you need to know that you’re not alone."
2:02 p.m. ET, February 16, 2023

Ohio governor requests immediate assistance from CDC​

From CNN's Samantha Beech

  • Officials tried to reassure East Palestine residents Thursday that they're focused on the cleanup from the derailment this month of a train carrying 20 cars of hazardous material.
  • Residents near the site were ordered to evacuate for several days following the controlled release of a toxic chemical, which was conducted to prevent an explosion. Officials say the area is safe but urged people to drink bottled water as a precaution.
  • At a community meeting held Wednesday, residents expressed concerns about the long-term safety of their families from chemical threats.
Our live coverage for the day has ended. Follow the latest news on the derailment here or read through the updates below.
4:46 p.m. ET, February 16, 2023

Officials try to reassure East Palestine residents that they're focused on cleanup from toxic derailment​

From CNN’s Samantha Beech
State and federal officials held a news conference Thursday in East Palestine, Ohio, as residents expressed frustration about the response to a train carrying potentially deadly materials that derailed in their hometown nearly two weeks ago.
Michael S. Regan, the head of the US Environmental Protection Agency, aimed to reassure residents authorities are focused on keeping them safe.
Regan arrived in East Palestine Thursday morning to assess the ongoing response to the February 3 train derailment and the controlled explosion of five railroad cars carrying the chemical vinyl chloride.
“This incident has understandably shaken this community to its core," Regan said. "The community has questions and they deserve answers. I want the community to know that we hear you, we see you, and that we will get to the bottom of this."
The massive aftermath of the derailment, including a blaze that lasted for days, led to the evacuation of many residents. The evacuation order was lifted on February 8 after air and water samples led officials to deem the area safe.
“Since the fire went out, EPA air monitoring has not detected any levels of health concern in the community that are attributed to the train derailment,” Regan said. “EPA has assisted with the screening of more than 480 homes under the voluntary screening program offered to residents. And no detections of vinyl chloride or hydrogen chloride were identified. And we’re continuing to make those screenings available to any resident that wants to have their indoor air tested.”
Regan said the agency has full authority to use its enforcement capabilities over the crisis and it will stay there "as long as it takes" to ensure the community's safety.
Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown said he’s been in contact with the White House, the EPA, NTSB, CDC and the federal rail authority over the management of cleanup and testing. He pledged to hold the rail company Norfolk Southern accountable for everything from the cost of testing to moving expenses.
Norfolk Southern has expanded its $1,000 payment beyond residents who were within a mile of the evacuation zone and will now pay each resident in the entire 44413 zip code, a spokesman for the company told CNN on Wednesday.
Ohio Rep. Bill Johnson urged residents to contact his office if they need to be connected with authorities or if they are having issues getting their questions answered.
“No community should have to go through something like this," he said. "But you need to know that you’re not alone."
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Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine meets with reporters in East Palestine, Ohio, on February 6. (Gene J. Puskar/AP/File)

In an update on the situation in East Palestine, Ohio, Gov. Mike DeWine said he has requested the immediate support of the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), almost two weeks following the derailment of a train carrying toxic chemicals.
DeWine said he is requesting the CDC to “immediately” send medical experts to the area to evaluate and counsel community members “who have questions and/or are experiencing symptoms."
Here are some updates he shared on the chemicals being monitored:
  • In anticipation of rainfall, emergency response teams are planning to prevent contaminants still present at the derailment site from washing into local waterways during the storms.
  • A chemical plume of butyl acrylate in the Ohio River is currently located near Gallipolis, Ohio, and will be near Huntington, West Virginia, sometime tomorrow. Testing results indicate that the chemical is currently well below a level the CDC considers hazardous.
  • No vinyl chloride has been detected in the Ohio River, but agencies will continue sampling water in the Ohio River out of an abundance of caution.
  • The Environmental Protection Agency's latest air monitoring reports continue to show no presence of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from the train crash. EPA and an independent contractor will continue monitoring air quality inside homes after residents requested testing.
  • No additional reports of deceased wildlife beyond the current standing estimates of about 3,500 aquatic animals killed.
  • The Ohio Department of Agriculture assures that its food supply is safe and the risk to livestock remains low.

2:01 p.m. ET, February 16, 2023

Biden administration offers Health and Human Services and CDC support to impacted Ohio village​

From CNN's Betsy Klein
The Biden administration has offered support from the Department of Health and Human Services and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to East Palestine, Ohio, where there is growing concern from residents and advocates about the health and safety of drinking water following the derailment of a train carrying hazardous materials earlier this month.
GOP Gov. Mike DeWine “asked for additional public health testing and assessments,” and teams from HHS and CDC are being deployed “now," according to White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre.
Jean-Pierre suggested that the needs in East Palestine are “much more expansive” than what the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) “can meet,” explaining that the situation in East Palestine is “very different” from the aftermath of a natural disaster. Though, she added, FEMA is still offering support.
HHS, the CDC and the Environmental Protection Agency are working together with the Emergency Operations Center and the Ohio Emergency Management Agency, she said. The National Transportation Safety Board is also working on an investigation into the derailment.
She reiterated the White House stance that the “top priority” is “the health and safety of the community.”
Federal agencies, she said, are “working to get to the bottom of what caused the derailment, monitoring air quality, collecting soil samples, testing surface and groundwater for any content contaminant.”
Jean-Pierre suggested concern from the East Palestine residents is “understandable” as she offered a message to the community that “we’re going to get through this together.”
12:47 p.m. ET, February 16, 2023

EPA chief pledges to hold company accountable over toxic train disaster​

From CNN's Samantha Beech
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Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael S. Regan speaks to CNN on Thursday. (CNN)

The head of the US Environmental Protection Agency told CNN the agency plans to hold the train company Norfolk Southern accountable as investigations continue into the derailment of a train carrying hazardous chemicals earlier this month in a small Ohio town.
The EPA issued a notice of accountability to the company, EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan told CNN on Thursday, adding that the company has signed it, indicating that it will responsible for the cleanup.
Residents in East Palestine, Ohio, expressed frustration at a community meeting late Wednesday after the train’s operator didn’t appear – and continued to voice their mounting distrust in assurances of their safety. The company did plan on attending Wednesday night’s meeting but backed out, citing threats against its employees.
Regan said he was "extremely disappointed" that the company representatives didn't show up at the town hall meeting, saying the community deserves transparency and the latest information.
"It’s our job, as the federal government, to hold this company accountable and I promise you we will,” he said.
Residents express worries over health: When asked about anecdotal reports of people getting headaches and sore throats, and of animals, such as cats and chickens, dying near the train derailment, Ohio Health Director Dr. Bruce Vanderhoff said Tuesday that air quality does not appear the source.
About 3,500 fish have died in Ohio’s waterways after the train derailment on February 3, according to Mary Mertz, the director of Ohio’s Department of Natural Resources. Mertz said Tuesday that none of the 12 species affected are endangered or threatened, but it’s “still a loss of life, all the same.” The estimation of the dead fish came after initial testing and sampling by the state agency, Mertz said. She added that there does not appear to have been an increase in the number of fish killed since the first couple of days following the derailment.
Regan has invited residents to report "any kind of adverse symptom" they experience so it can be gathered to request help from state health department.
Meanwhile, the EPA is “testing for the full breadth of toxic chemicals that were on that train that was spilled," to determine any impact that could result from the spillage, he said.
12:02 p.m. ET, February 16, 2023

Ohio governor requests federal assistance in the train derailment aftermath​

From CNN's Kristina Sgueglia
After speaking to White House officials, the Ohio governor said he has requested assistance from the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Health and Emergency Response Team, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Gov. Mike DeWine has been in daily contact with Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), but the agency says the state is not eligible for assistance at this time, a press release from his office said.
DeWine has asked the three federal organizations to provide on-ground assistance in East Palestine where a train derailed exposing the community to hazardous materials.
12:02 p.m. ET, February 16, 2023

Senators send letters to EPA and NTSB demanding answers over Ohio train derailment​

From CNN's Samantha Beech
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As part of cleanup operations, booms are placed in a stream Wednesday that flows through the center of East Palestine, Ohio. (Gene J. Puskar/AP)
Four senators have signed letters to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), pushing for answers after a train carrying hazardous chemicals derailed almost two weeks ago in a small Ohio town.
Ohio Senators JD Vance and Sherrod Brown and Pennsylvania Senators Bob Casey and John Fetterman thanked the EPA for its swift response following the February 3 incident. Their letter requests more information about the agency’s plans and ability to respond to the derailment. It also asks for any information about long-term effects on the environment and how the rail company Norfolk Southern would be held accountable.
The aftermath of the derailment – including a blaze that lasted for days – led to the evacuation of many residents. And although the evacuation orders ended on February 8, a chemical odor lingered days afterward and officials estimate thousands of fish were killed by contamination washing down streams and rivers, fueling residents’ concerns about water and air safety.
Michael S. Regan, the head of the EPA, is expected to travel to the town of East Palestine on Thursday, the agency said, to meet with state and local officials and residents and to assess the federal response to the derailment.
The four senators also sent a letter Thursday to the chair of the NTSB highlighting rail safety concerns as the agency conducts its own investigation. The letter said the senators intend to use NTSB's findings and any pertinent safety recommendations to advance measures that Congress and the U.S. Department of Transportation can implement to prevent derailments involving hazardous materials.
12:57 p.m. ET, February 16, 2023

Ohio residents returning home worry about chemical threats lingering from train derailment​

From CNN's Brenda Goodman and Kyla Russell
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Railcars are seen last week in East Palestine, Ohio. (Gene J. Puskar/AP)
Five of the tankers on the train that derailed in East Palestine, Ohio, last week were carrying liquid vinyl chloride, which is extremely combustible. A controlled burn was conducted to mitigate the danger and it worked.
Authorities assured the residents that any immediate danger had passed as they lifted the evacuation order for East Palestine residents. Real-time air readings, which use handheld instruments to broadly screen for classes of contaminants like volatile organic compounds, showed that the air quality near the site was within normal limits.
Up to this point, officials have been looking for large immediate threats: explosions or chemical levels that could make someone acutely ill. But the cleanup and monitoring of the site could take years, an Ohio Environmental Protection Agency official said.
Although the explosion risk is past, people who live in East Palestine want to know about the chemical threats that might linger.
Fish and frogs have died in local streams. People have reported dead chickens and shared photos of dead dogs and foxes on social media. They say they smell chemical odors around town.
When asked at a briefing about exactly what spilled, representatives from Norfolk Southern listed butyl acrylate, vinyl chloride and a small amount of non-hazardous lube oil.
About the chemicals: Butyl acrylate is a clear, colorless liquid with a strong, fruity odor that’s used to make plastics and paint. It’s possible to inhale it, ingest it or absorb it through the skin. It irritates the eyes, skin and lungs and may cause shortness of breath, according to the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health. Repeated exposure can lead to lung damage.
Vinyl chloride, which is used to make PVC pipes, can cause dizziness, sleepiness and headaches. It has also been linked to an increased risk of cancer in the liver, brain, lungs and blood.
Although butyl acrylate easily mixes with water and will move quickly through the environment, it isn’t especially toxic to humans, said Richard Peltier, an associate professor of environmental health sciences at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
Vinyl chloride, however, is very toxic and very persistent in the environment, and it can form some really awful combustion byproducts, Peltier said.
A spokesperson for Norfolk Southern acknowledged but did not respond to CNN’s request for more information on how much of these chemicals spilled into the soil and water. The Ohio EPA says it’s not sure yet, either.
“We’re definitely signing up for the air testing of the home before we get in there,” said resident Ben Ratner.
12:56 p.m. ET, February 16, 2023

The derailed train wreckage burned for days as Ohio authorities worried about the risk of explosion​

From CNN's Greg Wallace and Laura Ly
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A plume of smoke is seen after a controlled detonation in East Palestine, Ohio, on February 6. (Gene J. Puskar/AP)
Investigators probing the toxic train disaster in East Palestine, Ohio, are reviewing multiple videos of the train prior to it derailing.
Investigators have not yet determined what they believe caused the disaster. Such a determination typically takes many months.
The National Transportation Safety Board said it is reviewing other videos, too, including footage from two local businesses reported by local media that showed glowing or flames from the train prior to the derailment.
The agency is also reviewing recording data from the train’s so-called black boxes, including an event recorder and image recorders.
The train was carrying hazardous materials, including the toxic chemical vinyl chloride. It derailed February 3, prompting evacuation orders for residents in the village of 5,000 people near the Pennsylvania border.
The wreckage burned for days as authorities worried about the possibility of a widespread, deadly explosion. But crews managed controlled detonations to release the chemical, which can kill quickly at high levels and increase cancer risk. The hazardous substance spilled into a trench, where it was burned away.

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Thank God I'm not the agent who wrote the pollution liability policy or consulted them.
 
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Like the Bhopal disaster which btw is not India's responsibility but again the usual suspects.

That one also relatively silenced. Any of these things even 10% the scale of damage done by literally any other nation even neutral ones to the West would have been reported by media 1,000,000 times more.
 
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Ohio is facing a chemical disaster. Biden must declare a state of emergency​

Earlier this month, a train carrying toxic chemicals derailed in eastern Ohio, exploding into flames and unleashing a spume of chemical smoke on the small town of East Palestine. The train’s freight included vinyl chloride, a chemical known to cause liver cancer and other sicknesses.
In response, government and railway officials decided to “burn off” the vinyl chloride – effectively dumping 1.1m lbs of the chemical into the local community, according to a new lawsuit. Officials said that they did so to avert the vinyl chloride from exploding; in contrast, an attorney for the lawsuit has said that the decision was cheap, unsafe, and more interested in restoring train service and appeasing railway shareholders than protecting local residents.
East Palestine residents are reporting headaches, sore throats, and burning eyes; dead pets and chickens; and thousands of fish corpses in nearby waterways. The Ohio Department of Natural Resources has said that approximately 3,500 fish, of 12 different species, died across 7.5 miles.
In other words, Norfolk Southern’s “controlled burn” may have caused a mushroom cloud of poison to spread over eastern Ohio. The situation demands immediate action from President Biden. Without it, thousands of people – including children and the elderly – and animals will be at continued risk of premature death. Biden must declare a state of emergency and create an independent taskforce to take over the remediation of this eco-catastrophe.
Norfolk Southern “basically nuked a town with chemicals” to “get a railroad open”, a former hazmat technician told a local news outlet. It certainly seems like a company with a $55bn market cap chose to sacrifice the health of thousands of people to keep its profits flowing.
We need to try to understand how this happened.
For one thing, even the initial derailment wasn’t necessarily just an “accident.” It was a function of our out-of-control corporate culture in the United States, which has neutered effective government oversight of hazardous activities – including the rail transport of highly flammable and carcinogenic chemicals. The EPA’s response thus far has been to send a feckless letter to Norfolk Southern pleading it pay for clean-up.
That’s not going to cut it. We need to do better.
In terms of the sheer quantity of carcinogenic chemicals being released over an area of hundreds of miles, the catastrophe in Ohio is a major, unprecedented public health crisis. Biden must publicly recognize it as such and act to protect the people who live in the affected area. This requires a rapid, all-of-government response overseen not by the EPA but by independent scientists and taskmasters who will be immune to pressure from industry. This sort of taskforce must be willing to threaten the suspension or even nationalization of Norfolk Southern if it does not cooperate.
After battling an oil company over the discharge of toxic waste in the Amazon, I can say with some assurance that Norfolk’s response to this crisis so far comes from a time-tested corporate strategy: manage the situation as a public relations challenge and not the humanitarian and ecological catastrophe that it is. Norfolk’s leadership bailed out of a townhall meeting this week, blaming security risks, and has refused to face residents to answer questions.
That’s certainly cowardice. But it is also a function of the fact that industry does not respect the power of government to regulate it. Government is supposed to protect us from the excesses of industry; instead it often acts like its partner.
If the consequences of not attending had included a sufficient threat to his bottom line, Norfolk Southern CEO Alan Shaw – who earns a reported $4.5m a year – probably would have been at the town hall. And if the government had been doing its job in the first place, there is a good chance this accident would not have happened. During the Trump administration, Norfolk successfully lobbied to repeal a safety rule requiring new electronic brakes. The train was also dangerously long – with only two crew members, and a trainee, supervising its 1.7-mile length.


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