Rail Workers Say the Industry Courts Derailments in Its Quest for Profits
https://www.thenation.com/article/economy/rail-workers-say-industry-courts-derailments-in-quest-for-profits/?custno=
The rail catastrophe in East Palestine, Ohio, is a case study in disaster capitalism.
By Mel Buer
As public outrage has grown over the toxic fallout from last weeks fiery derailment of a Norfolk Southern freight train in East Palestine, Ohio, the urgent questions behind this disaster echo the past years confrontations over working conditions in the lightly regulated rail industry. Indeed, the catastrophe in Ohiotogether with another hazardous derailment in Houston, Tex., just a week laterdrives home the steep costs in health and well-being that we all incur when we fail to heed rail workers calls for more regulation and adequate staffing mandates.
As rail workers sought to win basic guarantees of staffing support and sick leave from rail carriers long accustomed to selling labor short and winning major regulatory concessions from federal agencies, they stressed how the unsustainable demands placed on their working lives would result in disasters just like the one in East Palestine. The northeast Ohio village of about 5,000 people is 40 miles northwest of Pittsburgh and 20 miles south of Youngstown; already those metropolitan areas are under alert for the air and water contamination originating from the Palestine derailment. And in Palestine proper, many residents are already reporting troubling health symptoms and dying area wildlife as they weigh the risks of remaining exposed to the toxic fumes and chemical leaks from the derailed tanker cars carrying hazardous materials.
In the immediate aftermath of the derailment, rail officials ordered that the vinyl chloride hauled by five of the Norfolk Southern cars in the 150-car train be burned off to prevent a still greater explosionbut that action sent hydrogen chloride and phosgene, two dangerous gasses, spuming into the air. EPA investigators have since identified other hazardous chemicals the train had been hauling, including ethylene glycol monobutyl ether, ethylhexyl acrylate, isobutylene, and butyl acrylate. And the EPA has released a report saying that chemicals from the derailment have leached into the soil and water in the aftermath of the accident.
Weve been trying to share our concerns around this for a while now, Ross Grooters, current rail employee and cochair of Railroad Workers United said. It wasnt a matter of if this was going to happen. It was a when and where, and unfortunately, theres a high likelihood that this will happen again, somewhere, if the root causes of the issues arent addressed.
FULL story at link at top.