Another Norfolk Southern train derails, this time in Alabama, just hours before railway's CEO told Congress he is 'deeply sorry' over East Palestine



Just hours before the CEO of Norfolk Southern testified this week before Congress about his railway's apparent difficulty staying on the tracks, another one of its trains derailed in Alabama.

According to the Calhoun County Emergency Management Agency, over 30 cars headed west from Atlanta derailed at approximately 6:45 a.m. on March 9 in Iron City near the White Plains area.

Calhoun County EMA director Myles Chamblee said, "There was no injuries, no fire, and no road blockages" involved.

"Fortunately, there were no hazardous materials with this, and we were able to work with Norfolk Southern, the county sheriff’s office, the Quad Cites fire department, the Oxford fire department, and were able to respond effectively," said Chamblee.

Fire departments left the scene at 2:30 p.m., leaving Norfolk Southern personnel to continue with cleanup efforts.

Calhoun County Sheriff’s Office Lt. Falon Hurst noted that railway traffic will be disrupted for some time, reported the Anniston Star.

"It's torn the tracks all up," said Hurst.

While rail traffic may be backed up, White Plains reportedly is not facing an ecological disaster like East Palestine, Ohio, where a Norfolk Southern train carrying 141 loaded cars derailed, ultimately releasing — with the explosive assistance of the railwaytoxic chemicals into the air and surrounding streams.

Norfolk Southern spokesman Connor Spielmaker told reporters that none of the 37 cars allegedly contained hazardous materials; however, two are designated "residue hazardous material cars" because they recently carried hazardous materials.

"They did not breach," said Spielmaker. "There is no hazardous material leak. There is no risk at all to the public."

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After this latest derailment, Norfolk Southern CEO Alan Shaw testified to Congress, where his railway has spent a great deal of money in recent years.

TheBlaze previously reported that Norfolk Southern has greased politicians' hands to the tune of nearly $100 million since 1990.

According to Open Secrets, Norfolk Southern spent $1.8 million lobbying last year and $1.6 million the year before. Since 1998, it has spent over $79 million on lobbying efforts and $16,948,996 on political contributions.

That money has made its way to both sides of the aisle.

The company favored Democratic congressional candidates 55.27% to 44.72%, but doled out hundreds of thousands of dollars to persons of all political persuasions who may one day be called to hold it accountable.

Despite its previous investment, Shaw was raked over the coals by members of both parties.

Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) said, "The company followed the Wall Street business model: Boost profits by cutting costs at all costs. The consequences for places like East Palestine be damned."

Brown pointed out that the railway had cut its workforce back by 38% over the past 10 years while spending $3.4 billion on stock buybacks, reported the New York Post.

"That’s money that could have gone to hiring inspectors, to putting more hotbox detectors along its rail lines, to having more workers available to repair cars and repair tracks," added Brown.

Republican Sen. J.D. Vance (Ohio) lambasted the railway, stating, "This is an industry that enjoys special subsidies that almost no industry enjoys. This is an industry that enjoys special legal carve-outs that almost no industry enjoys."

"Now they’re claiming before the Senate and the House that our reasonable regulation is somehow a violation of the free market. Well, pot, meet the kettle, because that doesn’t make an ounce of sense. You cannot claim special government privileges, you cannot ask the government to bail you out, and then resist basic public safety," added Vance.

Shaw claimed he was "deeply sorry ... for the impact this derailment had on the residents of East Palestine and the surrounding communities."

"I am determined to make this right. Norfolk Southern will clean the site safely, thoroughly and with urgency. You have my personal commitment. Norfolk Southern will get the job done and help East Palestine thrive," said Shaw."

Shaw noted that Norfolk Southern had pledged $21 million in assistance to East Palestine alone, where 1.1 million gallons of water and 15,000 pounds of soil were contaminated and a trench warfare gas once used as a weapon of mass slaughter was released overhead.

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TheBlaze previously reported that Norfolk Southern Railroad just celebrated "double-digit percentage growth in revenue and ... record revenue and operating income," noting in its end-of-year financial report that it had raked in $12.7 billion in 2022, up 14% over the previous year. The railway managed this despite reportedly accounting for over half the hazmat damages involving rail transportation in the U.S. last year.

The New York Times reported that the rate of accidents on the company's railway has increased in each of the last four years.

Norfolk Southern recently saw major derailments on March 4 in Springfield, Ohio, and Feb. 16 in Van Buren Township outside Detroit, Michigan.

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Smiling Norfolk Southern CEO defends controversial decision, claims breach of rail cars and dispersal of trench-warfare gas in Ohio was the 'right move'



The CEO of Norfolk Southern told reporters Sunday outside his multimillion-dollar mansion in Atlanta that blowing up the derailed train cars laden with deadly chemicals in East Palestine, Ohio, was the "right move."

This suggestion from Alan Shaw, paid $4.5 million a year, comes amid intensifying scrutiny of his company's accident-prone history, soaring profits, and possibly slipshod remediation efforts in the wake of what may be a significant ecological disaster.

What's the background?

Norfolk Southern Railroad just celebrated "double-digit percentage growth in revenue and ... record revenue and operating income," noting in its end-of-year financial report that it had raked in $12.7 billion in 2022, up 14% over the previous year. The railway managed this despite reportedly accounting for over half the hazmat damages involving rail transportation in the U.S. last year.

The New York Times reported that the rate of accidents on the company's railway has increased in each of the last four years.

Albers, Illinois, for instance, was swept by 20,000 gallons of methyl methacrylate monomer, a combustible liquid, on Sept. 19, 2022, after a Norfolk Southern derailment. Sandusky, Ohio, similarly was streaked with spillage, this time 20,000 gallons of paraffin wax in October 2022.

Unlike Albers and Sandusky, East Palestine did not simply suffer a chemical spill in an area where, according to the Ohio EPA, residents' source of drinking water has a "high susceptibility to contamination."

The rail company conducted a so-called "controlled release" of a dangerous carcinogen on Feb. 6, three days after its 150-car train derailed.

The alleged 'right move'

According to the Review, explosives were used to create holes in the derailed tanks to enable the slow release of the deadly chemicals into nearby trenches dug into the ground. Flares lined the trenches, which ignited the chemical over the course of days.

TheBlaze previously reported that the initial reasoning provided for the controlled release was that it might prevent a "catastrophic tanker failure," which allegedly could have resulted in a massive explosion, throwing fumes and shrapnel a far distance.

Kimberly Garrett, an environmental toxicologist from Northeastern University, told Newsweek that this was akin to slowly opening a well-shaken can of soda as opposed to opening it quickly and sending the contents flying everywhere.

The railroad suggested that this process would involve "the burning of the rail cars' chemicals, which will release fumes into the air that can be deadly if inhaled. Based on current weather patterns and the expected flow of the smoke and fumes, anyone who remains in the red affected area is facing grave danger of death. Anyone who remains in the yellow impacted area is at a high risk of severe injury, including skin burns and serious lung damage."

Among the toxic chemicals stored in the wrecked cars were vinyl chloride, hydrogen chloride, ethylene glycol monobutyl ether, ethylhexyl acrylate, and isobutylene.

Burning vinyl chloride, as the railroad company ultimately did, turns it into hydrogen chloride and phosgene gas, the later of which was used as a weapon of mass slaughter in World War I.

Concerning the release, Silverado Caggiano, a hazardous materials specialist, told WKBN, "We basically nuked a town with chemicals so we could get a railroad open."

The Ohio National Guard, the U.S. Department of Defense, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R), and Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro (D), ordered an immediate evacuation of the area ahead of the "controlled release."

Since the skies were intentionally darkened over the village on Feb. 6, the rivers have been crowded by dead fish. Mammals have reportedly been dying in the area. Residents are concerned, not just about the health impact now, but about the fallout years down the line.

Doubling down

WKBN reported that Shaw returned to East Palestine on Saturday to survey the impact the derailment of his company's train has had on the village and its people and to see how the "controlled release" was going.

“This has been devastating to this community,” said Shaw. “I want to make sure you understand, I am terribly sorry that this happened to the community. Norfolk Southern is fully committed to doing what’s right for this community.”

Shaw claimed that the decision to destroy the five derailed train cars and release a column of black, toxic smoke into the air above the village on Feb. 6 was the right one — a claim he reiterated on Sunday, telling the DailyMail.com with a smile that it was the "right move."

According to the Norfolk Southern CEO, the "terrifying" plume of toxic smoke resulting from the "controlled release" signaled success.

The Biden administration similarly suggested the breach and burn was a success, reported CBS News.

Not all regard the action as having been necessary or prudent.

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro (D) suggested last week in a letter addressed to Shaw that the railway may have had options available to it other than the "controlled release" it settled on.

The letter, which raised concerns "about Norfolk Southern's poor handling of this incident," castigated Shaw's company for its "unwillingness to explore or articulate alternate courses of action to their proposed vent and burn limited state and local leaders' ability to respond effectively."

Shapiro also accused Norfolk Southern of having "failed to notify state and local response agencies initially of their intention to vent and burn all five cars containing vinyl chloride, rather than just the single car Norfolk Southern personnel identified originally."

Caggiano, a hazmat specialist who previously served as a battalion chief of the fire department in Youngstown, Ohio, indicated that alternative options to the "controlled release" would have taken too long and cost the railroad too much money, reported the Daily Mail.

"If they had to put the fire out, they would still have to handle every one of those containers and its content as hazardous waste, all non-marketable, and they would have to have gotten rid of all that contamination," said Caggiano. "This way they don't have contamination anymore. ... It burned up and it spread over God knows how much."

A lawsuit filed last week claims that "Norfolk Southern discharged more cancer-causing vinyl chloride into the environment in the course of a week than all industrial emitters combined did in the course of a year."

"Instead of properly containing and cleaning up its mess, and becoming responsible for a costly cleanup effort, Norfolk Southern had a different idea: 'Set it on fire,'" said the suit, noting that Norfolk Southern "likely understood that properly containing and removing this volume [of] vinyl chloride would be incredibly expensive and time consuming."

USA Today indicated that the company is now facing at least five lawsuits as of last week, primarily alleging Norfolk Southern was negligent and careless as it pertains to the derailment. These suits are expected to later be merged into a single class-action lawsuit.

The railway is presently offering $1,000 per person to those with a 44413 zip code and in Beaver County's evacuation zone, reported WKBN.

Shaw, who owns over 20 properties across Georgia and Virginia, intimated that recipients would not be precluded from pursuing further legal action or demanding more reparations in the future.

A spokesman for the company confirmed, "Acceptance of these reimbursements and/or inconvenience compensation is not a settlement of any future claim."

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Thick smoke, flames seen as controlled release of chemicals begins at East Palestine train site youtu.be