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Norfolk Southern CEO vows aid for ‘as long as it takes’ after toxic Ohio derailment

KEY POINTS
  • Norfolk Southern CEO Alan Shaw testified before a Senate panel to address “environmental and public health threats” from the East Palestine, Ohio, train derailment.
  • Shaw is appearing alongside EPA representatives and state officials.
  • Shaw told lawmakers he is “deeply sorry” about the impact of the derailment.

    Norfolk SouthernCEO Alan Shaw told a U.S. Senate panel Thursday that he plans to “make it right” after one of the company’s trains derailed in East Palestine, Ohio, last month.

    Shaw appeared at a hearing of the U.S. Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works to address what committee Democrats called “environmental and public health threats” resulting from the derailment.

    Shaw told the Senate panel he is “deeply sorry for the impact this derailment has had on the people of East Palestine and surrounding communities.”

    He vowed the company will clean the site fully and that it’s making progress. “We will be in the community for as long as it takes,” he said, adding there are “no strings attached” to the company’s assistance.

    Shaw also stressed Norfolk Southern’s commitment to financial assistance for affected residents and first responders, amounting to more than $20 million in reimbursements and investments.

    “Norfolk Southern is working around the clock to remediate the remaining issues and monitor for any impact on public health and the environment,” the CEO said in prepared remarks. “We continue to listen to the experts and cooperate with state, federal, and local government agencies. We are committed to this monitoring for as long as necessary.”

    Shaw appeared alongside Environmental Protection Agency regional administrator Debra Shore, Ohio EPA director Anne Vogel, Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission executive director Richard Harrison, and Beaver County, Pennsylvania, Department of Emergency Services director Eric Brewer.

    Environmental concerns

    At about 9 p.m. local time on Feb. 3, an eastbound Norfolk Southern freight train with 11 tank cars carrying hazardous materials derailed near Ohio’s border with Pennsylvania and subsequently ignited. The chemicals included vinyl chloride, a highly flammable carcinogen, according to the National Transportation Safety Board.

    The EPA screened about 600 homes in East Palestine and didn’t detect vinyl chloride or hydrogen chlorine, Shore said. She said the EPA is currently conducting 24/7 air monitoring at 21 stations throughout the community. Vogel added that the Ohio EPA has installed monitoring wells at the site of the derailment to test for potential groundwater contamination, as well as sentinel wells for long-term sampling of groundwater.

    Shore said she expects waste from the site to move as soon as Thursday. The EPA waited a month before starting to order dioxin testing.

    “We detected very low levels, which very quickly went even down to non-detect. Without those primary indicators, it was a very low probability that dioxins would have been created,” Shore said. “They are secondary byproducts of the burning of vinyl chloride, but we were listening to the community and they expressed significant concerns about toxins.”

    The committee’s chairman, Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., said there was miscommunication surrounding first responders who were under the impression that only one car would be vented and burned rather than five, which left some first responders scrambling. Brewer, the Beaver County official, said the decision was “jaw-dropping.”

    “There was not a script for this. There wasn’t a binder for me labeled ‘Train Wreck,’” Brewer said.

    According to Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., who is hospitalized and submitted a statement, Pennsylvania’s emergency management agency and environmental department were contacted hours after the derailment.

    Texas and Michigan officials said they did not know soil and water from the site of the wreck would be transported to their jurisdictions.

    “Michigan officials, the governor, myself, Sen. Peters, Michigan EPA, were not notified before that happened,” said Sen. Debbie, D-Mi. Stabenow said. “That’s not acceptable to us.”

    The committee’s ranking member, Republican Sen. Shelley Moore Capito from West Virginia, said the issue came down to trust and accountability.

    “If something like this happens again, God forbid they should also be able to trust the federal government will be quick, deliberate, transparent and clear in their response, and the guilty party parties will be held responsible,” Capito said.

    The committee also is hearing from Ohio Sens. Sherrod Brown, a Democrat, and J.D. Vance, a Republican, as well as Sen. Bob Casey, D-Penn., who together introduced the Railway Safety Act of 2023. The bill aims to enhance safety procedures for trains transporting hazardous materials, establish requirements for wayside defect detectors, increase fines for wrongdoing and create a minimum requirement for two-person crews.

    “It’d be a good start by Norfolk Southern to tell us today, in addition to what they’re going to do the people of Ohio, Pennsylvania, to tell us today that they supported the bill,” Casey said during the hearing. “That would help.”

    Shaw endorsed parts of the bill by committing to “the legislative intent to make rail safer.” Shaw said during the hearing that Norfolk Southern installed its first new wayside detector on Wednesday, though he said there is no indication these detectors were faulty before the East Palestine derailment. Shaw did not address a provision of the bill requiring a minimum of two-person crews on every locomotive.

    Shaw refused to say whether Norfolk Southern would commit to ensuring families full compensation for diminished property values when questioned by Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass.

    No fatalities were reported after the derailment, though residents and officials have raised concerns. Rail union representatives told Biden administration officials at a meeting last week that rail workers have fallen ill in East Palestine during the site cleanup.

    Pressed by Sen. Bernie Sanders, a democratic socialist from Vermont, Shaw said “everything is on the table” regarding covering health care needs for East Palestine residents. He also did not directly say whether the company would provide sick days for all employees.

    Ohio senators speak up

    “Right now as we speak, there are piles of dirt accumulating in East Palestine, piles of dirt filled with toxic chemicals that haven’t been moved out of the state in a week,” Vance said during the hearing. “What happens if it rains, what happens if the very toxic dirt that we just dug out of the ground begins to seep back into the ground, causing problems for the air and water for the residents of East Palestine?”

    Vance expressed frustration at fellow Republicans who have opposed legislation to hold the company accountable, including those who “think that any public safety enhancements for the rail industry is somehow a violation of the free market.”

    The NTSB released a preliminary report on Feb. 23 that pointed to an overheated wheel bearing as a factor in the derailment and fire. At the time, the train was instructed to stop, the bearing’s temperature measured 253 degrees hotter than ambient temperatures, above a threshold of 200 degrees hotter at which point temperatures are considered critical, according Norfolk Southern criteria.

    On Saturday, another Norfolk Southern train derailed in Ohio, after which residents near Springfield were ordered to shelter in place. The train was not carrying hazardous materials, and no injuries were reported, though there were power outages in the area.

    Hours after that derailment, internal emails  indicated that Norfolk Southern was making broad safety adjustments to prevent future incidents. A company spokesman told CNBC the train carrier is now mandating trains over 10,000 feet long use distributed power, such that trains are powered from several locations across their length.

    As Shaw testified, news of another Norfolk Southern derailment in Alabama surfaced. Around 30 train cars came off the tracks Thursday, though there were no reported injuries and no risk of hazardous material associated with the derailment.

    “You’re coming here with three derailments within three months, and the average in the industry is one per month for the entire industry,” said Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. “So congratulations on maybe some good luck over a few years, but at this moment, your team is the team that has the most derailments in the last three months.”

    The Norfolk Southern incidents have spurred wide-sweeping reviews by government agencies. On Tuesday, the NTSB said it had opened a special investigation into the company’s organization and safety culture following the derailments. Separately, the Federal Railroad Administration announced it would conduct a 60-day supplement safety assessment of the company.

    “We see what the company did with their massive profits. Norfolk Southern spent $3.4 billion on stock buybacks last year and are planning to do even more this year,” Brown said Thursday. “That’s money that could have gone to hiring inspectors to put in more hot box detectors along its rail lines and having more workers available to repair cars and repair tracks.”

    The company has cut around 40% of its workforce since 2015, but Shaw said the company is now “aggressively hiring employees.”

    On Wednesday, Norfolk Southern announced it will create a new regional training center in Ohio for first responders, as well as expand its Operation Awareness and Response program, which educates first responders on safely responding to rail incidents. Training classes will begin on March 22 at Norfolk Southern’s Bellevue, Ohio, yard.

    Other committees in Congress are also investigating the East Palestine derailment. House Energy and Commerce Committee Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., and Environment, Manufacturing, and Critical Materials Subcommittee Chair Bill Johnson, R-Ohio, on Thursday announced a hearing scheduled for March 28 to address the derailment’s environmental response.

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