CSX to Hold Public Meeting on Derailment Cleanup

CSX plans to discuss the cleanup of an oil-train derailment at a public information meeting this month in Glen Ferris.

The Charleston Daily Mail says the meeting is scheduled for July 21 at the Glen Ferris Inn.

Investigators haven’t determined what caused 27 of the train’s 109 cars to derail during a Feb. 16 snowstorm in Mount Carbon.

Cleanup remains in a short-term phase focusing on removing crude oil at the site and preventing potential oil sheens on the Kanawha River.

Under a March consent order with Environmental Protection Agency, the railroad agreed to a long-term plan for cleaning up and restoring the area around the derailment.

The public can inspect documents pertaining to the cleanup at Montgomery City Hall. The documents are on a CD-ROM.

Investigators: Transporting Bakken Crude Still a Challenge for Railroads

On Sunday, the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Railroad Administration announced that its full-scale forensic investigation is now underway in earnest, following last week’s train derailment.  

Federal Investigators say it could be weeks before we know what caused the CSX train to derail last Monday.

What is known is that the train was traveling 33 miles per hour (well under the speed limit) when tank cars derailed as they were passing through a Fayette County community called Adena Village.

Nobody died as a result of Monday’s derailment, although there was one very close call. 68-year-old Morris Bounds had a very narrow escape– as the exploding flames overtook his home. He suffered smoke inhalation and lost everything he owned.

Credit Crystal Collins / West Virginia Public Braodcasting
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West Virginia Public Braodcasting

“CSX will fully compensate Mr. Bounds for any of his losses,” said CSX representative Skip Elliott.

Mr. Bounds’ neighbors and those in the nearby community of Boomer Bottom were all forced to evacuate their homes last week. They were allowed to return Friday, with the exception of 5 homes immediately next to the site of the derailment.

The Federal Railroad Administration is in charge of investigating the cause of the incident. Sarah Feinberg is the acting administrator and says the train that derailed was transporting about 3 million gallons of a hazardous unrefined oil from South Dakota.

“The crude oil that comes out of the Shale Play in North Dakota is very volatile, very flammable. It’s a lot more like gasoline or jet fuel than anything else,” Feinberg said.

Feinberg says the United States’ push for energy independence is creating new obstacles for the Department of Transportation.

“Some of these challenges are very new to us. How do you move that product from North Dakota to the refineries on the coast?” said Feinberg.

Credit Courtesy of Mike King
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Last week’s accident comes on the heels of a series of train disasters involving the transportation of Bakken Crude, including one along the same route in Lynchburg, Virginia last April. The National Transportation of Safety Board has been investigating that incident, but the findings aren’t expected until this summer.

Sarah Feinberg says her agency is working to find safer solutions that would prevent these types of accidents in the future.

“It’s not just coming up with a better tank car, for transporting this product, but we’re also looking at how the train is operated. One of the most important things we can look at is breaking systems, to make sure that they are stopping and the cars are not piling up on each other, as they did in this case.”

After last week’s accident, tank cars were still smoldering until Thursday night.

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Dennis Matlock, with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, says first responders made the decision to let them burn out on their own.[They] “initiated a controlled burn, which was a safer option to do anything at that point, it really engulfed a big area. Particulate matter from the burning was probably the number one thing we’re concerned with. A big constituent of this material is Benzene.”

Matlock says nobody was exposed to any harmful amount of Benzene, but this is one of the reasons fire crews had to use caution and give the fire some distance.

None of the tank cars went into the Kanawha River as was initially reported, although an unknown amount of crude oil did leak onto the ground and may have entered Armstrong Creek.

The EPA has confirmed that as ice melted Sunday morning, a small amount of oil entered the Kanawha River. However, ongoing containment strategy and water monitoring has confirmed that there’s been no impact on drinking water or public safety.

 

 

 

One Lane Reopens of Route 61 Near Train Derailment

Authorities have partially reopened a stretch of road where an oil train derailed in southern West Virginia.

One lane of state Route 61 reopened Friday in Montgomery. It was blocked off after Monday’s fiery crash in the nearby town of Mount Carbon.

About 225 people had been forced out from 100 homes along the road. It wasn’t known whether the residents were being allowed back in their homes for good. A spokesman for multiple agencies responding to the crash didn’t immediately return a telephone message Friday.

Investigators are trying to determine what caused the derailment of the train carrying 3 million gallons of crude from North Dakota’s Bakken oil fields to an oil-shipping depot in Yorktown, Virginia.

Crews still must remove damaged tank cars from the scene.

WVU Tech Cancels Classes For Remainder of Week due to Train Derailment

WVU Tech has canceled classes for the rest of the week  of Monday, February 17, and campus residents will be provided off-site accommodations.

The cancelation is due to a water intake closure following a train derailment along the Fayette-Kanawha county line which spilled crude oil into the Kanawha River,

Here is the full release:

WVU Tech Cancels Classes following Off-Campus Incident

WVU Tech cancels classes for remainder of week due to water intake closure, off-campus incident. Classes to resume at 8 a.m. on Monday, February 23, 2015.

Since water service on campus is not expected to be restored for another 48 to 72 hours, classes will be cancelled for the remainder of this week. We plan to resume classes on Monday, February 23, 2015 at 8:00 a.m.

With cooperation from CSX, Mountain State University and the University of Charleston, residential accommodations will be provided to WVU Tech on-campus students in residence hall facilities in Beckley and the Beckley Marriott Courtyard will be used as overflow space, if necessary. Buses will be on campus this afternoon to transport students to Beckley. Arrangements for food service have been made and University Police and Residence Life staff will be on site. WVU Tech residence hall policies and the student code of conduct will be in effect on the Beckley campus.

Residence halls on the Montgomery campus will close today at 5:00 p.m. and will remain closed until after water service on campus is restored

http://wvute.ch/17izgSS

Five Things to Know About the Fayette Co. Train Derailment

On Monday, a 109-car CSX train derailed along the Fayette-Kanawha county line, causing crude oil to spill into the Kanawha River, giant fireballs to stretch hundreds of feet into the air and one home to catch fire.

Governor Earl Ray Tomblin has placed Fayette and Kanawha counties under a state of emergency as emergency officials continue to respond.

Here are five things to know about Monday’s derailment: 

1. The train was hauling Bakkan crude oil from North Dakota, which is considered dangerous by federal regulators.

According to a January 2014 report from Bloomberg Business, the federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration said crude oil produced in this region may be more flammable and dangerous to ship by rail than that of other regions. The agency came to that conclusion after a four-month study. 

2. Water sources continue to be limited for those in the affected area and testing has begun.

Updated Tuesday, February 18, 2015 at 12:00 p.m.

Both intakes are now reopened. Water samples have showed no trace of crude oil.

From the original post: West Virginia American Water initially closed two intakes, one in Montgomery and another further downstream in Cedar Grove. State Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety spokesman Lawrence Messina said the Montgomery treatment plant, which remains shut down, still had water in its reserves as of 10 p.m. and the Cedar Grove intake has been reopened. The Cedar Grove treatment plant continues to monitor approaching water for signs of crude oil from the derailment. 

Members of the West Virginia National Guard’s 35th Civil Support Team have begun drawing samples to test for the spilled crude oil. Personnel from the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection are on site assisting in gauging the potential threat to the area’s water. 

West Virginia American Water, with help from the West Virginia Department of Transportation, is providing two 8,000 gallon tankers to supply Montgomery General Hospital and a nearby long-term care facility. The water company is also providing potable water for customers serviced by the Montgomery intake. 

3. Shelters are being established for those in the affected area.

While local responders had estimated that as many as 1,000 area residents might be affected, only 85 were in local shelters late Monday evening, according to the news release from the state Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety.

Nonetheless, shelters for those who had been evacuated are open and CSX has established a community outreach center.

4. West Virginia officials refused to release oil train shipment data last year.

In October 2014, Ken Ward of the Charleston Gazette reported that state officials refused to release information provided by CSX regarding the company’s shipment of crude oil through West Virginia.  Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management director Jimmy Gionato said information, requested by Ward and the Gazette via a Freedom of Information Act request, contained “trade secrets or confidential locations” that would be exempt from public disclosure. Oil shipment data is required to be filed with state emergency response agencies, as per the Obama Administration. 

5. Many questions about the incident remain unanswered.

CSX says the amount of crude oil that spilled into the river is currently unknown. The company also says the cause of the derailment is under investigation.

State public safety spokesperson Lawrence Messina says that initial reports of one or more train cars winding up in the river does not appear to be the case.

Where to Seek Shelter in Fayette County

After a train derailment near the Fayette- Kanawha County line Monday afternoon, residents within a half mile radius of Armstrong Creek Road are being asked to evacuate their homes, according to a press release from the West Virginia State Police. 

A representative of a West Virginia chapter of the American Red Cross says some shelters have been made available, but Red Cross workers who were attempting to set up an overnight shelter at Valley High School in Smithers were not able to reach the location as of 5 p.m. Monday.

The Red Cross will continue to try to reach the location, but Valley High is open to evacuees as a place to stay warm.

Evacuation / Shelter Locations:

A Red Cross representative said the Armstrong Creek and Falls View Community Centers are also open for evacuees, but are not Red Cross sponsored centers with overnight accommodations. 
For more information about shelters, contact the Montgomery Fire Department at 304-442-5139.

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