Earlier warning might have spared Ohio a derailment, U.S. investigator
says
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[February 24, 2023]
By Julio Cesar Chavez and Brad Brooks
EAST PALESTINE, Ohio (Reuters) -A U.S. train derailment that spilled
toxic chemicals in an Ohio town might have been avoided if the railway
company's alarm system had given engineers an earlier warning that
bearings were overheating, the chair of the National Transportation
Safety Board said on Thursday with the release of a preliminary
investigation.
"Had there been a detector earlier, that derailment may not have
occurred," NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy told reporters in Washington. The
incident prompted the evacuation of thousands of people and ignited
health concerns.
While stressing a final report on the Feb. 3 derailment in East
Palestine could be 18 months away, she said the NTSB could recommend
that railroad companies lower the temperature thresholds that would
trigger an alarm about overheated bearings.
Norfolk Southern Corp, the operator of the train, said in an emailed
statement that its system to detect overheated bearings was operating
normally in the area where the accident took place and said its warning
system is among the most sensitive in the industry.
Norfolk Southern said it is cooperating fully with the NTSB.
The derailment has sparked a political battle and a blame game over
railroad safety regulations, with residents voicing deep concern over
the long-term health impact of the millions of pounds of carcinogenic
chemicals spilled in their town.
U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg toured the wreckage on
Thursday and took aim at freight rail companies over their responses to
efforts to improve safety regulations.
Wearing a hard hat and orange safety vest while he met with NTSB staff,
Buttigieg told reporters: "Norfolk Southern and the other freight rail
companies need to stop fighting us every time we try to do a
regulation."
Norfolk Southern's chief executive apologized on Wednesday at a CNN town
hall event that highlighted residents' concerns about soil and ground
water contamination.
Homendy said that in 2021 there were 868 derailments across the United
States of freight cars in the same class as the Norfolk Southern train
that wrecked, a number she said was far too high and the result of both
the industry and government not implementing previous NTSB safety
recommendations.
The rail industry had said 99.9% of all hazardous material shipments
reached their destination without incident and the hazmat accident rate
has declined by 55% since 2012.
In its preliminary report, the NTSB said the train engineer applied
brakes as soon as an alarm rang on Feb. 3 to warn of an overheated axle
on the Norfolk Southern train.
RARE HEARING SCHEDULED
The NTSB said "defect detectors" showed the axle and wheel bearing
starting to heat up about 30 miles (48 kilometers) from the derailment
site, but not to levels that would have triggered the audible alarm to
warn the train engineer that far away.
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A general view of the site of the
derailment of a train carrying hazardous waste in East Palestine,
Ohio, U.S., February 23, 2023. REUTERS/Alan Freed
Each individual railroad company determines its own temperature
thresholds for when alarms are triggered.
Before the derailment, temperature measurements on the Norfolk
Southern train's suspect wheel were doubling every 10 miles in the
lead-up to the derailment, the NTSB said.
Norfolk Southern, in its statement on Thursday, said it is now
inspecting all of the nearly 1,000 wayside heat detectors on its
system, on top of regular inspections every 30 days.
The NTSB said it would hold a rare "investigative field hearing"
near the derailment site in East Palestine and call witnesses. The
board said all parties involved in the derailment were fully
cooperating with its investigation.
Some rail safety requirements were withdrawn under Republican former
President Donald Trump. Some Republican critics of the East
Palestine response who previously opposed rail regulations have now
expressed openness to new rules.
The Democratic Biden administration had been criticized for not
having made a high-level visit sooner. Buttigieg on Thursday said he
had not wanted to make an earlier visit that might have impeded the
emergency response.
The NTSB also said it was investigating whether pressure relief
valves on train cars carrying the toxic chemical vinyl chloride
functioned properly following the wreck and subsequent fire.
Experts have said that if those valves had functioned properly,
authorities may not have needed to drain upward of 1.1 million
pounds of vinyl chloride from cars and purposefully set it ablaze,
contaminating the environment.
President Joe Biden and his administration have said Norfolk
Southern must pay for the damage and clean-up efforts. The EPA
ordered company officials to attend town hall events after
executives failed to attend an earlier meeting in East Palestine.
Russell Quimby, a retired NTSB investigator, said rail companies
should monitor differences in temperature readings between the
sensors spaced along a rail line, which could give an early warning
that a bearing is failing, rather than wait for a bearing to hit a
high temperature to sound an alarm.
"They start slow, but the longer it (the train) goes, the quicker
they fail," Quimby told Reuters. "They stop heating up if they stop
the train."
(Reporting by Julio-Cesar Chavez in East Palestine, Brad Brooks in
Lubbock, Texas, Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles and Susan Heavey in
Washington; Editing by Donna Bryson, Howard Goller and Leslie Adler)
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