CHICAGO (AP) -- When derailed freight train cars carrying ethanol burst into
flames just 50 miles from her Chicago suburb, killing a motorist who tried
to flee, Barrington Mayor Karen Darch saw her worst fears realized.
“This is exactly the kind of thing we’ve been afraid of,” said Darch, who
tried but failed to stop a railroad sale that will boost freight traffic
through her village. “Any community could find themselves in that
situation.”
The derailment earlier this month highlights the struggle to prevent such
disasters along the 140,000-mile U.S. rail network. The pressure is on to
tackle outstanding safety issues with hazardous-cargo shipments expected to
soar in coming years. Fears terrorists might view chemical-laden tankers as
easy targets adds to the urgency.
But competing interests that sometimes pit the government against railroads,
suburbs against cities or chemical makers against environmentalists
complicate efforts to secure the transport of around 1.7 million carloads of
hazardous material a year.
One of the most contentious issues has been new federal regulation requiring
that companies reroute trains hauling the most toxic materials away from big
cities. Those rules apply to substances that can vaporize, like chlorine.
A 2005 train crash in Graniteville, S.C., that killed 9 people and injured
hundreds of others involved chlorine, used by cities to purify water. The
wreck ruptured a car carrying the chemical, releasing a poisonous cloud over
the town.
Tankers amount to “hell on wheels rolling through our communities,” U.S.
Rep. Edward Markey has said in support of the rerouting rules. In a
catastrophic event, the Massachusetts Democrat said tankers contain enough
chlorine to kill 100,000 people in 30 minutes.
Other new federal rules that have been partially implemented require that
new tankers be better fortified to lessen chances of spills or explosions.
Amid current economic woes, though, railways aren’t buying many new tankers.
Rail companies note accidents already are at historic lows.
Out of the more than a million train cars that carried hazardous cargo in
2008, there were 21 train accidents where some material was released; that’s
down from 118 in 1980, according to federal data.
“You’re at a very high level of safety right now,” said Tom White, spokesman
for the Association of American Railroads, the industry trade group.
Authorities have long deemed trains the safest way to move hazardous
material. That’s reflected in a federal mandate dating back at least 100
years requiring railroads carry such cargo, whether they like it or not.
Partly from fear that liability for a major accident could bankrupt them,
some companies have called for that requirement to be canceled or eased.
Federal officials have resisted such moves.
“Isn’t it a little unfair to both require railroads to carry this stuff, and
then say they are fully liable?” White asked.
Some railroads have opposed mandatory rerouting of hazardous freight -- a
rule debated for years before its final implementation early this year. They
argued there’s often no alternative to running trains through cities and
that upgrading out-of-the-way tracks to bear tanker-car loads would prove
costly.
“Rerouting can also substantially increase the distance a material travels
and the amount of handling it requires,” White said. “That in itself can
increase the safety risk.”
Among 27 criteria railways are required to consider as they draw up
rerouting plans is whether tankers pass by what regulators call “iconic
targets” -- well-known landmarks terrorists might want to hit. Plans are due
in to regulators in a few months.
Some rail companies already are steering more trains onto lines that cut
through villages, towns and suburbs to bypass chronic train-track congestion
in Chicago, the nation’s premier rail hub.
Outlying communities say that and the mandatory reroutes increase their
exposure to derailments.
Canadian National Railway, whose train derailed in Rockford in northern
Illinois, is among those seeking ways to avoid Chicago. CN recently bought
the Elgin, Joliet and Eastern Railway line that loops around Chicago and
through 30 suburbs.
CN declined to discuss the Rockford accident. Federal investigators say it
could take a year to pinpoint a cause.
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On the Net:
Federal Railroad Administration:
http://www.fra.dot.gov
American Association of Railroads:
http://www.aar.org