U.S. orders Norfolk Southern to clean up 'mess' from Ohio train chemical
spill
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[February 22, 2023]
By Valerie Volcovici and Brad Brooks
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The head of the U.S. government's environmental
agency said on Tuesday that rail operator Norfolk Southern Corp must
"pay for cleaning up the mess" created when a freight train derailment
in Ohio released toxic chemicals into the environment.
The comments by the head of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
were echoed by President Joe Biden later on Tuesday. "This is their
mess. They should clean it up," Biden said on Twitter.
The EPA also ordered that Norfolk Southern officials attend town
meetings about the Feb. 3 spill in East Palestine, Ohio. Last week
company officials boycotted a meeting, citing concerns for their
personal safety, leaving residents angered.
The EPA order requires Norfolk Southern to submit a work plan for EPA
approval for the cleanup associated with the derailment. The wreck
resulted in a fire that sent clouds of smoke over the town. Thousands of
residents had to evacuate while railroad crews drained and burned off
toxic chemicals.
"Let me be crystal clear: Norfolk Southern will pay for cleaning up the
mess that they created and for trauma they've inflicted on this
community," EPA Administrator Michael Regan said during a press
conference in East Palestine.
Biden also said on social media that rail companies have successfully
lobbied hard in Washington to slow regulations, and he called on
Congress to pass new rail safety measures. "This is more than a train
derailment or a toxic waste spill - it's years of opposition to safety
measures coming home to roost," Biden wrote.
Norfolk Southern said in an emailed statement that it recognizes its
responsibility to "thoroughly and safely" clean up the derailment site
and pay for it. "We are going to learn from this terrible accident and
work with regulators and elected officials to improve railroad safety,"
it said.
The company last week said it had established an initial $1 million
community support fund and on Tuesday said it has distributed $3.4
million in direct financial assistance to more than 2,200 families to
cover evacuation costs.
Norfolk Southern shares closed down 1.6% on Tuesday and have slid almost
11% since Feb. 3.
The derailment took place on the border between Ohio and Pennsylvania.
Josh Shapiro, the governor of Pennsylvania and a Democrat, sharply
criticized Norfolk Southern for what he called the company's "corporate
greed and incompetence" in being responsible for the derailment and for
how the company has responded since. The governor said the company has
chosen not to work within the "unified command" of government agencies
in the clean-up.
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Local waterways are monitored following
the derailment of a train carrying toxic chemicals which caused a
fire that sent a cloud of smoke over the town of East Palestine,
Ohio, U.S., February 21, 2023. REUTERS/Alan Freed
"They created confusion in this process," Shapiro said. "They gave
us inaccurate information and conflicting modeling data, and they
refused to explore or articulate alternative courses of action when
we were dealing with the derailment in the early days."
Shapiro was referring to the decision to drain a toxic chemical from
rail cars after the wreck and set it on fire, creating a toxic plume
of air. Norfolk Southern did not immediately reply to a request for
comment on Shapiro's remarks.
EPA issued the order under the federal Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, which gives it the
authority to force parties responsible for pollution to clean it up.
"I know this order cannot undo the nightmare that families in this
town have been living, but it will begin to deliver much needed
justice for the pain that Norfolk Southern has caused," Regan said.
Although no fatalities or injuries have been reported, residents
have been demanding answers about health risks and blaming Norfolk
Southern and state and federal officials for a lack of information.
The EPA will require the company to reimburse the agency for any
cleaning services it offers residents and businesses. If the EPA is
forced to do any clean-up work that the railroad refuses to do, the
agency can force Norfolk Southern to pay triple the cost of those
operations, Regan said.
Regan said the agency is taking this action now because the
situation has moved from the emergency response phase, during which
local and state agencies had the lead, to the clean-up phase, when
the federal government takes command.
The agency will also create a unified command structure to
coordinate the clean-up related efforts alongside the Federal
Emergency Management Agency, the Department of Health and Human
Services, Ohio EPA, Ohio Emergency Management Agency and the
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, as well as
Norfolk Southern.
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici in Washington and Brad Brooks in
Lubbock, Texas; additional reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by
Donna Bryson, David Gregorio and Leslie Adler)
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