The NPR Politics Podcast - Train Wreck: Political Sideshow Descends On Ohio Crash Site
Episode Date: February 27, 2023After a train derailed in rural Ohio, the community is concerned about the near- and long-term health impacts of the hazardous waste that the train was transporting. Top-level Biden administration off...icials, including EPA Administration Michael Reagan and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, and former president Donald Trump have all traveled to the area.This episode: political correspondent Susan Davis, White House correspondent Tamara Keith, and transportation correspondent David Schaper.This episode was produced by Elena Moore and Casey Morell. It was edited by Eric McDaniel. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi. Research and fact-checking by Devin Speak.Unlock access to this and other bonus content by supporting The NPR Politics Podcast+. Sign up via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Connect:Email the show at nprpolitics@npr.orgJoin the NPR Politics Podcast Facebook Group.Subscribe to the NPR Politics Newsletter.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Support for this podcast and the following message come from Autograph Collection Hotels,
with over 300 independent hotels around the world, each exactly like nothing else.
Autograph Collection is part of the Marriott Bonvoy portfolio of hotel brands.
Find the unforgettable at AutographCollection.com.
Hi, this is Kristen.
And this is Hayden.
And we're practicing riding bikes.
This podcast is recorded at 221 p.m. on Monday, February 27th.
Things may have changed by the time you hear it, but we'll still be out here.
Riding our bikes!
I do remember the first time I learned how to ride a bike.
You never forget that feeling. I have to say that I am so nervous that as my kids have been trying to learn how to ride their bikes,
I actually can't be anywhere near them.
Because it makes you too nervous they're going to fall.
It makes me too nervous that they're going to fall, that I'm going to impose my nervousness on them,
and therefore I go away.
I think they'll figure it out. I think they will.
Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast. I'm Susan Davis. I cover politics. I'm Tamara Keith.
I cover the White House. And David Shaper is here. He covers transportation for NPR. Hey, David.
Hi, guys. Thanks for having me.
So earlier this month, a freight train operated by Norfolk Southern that was carrying hazardous chemicals derailed near the town of East Palestine, Ohio, and caught fire.
A state of emergency was declared and the risks to the health of the community there has been a focus for federal and state officials.
David, this is not new in the news, but it's the first time we are discussing it on the podcast. So can you step back and tell us what's known about what caused this freight train to derail and how significant is the amount of
hazardous chemicals that has been exposed to the town? Well, the train derailed because of a
problem with an axle on a wheel set in one of the freight cars. So according to the National Transportation Safety Board,
the wheel bearings, this is a little more technical than you probably want it to be,
but were heating up and actually caught fire before the axle just failed in that car, which was
a 23rd car out of 150 on this train. Once the axle broke, couldn't stay on the rails, and it went off.
And about 38 other cars joined it in a big pileup.
And some of those cars were carrying hazardous materials, you know, kind of nasty chemicals
that exploded and caught fire.
Some of the tank cars were still contained, but they were heating up because of the fire
in the nearby cars.
And there was a lot of concern amongst the first responders there and the company that owns the
train that was running the train, Norfolk Southern. And so they actually did a controlled burn to
release some of the chemicals that they thought otherwise might explode and cause quite a
devastating explosion. I imagine with most environmental disasters, too, there's the short-term problem, but there's also long-term questions that we can't really
answer yet of what the effects could be over the course of a long period of time. Right. And that's
what a lot of folks are concerned about right now is, you know, now we're more than three weeks past
the date of the original derailment. And, you know, the cleanup continues and there's been a
lot of hazardous materials that have been rounded up and a lot of soil that has been taken out and even some
water from a nearby stream that has been removed from the area and shipped elsewhere.
A lot of this contaminated waste has to go somewhere. So it's going to go to
landfills and other places elsewhere.
But there's a lot of concern now about the shipping of those contaminated waste materials.
There's a lot of concern about where they're going to end up, and there's a lot of concern about what's still left behind and how long it might be there.
Tam, the president has been pretty clear that he puts the responsibility on the company, on Norfolk Southern, to pay for the cleanup effort.
How else has the administration responded to this? And we should note, it's also been subjected to a fair amount of criticism,
at least from its political opponents. A huge amount of criticism, arguing,
among other things, that President Biden should have gone there to East Palestine instead of,
for instance, going to Kiev, Ukraine. The White House has pushed back,
including the president, very hard on this, saying, no, this community hasn't been forgotten.
And in fact, the administration had people responding there on the ground within a couple
of hours of the derailment happening. That's what the president said on Friday.
And then additionally, the White House has been providing extensive timelines of all of their
involvement. You know, not much of it has been at the presidential level other than a few phone
calls to the governors saying that he would do anything that needed to be done, anything they asked.
But most of it has been cabinet-level officials and lower-level government agency heads and others doing the work on the ground, including, over this past weekend,
employees of the Environmental Protection Agency, FEMA, and the CDC went door to door doing health checks,
checking in on people in this community, giving them flyers and additional resources.
They had reached about 350 households by the end of the weekend, and they were aiming for 400
by the end of the day today. David, one of the reasons why I think that this story has gotten
so much attention is the visuals, the images of these huge plumes of black smoke coming over the town.
I mean, it looked like a bomb went off in East Palestine.
Can you give some perspective to what it's going to take to clean up something like this and how it might compare to other environmental disasters that people might remember, things like oil spills or other chemical disasters. Yeah, it's a pretty big task because it's, you know, like I said, there's 38 rail cars that actually went off the tracks.
Not all of them had toxic chemicals in them, but 11 of them did.
Now, some of those, they released and burned, so it went up into the air.
That was the vinyl chloride from some of these
tanker cars. And that's what caused the massive flames shooting up and the black smoke billowing
into the sky. And then the way it hung, just like this really menacing ceiling over the community,
was quite frightening for a lot of people. And even though the substances in the air dissipated
and air testing, even indoors, has been deemed safe by the EPA,
as well as state and local health officials who are on site,
there are a lot of people concerned about, you know, the soot that maybe landed on their cars and on their backyards
and all this material that has to be cleaned up and scraped up.
Meanwhile, the soil, there were chemicals that seeped into the soil,
so they're excavating in and around the rail derailment site.
In fact, they're going to actually have to move the tracks at some point
and basically, you know, scrape up and shovel up all of the dirt
that is underneath the rails themselves and then put them back.
So it's a major, major task that's going to take at least
months. And, you know, we could still be talking about this and that people may be still testing
the water and testing the air for years to come. David, I'm curious how the rail unions have
responded, because this is a group that has not only had tensions with the private companies that
run these railroads, but they've also had tensions of late with the Biden administration.
Right. You know, we went through this near strike in the fall a couple
of times, actually, where the Biden administration actually stepped in and imposed terms of a new
contract to keep the railroad workers from going on strike. And a lot of the unions were not
completely happy with that deal. And one of the big sticking points for the railroad unions has been that
railroads have been trimming and trimming back, cutting staff levels over the last maybe six to
eight years as they've gone to this new precision style of scheduling that makes them run more
efficiently with fewer employees. But what the unions say that has happened is that there are fewer employees across the board. So it's not just, you know, in certain levels of the operation that
are being replaced by, you know, technology, but it's also, you know, the amount of time people
have to do inspections. They used to have a couple of minutes to do each inspection, and now it's
down to under a minute for inspecting each rail car. They've been warning that some things might be falling through the cracks
in terms of safety inspections.
They say that something like this was bound to happen as a result.
All right, let's take a quick break,
and we'll talk more about the politics around this in a second.
This message comes from WISE, the app for doing things in other currencies.
Send, spend, or receive money internationally, and always get the real-time mid-market exchange rate with no hidden fees.
Download the Wise app today, or visit wise.com.
T's and C's apply.
Hey, it's Eric McDaniel, editor of our podcast, and I'm here to plug our latest bonus episode.
We talk about what happens behind
the scenes of a secret presidential trip. The two reporters who were chosen were allowed to tell
in person their spouse and one editor. Plus, we answer a few questions from listeners about
working on Air Force One. I can't overstate how not like normal airplane food this is.
That's in our bonus episode out now.
Bonus episodes are how we say thanks to our NPR Politics Plus supporters.
If that's not you, it could be.
Details at the link in our episode notes.
And we're back.
And this is just the latest in a number of high-profile crises
that the Transportation Department has faced under Secretary Pete Buttigieg, thinking of things like the FAA communications meltdown that affected air
travel, ongoing problems with the supply chain, especially during the pandemic. You know, Tam,
for Buttigieg, as sort of his own selfish aspiring politician reasons, he has had a very rocky tenure
as the Transportation Secretary. Well, and I think part of the reason it has been rocky is because the transportation secretary is not front of mind, right?
But because Pete Buttigieg ran for president in the last cycle, is seen as someone who is widely thought to have a political future or at least want to have a political future, he has become a target of a
lot of political ire from Republicans. The point is that Secretary Buttigieg has gotten a huge
amount of attention over this train derailment, more so than, for instance, the EPA administrator, Michael Regan, who actually visited East Palestine a few days before
Buttigieg did. So it is this very interesting thing where there is this person with political
ambition. And because of that, or maybe not, but he's getting an outsized amount of attention about
it. Yeah, I mean, Republicans, particularly in conservative
media outlets, this has been a huge topic of focus. Donald Trump, who is running again in 2024,
did make a point to visit East Palestine. And Republicans seem to be trying to make a point
here about, you know, these are the forgotten people, right? Like that's this is the argument
Trump has made that Joe Biden doesn't care about the kind of people that live here. And the subtext
is that East Palestine is, you know, mainly a white working class kind of place. I don't think it's subtext.
I think it's text. I think they've been very clear that they are criticizing President Biden
for not caring about these people because they are white working class and rural and Republican.
David, from your perspective,
is there a bigger dot to connect here about the substance, about the infrastructure questions
here? I mean, one of the facts that I read that kind of blew my mind is that there's at least
1,000 train derailments a year in this country. This is not a unique event, although the scale
of this one is obviously more impactful. I mean, the country does seem to have an infrastructure problem.
And while Congress has recently passed a new law and there's more money going out into the system, this is something that people in your arena have been talking about for decades, that the country's infrastructure is weak and getting weaker.
The 1,000 or so derailments that we have each year, that's actually fallen in the last decade or so.
It used to be upwards of 2,000 or more. And most of these are very minor. Sometimes they're in
rail yards themselves where a train goes off the track. We have a lot of incidents in this country
of cars that are stuck on tracks at grade crossings that get hit by trains. But yeah,
there are derailments. There is a lot of rail infrastructure. The thing
about the railroad infrastructure in this country is, unlike our highways, these rails are almost
all privately owned. And therefore, it is up to the railroads themselves to maintain them
and to maintain their rail cars, their stock of rail cars that is rolling over them, the
locomotives that are pulling the trains and pushing the trains. And so a lot of it is in private hands. And the Federal Railroad Administration
has the authority to supervise, if you will, and inspect the track and make sure that the railroads
are doing what they say that they're doing. But that's an agency that's also stretched pretty thin
in terms of their own inspection authority.
There is federal money coming in the infrastructure law that was passed last year that will help
support some rail projects, freight rail projects across the country. And I think most of the money
that the federal government wants to spend is to actually ensure that the rails themselves are safer, that trains
stay on the track. But the significant amount of the money that the federal government is putting
under the infrastructure law into rail is going to be to support passenger rail. Now, a lot of
Amtrak trains outside of the Northeast Corridor run almost completely on freight rail tracks. So
there is going to be some
investment that will help the freight railroads because it's also helping the trains that Amtrak
is running on those tracks. But it remains to be seen. I mean, this investment is just starting
and we don't know how soon a lot of the money is going to go out and how long these projects
are going to take. So it may be a while before we see significant improvements to the rail infrastructure across the country. And I should note House Republicans are already
indicating that they plan to have hearings over this train derailment. So I'm sure we'll have
more to say about it in the future. David, thank you so much for joining the pod today.
Oh, it's my pleasure.
I'm Susan Davis. I cover politics.
I'm Tamara Keith. I cover the White House.
And thanks for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.