Report: Norfolk Southern has greased politicians' hands to the tune of nearly $100 million since 1990



Norfolk Southern Railway, the company responsible for over half of the hazmat rail incidents in 2022 and the catastrophic Feb. 3 derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, has spent a great deal of money over the past 30 years to win favor amongst America's political elites.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R), Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro (D), the Environmental Protection Agency, and others have suggested that Norfolk Southern will be held accountable for the cleanup in East Palestine, Ohio; now home an ecological disaster that has killed wildlife, turned the sky black, and threatened the residents' ways of life.

Biden's Transportation Secretary, Pete Buttigieg, accountable the nation's system of railroads and the regulation of its railways, repeated the claim that those responsible or possibly malfeasant will be held accountable, suggesting also that he would turn to Congress for help in tackling violators amongst the rail companies, reported Fortune.

A new report from the New Republic suggested that some of those expected to help hold Norfolk Southern responsible are the same that have gladly taken its money in the past.

The rail industry has spent nearly $800 million to lobby the government that is supposed to oversee them since 1998.

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.

Senatorial and congressional campaign committees for both parties received money from the railway last year — as did 71 Democrats and 62 Republicans in Congress.

For instance, Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) received $10,000 from Norfolk Southern last year, as did leftist Democratic Sen. Tammy Duckworth (Ill.), Rep. James Clyburn (D-S.C.) and Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.). Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell received $5,000 as did Sen. John Boozman (R-Ark.).

Almost half of the crowded House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure pocketed money from Norfolk Southern.

The relationship that the government — which the residents of East Palestine have been told will ensure justice is meted out — has with the company is incestuous for reasons beyond money.

75% of the company's lobbyists last year previously held government positions.

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.

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.

Bank of America analyst Ken Hoexter indicated last week that in the case of the Feb. 3 Norfolk Southern disaster in Ohio, the railway may have to pay $40 million to $50 million in a "casualty charge," reported FreightWaves. However, on the top end, this would equal roughly 1.7% of its 2022 profits and amount to a drop in the bucket.

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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

Multiple hazmat train derailments in the US over the past several months prompt questions about corner-cutting and malfeasance



A train containing hazardous materials went off the rails Thursday in Van Buren Township outside Detroit, Michigan, just two weeks after the ruinous derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.

These incidents, coupled with several similar derailments in recent months, have prompted greater scrutiny over an apparent trend of questionable train wrecks in the United States.

While Department of Transportation and Federal Railroad Administration officials have not commented on the possibility that any of the derailments have been coordinated, there are however a host of other reasons — such as the corporate prioritization of efficiency over safety — that may account for why derailments like Norfolk Southern's in East Palestine, though not wholly uncommon, were preventable and could prove more catastrophic down the line.

What are the details?

Below is a list of some of the recent derailments this year:

  • Feb. 16 Van Buren Township, Michigan: A train operated by Norfolk Southern had around six cars go off the tracks, at least one of which was carrying hazardous materials.
  • Feb. 13Splendora, Texas: A Union Pacific train had 21 cars go off the tracks after a collision with a tractor-trailer. Newsweek indicated that the tractor-trailer leaked diesel and oil.
  • Feb. 13Enoree, South Carolina: A CSX train had three cars come off the tracks. The scene was reportedly cleared in short order.
  • Feb. 3 East Palestine, Ohio: A train operated by Norfolk Southern carrying around 150 loaded cars, nine empty cars, and three locomotives had around 50 cars go off the tracks, several with toxic contents, including vinyl chloride, hydrogen chloride, ethylene glycol, monobutyl ether, ethylhexyl acrylate, isobutylene, and phosgene.
  • Feb. 1Detroit, Michigan: A CN Rail train had eight empty railcars derail and one teeter over the side of a rail bridge.
  • Jan. 21Outside Loris, South Carolina: Six gravel-laden cars on an RJ Corman Railroad line went off the tracks a mile south of Allsbrook.
  • Jan. 19Trinway, Ohio: An Ohio Central Railroad train composed of 97 cars went off the rails. No leaks occurred, reported the Times Recorder.
  • Jan. 9Lake City, South Carolina: A CSX freight train struck an empty car that had been left on the tracks; 25 cars went off the tracks.

According to the U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Railroad Administration, there were 471 derailments in the U.S. in 2022. The five states with the most derailments were Texas (44), Georgia (37), Ohio (33), Tennessee (29), and Illinois (29).

These derailments resulted in $92,958,685 in reportable damages and four injuries. The previous year saw over $105 million in reportable damages.

Incidents involving hazardous materials can also be costly, although the true devastation is not fully accounted for in dollars and cents, as East Palestine has learned.

Grid reported that railway accidents involving hazardous materials inflicted around $17 million in damage in 2022 alone. Rail hazmat accidents reportedly dealt roughly $15 million in damage in 2021.

Federal data indicates that Norfolk Southern, which just celebrated "double-digit percentage growth in revenue and ... record revenue and operating income," accounted for over half the hazmat damages involving rail transportation in 2022.

For instance, a train operated by Norfolk Southern suffered a derailment on Sept. 19, 2022, in Albers, Illinois, spilling over 20,000 gallons of methyl methacrylate monomer, a combustible liquid. According to an incident report, the result was $3.2 million in damage.

Again, on Oct. 8, 2022, in Sandusky, Ohio, a train operated by Norfolk Southern spilled approximately 20,000 gallons of paraffin wax, reportedly causing $2.6 million in damage.

Devastating 'efficiencies'

The U.S. Government Accountability Office issued a report in 2019 that accounted for some of the recent derailments: "Freight train length has increased in recent years, according to all seven Class I freight railroads. ... Officials identified increased efficiencies and economic benefits among the advantages of longer freight trains."

The report also states that officials from the FRA, railroad employees unions, and others have indicated that "longer mixed-freight trains may be more difficult to handle than unit trains in certain circumstances due to variations in car length and weight and the extent to which additional DP locomotives are employed."

Bob Comer, a railroad expert who has investigated a slew of accidents, told Grid, "We’re talking about a U.S. industry starting in 1825 that has put money first and safety last. ... They’ve gone to these longer trains, and they’ve cut back on their maintenance crews."

Comer suggested that longer trains means more cargo and potential damage on a greater and possibly catastrophic scale.

Jared Cassity, a legislative director for SMART Transportation Division, told Politico, "The longer the train, the heavier the train, the more wear and tear it puts on the actual rail itself, as well as the equipment."

According to Cassity, this wear and tear leads to "more unintended train separations, which is where the train breaks apart."

These longer trains are not necessarily staffed by more rail workers.

Republican Sens. J.D. Vance (Ohio) and Marco Rubio (Fla.) penned a letter Wednesday to DOT Secretary Pete Buttigieg, drawing attention to the fact that the Norfolk Southern train that darkened the sky over East Palestine and sullied the waters "had a three-member crew overseeing the entirety of its 150 cars: a locomotive engineer, a conductor, and a conductor trainee."

"Current and former rail workers, industry observers, and reform advocates have pointed to precision-scheduled railroading (PSR), by which rail companies such as Norfolk Southern increase efficiency and drive down costs by moving more freight with fewer workers, as a potential contributor to the accident. We have voiced concerns with PSR, as well as with this administration’s prioritizing of efficiency over resilience in its national infrastructure and transportation systems," added the senators.

The DOT Office of Inspector General issued a report in February 2016 accounting for another potential reason why rail hazmat incidents appear to be continuing unabated.

The report found that the FRA had not "conducted a comprehensive evaluation of risks associated with hazardous materials transportation that appropriately addresses national level risk. Neither the National Inspection Plan nor the hazardous materials staffing process — two nationwide tools provided to regional specialists — produces a complete evaluation of risk. For example, both models assess how much hazardous material is routed through a region, but not the proximity of those routes to population centers."

Inspectors are allegedly provided with decent training and guidance, however the report claimed that complicated information systems and outdated web portals hamper efforts to enforce hazardous materials regulations.

Additionally, the report claimed that "FRA pursues limited civil penalties for violations of hazardous materials regulations and, despite departmental requirements in several DOT Orders, does not refer cases to our office for criminal investigation."

A failure to hold offenders accountable except for "serious incidents of non-compliance" apparently served to neuter penalties as disincentives for violations.

Bank of America analyst Ken Hoexter indicated this week that in the case of the Feb. 3 Norfolk Southern disaster in Ohio, the railway may have to pay $40 million to $50 million in a "casualty charge," reported FreightWaves. However, on the top end, this would equal roughly 1.7% of its 2022 profits and amount to a drop in the bucket.

Jason Seidl, an analyst at the financial services firm Cowen, suggested Tuesday, "While the severity of the derailment earlier this month is still unclear, if history is a guide, the unfortunate event may not have much long-term impact on the rail carrier’s share."

The Railroad Workers Union appears to believe that the reasons mentioned above, together, may account for the kind of accidents that took place in East Palestine, reported the New Republic.

While the RWU contended that "the immediate cause of the wreck appears to have been a nineteenth-century style mechanical failure of the axle on one of the cars," the long-trend cause may have been the "short-term profit imperative, the so-called 'cult of the Operating Ratio' — of NS and the other Class 1 railroads — has made cutting costs, employees, procedures, and resources the top priority."

"The wreck of Train 32N has been years in the making. What other such train wrecks await us remains to be seen," the RWU said. "But given the modus operandi of the Class One rail carriers, we can no doubt expect future disasters of this nature."

Despite the calamity in Ohio, Ian Jefferies, head of the Association of American Railroads trade group, has suggested that 99.9% of hazardous materials cargo makes its way to its destinations safely, reported the Independent.

As dead fish floated down Ohio streams en masse and East Palestine residents contemplated possible tumor-laden futures, Jefferies noted, "Railroads are the safest form of moving goods across land in the country without question."

TheBlaze reached out to officials at the Department of Transportation and the Federal Railroad Administration, inquiring whether they are concerned with the frequency of derailments; what new actions if any they are taking to preclude future derailments rom taking place; and whether they suspect any of the recent derailments to have been coordinated. They did not respond by deadline.

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PA governor suggests Norfolk Southern may have rushed 'controlled' release of toxic fumes above East Palestine to get rail line open, ignored other options



Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro (D) suggested in a biting letter Tuesday that Norfolk Southern may have had options available to it other than conducting a so-called "controlled" burn of a dangerous carcinogen in the aftermath of the Feb. 3 derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, right on the border of his state.

Extra to accusing Norfolk Southern of needlessly generating confusion and possibly exacerbating the problem, Shapiro implied that the rail company may have rushed the process in order to reopen the rail line.

Shapiro's claims come amid growing tensions and concerns about what precisely was done in response to the derailment and toxic leaks and what the fallout may ultimately be in terms of health and financial impacts.

Failure after failure

In his Feb. 14 letter to Alan Shaw, president and chief executive of the Norfolk Southern Corporation, Shapiro indicated that various elected leaders and emergency management officials in Beaver County and the surrounding area — reportedly impacted to a significant extent by the ecological disaster — are concerned "about Norfolk Southern's poor handling of this incident."

Shapiro noted that the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection and the state's emergency management agency "were not immediately contacted by Norfolk Southern" after the incident. However, upon learning of the incident independently, the DEP and PEMA reportedly began monitoring for impacts to the residents, businesses, and environment in the state.

The agencies found that there were at least three major issues with the rail company's "management of the response that put the safety of our first responders and residents at significant risk":

  • "First, Norfolk Southern failed to implement Unified Command, creating confusion and resulting in a general lack of awareness for first responders and emergency management of the tactics Norfolk Southern planned in response";
  • "Second, Norfolk Southern gave inaccurate information and conflicting modeling about the impact of the controlled release that made protection action decision making more difficult in the immediate aftermath of the derailment"; and
  • "Third, Norfolk Southern's unwillingness to explore or articulate alternate courses of action to their proposed vent and burn limited state and local leaders' ability to respond effectively."
Concerning the rail company's first alleged failing, Shapiro claimed Norfolk Southern personnel "separated themselves from the rest of the incident management structure at the Incident Command Post."
Having gone on to do their own operational and tactical planning, they allegedly left state and local response agencies in the dark, forcing them to react to unilateral maneuvers without first soliciting informed input.

Perhaps more consequential was the rail company's alleged provision of inaccurate information, again imperiling planning, remediation, and protection efforts.

Shapiro claimed that Norfolk Southern "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."

The governor further suggested that this failure to communicate critical information about the affected rail cars, their content, and the company's intention to expedite their combustion "led to confusion and wide variability in potentially affected population estimates in downwind plume impacting the Commonwealth."

TheBlaze previously reported that the thick column of smoke that Norfolk Southern personnel helped send skyward contained fumes from the toxic chemicals stored in the wrecked cars, such as vinyl chloride, hydrogen chloride, ethylene glycol monobutyl ether, ethylhexyl acrylate, isobutylene, and phosgene — a gas used for mass slaughter in the trenches during World War I.

Early reports indicated that the reasoning behind the controlled release of the deadly chemicals was to prevent a "catastrophic tanker failure," which allegedly could have resulted in a massive explosion, throwing fumes and shrapnel a far distance. However, the Pennsylvania governor implied in his letter that there were other options available that the rail company apparently discounted or failed to consider.

"Norfolk Southern failed to explore all potential courses of action, including some that may have kept the rail line closed longer but could have resulted in a safer overall approach for first responders, residents, and the environment," wrote Shapiro.

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

At the time of the so-called controlled breach, villagers within a one-mile radius of the wreck were cautioned by Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) and Shapiro (D) that remaining in the impacted area could put them in "grave danger of death" and were subsequently evacuated.

DeWine called it "absurd" that Norfolk Southern was not required to notify local officials about the train's contents before it came through, reported the New York Times. DeWine has also called for congressional and possible legal action in the event that the company fails to pay for the cleanup.

Responding to Shapiro's letter, a spokesman for the rail company told Yahoo News, "Norfolk Southern was on-scene immediately following the derailment and began working directly with local, state, and federal officials as they arrived at the unified command established in East Palestine by local officials, including those from Pennsylvania. ... We remain at the command post today working alongside those agencies to keep information flowing from our teams working at the site."

In its response, the company added it was "committed to ensuring health and safety through ongoing environmental monitoring and support for their needs."

Shapiro underscored that he intends to help the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission "facilitate holding [Norfolk Southern] accountable to Pennsylvanians."

Shapiro penned his letter after the EPA sent Norfolk Southern a general notice of potential liability over the weekend, outlining EPA cleanup actions and the possibility that the railway will have to foot the bill.

TheBlaze reported earlier that residents are now especially concerned about possible water contamination, granted that schools of fish have been spotted floating belly-up down nearby streams and rivers.

The Ohio EPA conducted an assessment in 2019 that found East Palestine's source of drinking water has a "high susceptibility to contamination" because of a lack of clay helping protect the aquifer and "the presence of significant potential contaminant sources in the protection area."

The assessment notes, "This susceptibility means that under currently existing conditions, the likelihood of the aquifer becoming contaminated is relatively high."

WKBN reported that the EPA recently castigated Norfolk Southern for simply covering up contaminated soil in the aftermath of the derailment.

"Five railcar tankers of vinyl chloride were intentionally breached; the vinyl chloride was diverted to an excavated trench and then burned off. Areas of contaminated soil and free liquids were observed and potentially covered and/or filled during reconstruction of the rail line including portions of the trench/burn pit that was used for the open burn off of vinyl chloride," said the letter.

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