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EAST PALESTINE, Ohio (WKBN) – The mayor of East Palestine has declared a State of Emergency after a train derailment caused a massive fire Friday night that is still burning into Saturday afternoon. The mayor says a mandatory evacuation order is still in place for part of the East Palestine community.

Photo Gallery: Train derailment fire in East Palestine

Officials say their concern is with the vinyl chloride located in the train cars. They say the safety features of the trains are protecting the public from the vinyl chloride, but they are not sure about the specifics of the safety systems. Officials were also not sure if there are any other chemicals in the train cars that the public should be aware of.

Officials say Norfolk Southern Railway will give the indication of when the train will be safe for crews to approach.

Mayor Trent Conaway says East Palestine officials are partnering with the EPA, hazmat and the National Transportation Safety Board.

Officials say residents in East Palestine should call 211 for any additional information.

Mayor Conaway declared the State of Emergency just before 9:30 a.m. Saturday. This allows the Village of East Palestine to exercise all emergency authority for protection during the crisis.

In a 6:30 a.m. press conference, officials announced there is a mandatory evacuation for those living east of Market Street to Highland and Jimtown Roads. This affects about 1,500 to 2,000 residents in the zone.

East Palestine Evacuation Map
Approximate map of evacuation area

There is a shelter-in-place order for the rest of the community.

Officials say they may put disciplinary actions in place for those who break the barricade around the train.

First News reporters on the scene noticed a distinctive smell that reminded them of paint thinner.

According to the mayor, there were no fatalities in the fire, but over 50 railcars were involved.

Mayor Conaway says no one was hurt.

“The train crew was fine,” he said.

East Palestine train derailment fire was visible on Pittsburgh radar

The Norfolk Southern train, which totaled around 50 cars, derailed around 9 p.m. Friday on the tracks that run east and west through East Palestine. It happened on the outskirts of town, near the Pennsylvania border.

Several explosions have been heard, and those explosions could continue as the cars burn.

There’s no indication of how the train derailed.

There is a no-fly zone within a one-mile radius of the scene. Officials are also asking the public to avoid the area.

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“We have multiple hazmat teams on the scene,” Mayor Conaway said. “Norfolk Southern’s here with its hazmat team too, to determine the possible chemicals that were involved.”

“We are asking residents not to drive around. Fire trucks are flying up and down the road.  They’re tanker trucks. They’re full of water. They leak,” Conaway said.   

The mayor says 43 residents are currently in the shelter and 10 local businesses are affected by the evacuation.

As far as what chemicals are burning, Conaway said, “We don’t know 100% for sure.” The train comprises tanker cars, box cars and a car hauling automobiles.     

Drone video at the peak of the fire shows the flames stretching for around a half mile along the tracks. The plume of smoke could be seen 10 miles away and was easily picked up on weather radar.

Fifty fire departments from three states responded to help fight the fire, including crews from virtually every fire department in Columbiana and Mahoning counties. 

“The initial challenge was just not knowing what we were dealing with,” said Battalion Chief Brian Rutledge, who was part of the first crew on the scene.

One of the biggest issues in fighting the fire was that the temperature was between 5-10 degrees. Mayor Conaway said the hydrants were working fine but the trucks pumping the water were freezing up.

According to East Palestine officials, residents may experience low pressure or water discoloration due to high usage from fighting the fire. Officials say the water is still safe for consumption.

The Red Cross is also in place to give aid to residents and help them access medications they may have left behind in the fire.

High School students Jacob Griffith and Cami Kridler had attended the basketball game and were headed to Chippewa for something to eat when they saw the fire.

“We were driving past Leake’s gas station on Taggart Street, and we just looked to our left and a giant explosion, probably at least 200 feet, and we’re like, ‘Oh my God. What do we do?'”

“I was actually the one that dialed 911,” Kridler said. “We all saw the same thing. One of our friends said, ‘Hey something blew up.'”

Norfolk Southern Railway has also opened a family center at East Palestine City Park Center until 10 p.m. Saturday and 8-11 p.m. Sunday.

Officials say there will be no other press conferences on Saturday but there will be another press conference Sunday at noon.

Obviously a terrible situation, but it's resulted in some unique detours for NS trains. Yesterday a Chicago - NJ stack train came through the NYSW in NY/NJ, and took down a ton of wires/poles along the way due to low hanging phone/cable wires that the double stacks couldn't clear.

Is the (land) remediation process for the disaster site made 'easier' in letting the toxics burn off?  Or is that another major headache besides the clearing of wreckage and relaying of trackage?

And just what do they do with toxic-soaked soils, et al...per Federal/State/Local requirements thereof?

It's one thing to get the trains running again.   Seems like it could be a longer issue for the surrounding community to be assured of complete restoration.

Is there a nationwide 'Serve-Pro' (analogy) for handling the clean-up of railroad disasters of this sort?  Just curious.

KD

I'm pretty sure the toxic material dredged from the Mahoning river was taken to a landfill @dkdkrd so I imagine similar things will be done here. I know Flint, MI used trees/bushes to absorb toxins from the soil. Maybe they'll do similar things here.

I thought vinyl chloride broke down into phosgene and hydrogen chloride (which turns into hydrochloric acid on contact with moisture) and some other stuff. I guess burning it in a controlled fashion lets it go straight up into the atmosphere instead of spreading in an explosion. I know they tried to get the controlled burn started at 3:30PM when the wind was dead. But I'm just armchair speculating. I mostly hope the wind dies down or doesn't carry this stuff 20 miles north to me or 15 miles southeast to my friends and family on the border. Straight up would be the best solution I assume.

I know hazmat teams are on site. That's probably the national "Serve-Pro" (same analogy I would have used by the way haha).

I just hope anyone affected by this is okay. I clicked on the link in the OP post to the BBC coverage of the derailment. Wow! That was some fire!

After watching the video on the Ohio derailment you know how it automatically goes to another story. The next story was "Man rescued after crashing stolen Police car". Some knucklehead in Georgia steals a Police car and crashes the car on to it's side right on railroad tracks! The Police were able to rescue the guy literally seconds before a train comes by and smashes the car! Wow! That was crazy!!

https://www.bbc.com/news/av/64448930

Last edited by Hudson J1e

Interesting stuff. It's my understanding that trains are rolling through there again.

It's also interesting how people love modern conveniences until they find out what it takes to have them.

Hopefully these symptoms are all an effect of there being an event. I would hate to see long term damage occur in people who were in the wrong place at the wrong time. I wonder if the reporters that were there are feeling sick.

The plot thickens.  As Hot Water mentioned earlier, a burning journal was the likely cause.  The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports that a surveillance video at a manufacturing plant in Salem, OH shows a hopper car with a fire underneath it.  There is evidently a hot-box detector near that camera as well as one much closer to the derailment site.  The report says, "Hot box detectors are typically spaced every 10 to 20 miles apart, Mr. Wilcox said. On this particular track, the next detector after Salem was in East Palestine. The train would have passed that one less than a mile before derailing on Feb. 3."

Question is why the detector in/near Salem didn't result in a stop happening well before the train derailed an hour later.  The lawyers will have a field day with this one.

@PRRrat posted:

"Hot box detectors are typically spaced every 10 to 20 miles apart, Mr. Wilcox said. On this particular track, the next detector after Salem was in East Palestine. The train would have passed that one less than a mile before derailing on Feb. 3."

I was wondering about this. My parents said the camera footage was many miles before East Palestine but I had assumed the footage was from somewhere in East Palestine. I didn't know how far detectors are typically spaced. It's going to be a doozy if the Salem detector was neglected.

52 weeks a year, there is a major derailment some where in the lower 48 plus Alaska, and no one says a word

The derailments are not sensational enough for media coverage

I have always followed these stories on the forum and I find it curious , that so few , are commented on!  Every day of the week , 52 weeks a year, there is a major derailment some where in the lower 48 plus Alaska, and no one says a word

They don't all involve fire, hazardeous materials, and massive burn-offs close to residential areas, do they? What is major? Sure there may be more than 1,000 derailments in the U.S. each year, but most do not include the loss of life and/or major environmental contamination.

https://www.miamiherald.com/ne...rticle272504491.html

I have always followed these stories on the forum and I find it curious , that so few , are commented on!  Every day of the week , 52 weeks a year, there is a major derailment some where in the lower 48 plus Alaska, and no one says a word

Now just where/how did you come up with THAT information? A "derailment", maybe but, a "major derailment"? Not to mention "every day of the week"? Somehow, I just don't believe THAT!

Until we know the root cause, which will take the NTSA a while to figure out, it will be hard to figure out the why's and hows. You all see the news so you know that this of course turned into a political stink (and that is all I am gonna say, I promise). Was it because the railroad cut back on preventative maintenance? Would regulations for new braking systems have prevented this? If it was a hotbox, why didn't detectors pick it up and report it? None of that really can be answered at this point.  Right now there is a lot of background, we know some rail safety regulations were rolled back or delayed, we know railroads these days with PSR and the need to please Wall Street have slashed staffing, have cut back on a lot of things...but we don't know if any of that had a role here.

Personally what I question (and folks, this is just me, and my own limited background) was the response to it. Did they even know what was in those cars before deciding to do a burn? One of the impressions I got is they likely didn't when they made that decision, some of those are so toxic that I wondered why they did the 'limited burn'. I also question letting people back into their homes with that thing still spewing toxic stuff into the air, it reminds me a little bit too much of NYC after 9/11 and claiming the air in lower manhattan was safe not long after 9/11.

All I can do is add my hopes and prayers for the poor people affected by this, the responders and the like risking their lives there, and I hope that they make sure people affected can get follow on medical care and be monitored for the rest of their lives, like they did with 9/11 in NYC, hopefully prevent tragedy going down the road.

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