The woman behind the popular TikTok account “Appalachian Forager” makes jam from wild pawpaws … and jewelry from coyote teeth. We also talk with the hosts of a new podcast that looks at coal dust exposure beyond the mines, affecting people far downstream from Appalachia. You'll hear these stories and more this week, Inside Appalachia.
U.S. DOT: Stronger Rail Cars Must Be in Place By 2020
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After several accidents involving trains carrying crude oil in the past few years, including one in southern West Virginia, the U.S. Department of Transportation has announced new rules to make rail shipping safer.
The new rules apply to rail shipments of flammable and hazardous materials, like crude oil and ethanol.
They include phasing out some of the most widely used rail cars in the industry, like the CPC 1232s involved in the February derailment in Fayette County. That crash resulted in a massive fire that evacuated dozens of people from their homes.
Cars like CPC 1232s must be retrofitted by 2017 or phased out of use by 2020. Manufacturers are also required to begin producing new cars with thicker steel walls and thermal jackets to prevent punctures and fires.
“One of the challenges with this rule, quite frankly, is that we’re dealing with prospective risk,” U.S. DOT Secretary Anthony Foxx said at the press conference releasing the strengthened regulations, “an industry that continues to grow, a use of transportation that continues to expand and the fact that we’ve got to think ahead of the problem.”
“So, this rule is recognizing that we’ve got a growing risk and its attempting to put some brackets around that risk and reduce the risk to the public.”
The rules also require trains carrying flammable liquids at more than 30 miles per hour be equipped with specialty breaks and those traveling through densely populated areas slow to 40 miles per hour.
On this West Virginia Week, lawmakers returned to the capitol for interim committee meetings and a special session of the West Virginia Legislature. We’ll talk about some of the policy decisions lawmakers made.
The advocacy organization representing those with disabilities in West Virginia has filed a notice of suit against Gov. Jim Justice, other top state officials and agencies.
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