Current:Home > MarketsNorfolk Southern said ahead of the NTSB hearing that railroads will examine vent and burn decisions -Zenith Investment School
Norfolk Southern said ahead of the NTSB hearing that railroads will examine vent and burn decisions
NovaQuant Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-10 19:20:15
Days before the National Transportation Safety Board is set to explain why first responders were wrong to blow open five tank cars and burn the toxic chemical inside after the East Palestine derailment, Norfolk Southern said Friday it plans to lead an industrywide effort to improve the way those decisions are made.
The railroad said it promised to lead this effort to learn from the aftermath of its disastrous derailment as part of its settlement with the federal government. The NTSB will hold a hearing Tuesday to discuss what caused the Feb. 3, 2023 derailment and how to prevent similar derailments in the future.
More than three dozen railcars came off the tracks that night and piled up in a mangled mess of steel with 11 tank cars breaking open and spilling their hazardous cargo that then caught fire. Three days later, officials in charge of the response decided they had to vent and burn the five vinyl chloride tank cars to prevent one of them from exploding.
That action created massive fireballs above the train and sent a thick plume of black smoke over the town on the Ohio-Pennsylvania border. Half the town had to evacuate for days and residents are still worrying about the potential health effects from it.
NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy told Congress earlier this year that didn’t have to happen. She said experts from the company that made the vinyl chloride, OxyVinyls, were certain that the feared chemical reaction that could have caused those tank cars to explode wasn’t happening.
But Ohio’s governor, first responders and the hazardous materials experts who made that decision have said the information they had that day made them believe an explosion was likely imminent, making the vent and burn their best option even though it could unleash cancer-causing dioxins on the area.
Drew McCarty, president of the Specialized Professional Services contractor the railroad hired to help first responders deal with the hazardous chemicals on the train, said in a letter to the NTSB this spring that The Associated Press obtained that the OxyVinyls experts on scene “expressed disagreement and surprise with that Oxy statement from Dallas” that polymerization wasn’t happening inside the tank cars. McCarty said that “ultimately, Oxy’s input to us was conflicting.”
Over the past year, that chemical manufacturer has declined to comment publicly on the situation that is already the subject of lawsuits beyond what its experts testified to last spring.
Norfolk Southern CEO Alan Shaw said he hopes the industry can improve the way these decisions — which are a last resort — are made to improve rail safety.
“When a vent and burn procedure is being considered, the health and safety of surrounding communities and emergency responders is top priority,” Shaw said.
Announcing this new workgroup Friday may put Norfolk Southern ahead of one of the recommendations the NTSB will make Tuesday.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- The new 'Color Purple' exudes joy, but dances past some deeper complexities
- A boycott call and security concerns mar Iraq’s first provincial elections in a decade
- Anthony Edwards addresses text messages allegedly of him telling woman to 'get a abortion'
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Japan’s central bank keeps its negative interest rate unchanged, says it’s watching wage trends
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar shares his thoughts after undergoing hip replacement surgery
- Will the eruption of the volcano in Iceland affect flights and how serious is it?
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- 400,000 homes, businesses without power as storm bears down on Northeast: See power outage maps
Ranking
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Trump lawyer testified in Nevada about fake elector plot to avoid prosecution, transcripts show
- Rural Arizona Has Gone Decades Without Groundwater Regulations. That Could Soon Change.
- Purdue back at No. 1 in the USA TODAY Sports men's college basketball poll
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Woman slept with her lottery ticket to bring good luck, won $2 million when she woke up
- Ottawa Senators fire coach D.J. Smith, name Jacques Martin interim coach
- Meghan Markle Reveals the One Gift Budding Photographer Archie Won't Be Getting for Christmas
Recommendation
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
Kentucky lieutenant governor undergoes ‘successful’ double mastectomy, expects to make full recovery
Want to get on BookTok? Tips from creators on how to find the best book recommendations
EPA Begins a Review Process That Could Bring an End to Toxic, Flammable Vinyl Chloride
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Lionel Messi celebrates Argentina's World Cup anniversary on Instagram
Taraji P. Henson says she's passing the 'Color Purple' baton to a new generation
Working families struggle to afford child care. Could Michigan’s ‘Tri-Share’ model work?