Saturday, December 14, 2024

EAST PALESTINE, Ohio: Texas and Michigan officials complain water, soil from train wrecks were not told they would be transported into their jurisdictions.

(CNN) Officials in Texas and Michigan complain they received no warning from contaminated water and soil. The train derailed In East Palestine, Ohio, will be sent to their jurisdictions for disposal.

About 2 million gallons of firefighting water is expected to be removed from the derailment site in Harris County, Texas, after about half a million gallons already, the county’s chief executive said.

“It’s a real problem, we were told yesterday that the items were coming today only to find out they’ve been here for a week,” Judge Lina Hidalgo said Thursday.

Contaminated soil from the derailment site is being transported to U.S. Ecology’s Wayne Disposal in Belleville, Michigan, Michigan’s U.S. Representative Debbie Dinkel said Friday.

“We have not received any intervention regarding this reported activity,” Dinkel said in a Press release On Friday. “Our priority is always to keep the people we represent safe.”

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine said 4,832 cubic yards of soil had been removed from land in East Palestine and about six truckloads were on their way to Michigan.

Complaints widen the controversy February 3 train derailment He left that Residents complain About getting sick after hazardous chemicals seep into the air, water and soil.

National Transportation Safety Board Initial report According to safety board chairman Jennifer Homandy, one of the cars of the train carrying the plastic pellets was found to be heated by a hot mold.

Residents worry that chemicals from the train crash could cause rashes and headaches

As the bearing temperature warmed, the train passed through two track fault detectors that did not trigger an audible alarm message because the temperature threshold was not met at the time, Homandy explained. A third detector eventually picked up a higher temperature, but by then it was too late.

“It was 100% preventable. … There was no accident,” Homandy said during a news conference Thursday.

The Texas official learned about the shipment from the news

At a news conference Thursday, Hidalgo expressed frustration that he first learned about Wednesday’s expected water shipment from the news media — not from the government agency or Texas Molecular, the company hired to dispose of the water.

Hidalgo said Texas Molecular told his office Thursday that half a million gallons of water are already in the county and that shipments began arriving last Wednesday.

He added that while there is no legal requirement for his office to be notified, “it just doesn’t seem right.”

Texas Molecular receives water from trucks, but it’s unclear whether the trucks are used for the entire trip, Hidalgo said. The agency said in its office that it receives about 30 trucks of water per day, he said.

Texas Molecular said Friday that all shipments so far have come by truck for the entire trip.

“Texas Molecular does not carry or select a transportation system for water,” Jimmy Bracher, vice president of sales for Texas Molecular-owned VLS Environmental Solutions, said in a statement on CNN Friday evening.

“The company that generates the waste determines/selects who ships the wastewater, and they must be DOT and EPA approved transporters,” Bracher said.

On Thursday, Texas Molecular told CNN it had been hired to dispose of hazardous water from the Ohio train derailment. The company said they are experts with more than four decades of experience in managing water safely.

He said Hidalgo’s office is seeking information about the disposal, including the chemical composition of the firefighting water, the precautions being taken and why Harris County was chosen as the site.

Hidalgo said, “There is an accident in traffic, and this is happening in a way that does not match the well, and now there is nothing to say that there is a bad reason for the water. I am coming here, not to the nearest site.” “But it’s our job to do basic due diligence on that information.”

More than 1.7 million gallons of contaminated fluid had been removed from the immediate site of the derailment, according to a Thursday. Press release From the Ohio Emergency Management Agency. Of this, more than 1.1 million gallons of “contaminated liquid” from East Palestine has been transported off-site so far, with most going to Texas Molecular and the rest to a facility in Vickery, Ohio.

CNN has yet to hear back from an Ohio agency asking for the location of the remaining 581,500 gallons, which were “removed” but “not hauled out.”

“We learned about it through the grapevine,” says Tinkel

Wayne County, Michigan, officials have been in contact with various federal and state agencies, including the railroad company involved in the derailment since learning about the shipment of contaminated material, Wayne County Executive Warren C. Evans said. Friday evening press conference. He said Evans County has not received a call from anyone saying this is happening.

“It just seems bad to me to do that to the citizens of Wayne County without knowing it’s coming,” Evans said.

Evans said officials don’t know if the move was “malicious or not,” but “there are disconnects.”

“We found out about it through the grapevine and then we saw Governor DeWine announce it on his platform,” Dingell said at a news conference.

According to Dingle, five trucks have been transported to the area so far, 99% with contaminated water and 1% with contaminated soil. A truck containing soil may have been brought to the area by mid-week, Dingle added.

Shipments to the facility in Michigan have been suspended, and another site may be found, Dingle and Evans said.

CNN has reached out to the EPA and the owner of the derailed train, Norfolk Southern, for comment.

Railway employees are not at fault, says NTSP chair

Homendi told CNN’s Jake Tapper Thursday that the 149-car train, operated by Norfolk Southern, had three employees: an engine engineer, a conductor and a coachman all at the engine head.

So far, the investigation has found that the crew did nothing wrong before the derailment, even though the crash was “100% preventable,” he said.

The next phase of the investigation will examine the train’s wheelset and bearings and the damage caused by the derailment, the NTSP report said. Along with maintenance practices and procedures, the company will also focus on designs of tank cars and railcars.

Investigators will also review the train operator’s use of track defect detection and inspection procedures for the company’s railcars. More specifically, determining what caused the wheel bearing failure will be key to the investigation, Homandy said.

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