tree68I would suspect it would be more like an easement than a taking.
I read his intent slightly different from what it appears you may have. Notice he states "property value"
Current property owners located within an (proposed) "evac zone" have remedies that Blue Streak is proposing be forfeited. Unless existing residents are compensated for this proposed forfeiture, doesn't that basically amount to seizure?
More to the point, the effect that loss of rights will have on the value of the property thusly compromised.
EuclidThis would amount to a broad seizure of property value from property owners and gifting it to the railroads. On what grounds would this be justified?
I would suspect it would be more like an easement than a taking. I interpret the intent as making sure that the purchaser understands that there is a railroad there. We've seen too many stories about people who buy near railroad crossings (airports are another favorite) and then complain about the noise.
If you have power lines running on or near your property, odds are there's an easement involved which allows the utility to access the pole line for whatever purposes may arise.
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
blue streak 1 Hve one more item that needs the federal legislation. Require all real estate transactions within 1000 feet of any rail line hauling Haz Mat to have a mandated separate disclosure that the property is within a possible Haz Mat derailment location. For all active and idle rail lines that may be reactivated. EDIT: If buyer closes anyway punative damages will not be awardable.
Hve one more item that needs the federal legislation. Require all real estate transactions within 1000 feet of any rail line hauling Haz Mat to have a mandated separate disclosure that the property is within a possible Haz Mat derailment location. For all active and idle rail lines that may be reactivated.
EDIT: If buyer closes anyway punative damages will not be awardable.
I think we will see this play out in some form regarding this East Palestine wreck. I would estimate that every property owner in that town has lost at least half of their property equity.
blue streak 1Hve one more item that needs the federal legislation. Require all real estate transactions within 1000 feet of any rail line hauling Haz Mat to have a mandated separate disclosure that the property is within a possible Haz Mat derailment location. For all active and idle rail lines that may be reactivated. EDIT: If buyer closes anyway punative damages will not be awardable.
My house in Maryland is 1/2 mile from CSX's Old Main Line
My condo in Florida is 2/3 mile from the FEC's Bowden Yard and 5.6 miles from CSX's A Line.
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
duplicaaaaaaaated
EuclidGovernor Shapiro of Pennsylvania stated there were safer options available. What options was he referring to?
Consider this question: Say you had a derailment that put ten contiguous tank car loads of vinyl chloride on the ground in random positions, but not leaking or breached. What would be the procedure of recovering those loaded tank cars along with cleaning up the rest of the wreck?
IMHO one of the immediate things is going to be to move and align the cars so the pressure-relief valves are above liquid level -- there are some techniques including flat-jacking that might accomplish this reasonably quickly without risk of additional damage or 'overshoot' before the relief valves can function correctly -- and then as much of the access piping and valves can be reached without risk of the car moving or rolling unexpectedly (including as it gets lighter during unloading).
You'd then connect purgeable hoses to appropriate positions on the car. I would have to check the piping on the car to determine if it would allow safe transfer, and this would likely be a source of damage in any foreseeable wreck bad enough to put ten cars on the ground 'in random positions', but there may be a 'siphon' connection in the dome that could be used to connect safely at the top of the dome. You would then extract the contents of the car with pressurized dry nitrogen or similar inert gas (CO2 might work in this case) into a suitable tank -- here' a Hulcher-like contractor could provide tank swap-bodies on a suitable offroad chassis that could traverse rough terrain to reach a suitable loading position and attitude. The recovered vinyl chloride might then be re-transferred to auitable road or rail tanks located a safe distance from the accident site.
Overmod BaltACD While not directly railroad related - now Chocolate seems to be HAZMAT Almost has to be a process-steam accident from the description. But -- without knowing the specific enthalpy of cocoa powder -- I'd bet it would sustain a critical-mixture deflagration as well as, say, flour dust would. Or confectioner's sugar... (I might add that I've seen sugar used as a critical fuel ingredient in rocket fuel...) But now it may be time for the Government to bring up that molasses is a proven hazmat -- many were killed by it in Boston.
BaltACD While not directly railroad related - now Chocolate seems to be HAZMAT
Almost has to be a process-steam accident from the description. But -- without knowing the specific enthalpy of cocoa powder -- I'd bet it would sustain a critical-mixture deflagration as well as, say, flour dust would. Or confectioner's sugar...
(I might add that I've seen sugar used as a critical fuel ingredient in rocket fuel...)
But now it may be time for the Government to bring up that molasses is a proven hazmat -- many were killed by it in Boston.
Imperial Sugar at Port Wentworth, GA (outside Savannah) blew up in February 2008 killing 14.
The missing are down to five - one lucky soul found alive in the rubble overnight.
Gas has been mentioned in several stories I've seen.
The possibility of dust can't be discounted - it's levelled more than a few grain elevators.
Get your chocolate bunnies while you can.
BaltACDWhile not directly railroad related - now Chocolate seems to be HAZMAT
While not directly railroad related - now Chocolate seems to be HAZMAT
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2023/03/25/pennsylvania-chocolate-factory-explosion-5-dead-6-missing/11541640002/
blue streak 1 Euclid Prior to the post above by Reading467, I had not realized that the vinyl chloride car that was experiencing rising temperature was far removed from the other four cars that were not increasing in temperature. That is an incorrect statement. Please look at this link and scroll down to the picture. All 5 cars were together. That is cars 26 - 30. The challenges of East Palestine's toxic waste cleanup : NPR
Euclid Prior to the post above by Reading467, I had not realized that the vinyl chloride car that was experiencing rising temperature was far removed from the other four cars that were not increasing in temperature.
Prior to the post above by Reading467, I had not realized that the vinyl chloride car that was experiencing rising temperature was far removed from the other four cars that were not increasing in temperature.
That is an incorrect statement. Please look at this link and scroll down to the picture. All 5 cars were together. That is cars 26 - 30.
The challenges of East Palestine's toxic waste cleanup : NPR
They weren't all blocked together according to USEPA: https://www.epa.gov/system/files/documents/2023-02/TRAIN%2032N%20-%20EAST%20PALESTINE%20-%20derail%20list%20Norfolk%20Southern%20document.pdf
First four were Lines 28-31 and the fifth Line 55. Lines 25-63 all appear to have burned or been affected by nearby fires. Remember the Line #'s include the locomotives.
I haven't seen a report listing the specific car that they were concerned about exploding.
What did Mark Twain say in his comparison of law and sausages??
Overmod jeffhergert Reading both, they're going to have to install a whole lot of detectors. I would dearly love to know where both these bills got their common language and common emphasis on items not germane to the safety issue at hand. Something pointedly missing that in my opinion should not have been is formalization of the tracking between detectors, most specifically to detect unusual profiles of temperature rise or developing acoustic signature -- that's much more important than guaranteeing two-man crews, or getting rid of an apparently hated abbreviated pre-departure inspection protocol, or avoiding stopping key trains on crossings.
jeffhergert Reading both, they're going to have to install a whole lot of detectors.
I would dearly love to know where both these bills got their common language and common emphasis on items not germane to the safety issue at hand. Something pointedly missing that in my opinion should not have been is formalization of the tracking between detectors, most specifically to detect unusual profiles of temperature rise or developing acoustic signature -- that's much more important than guaranteeing two-man crews, or getting rid of an apparently hated abbreviated pre-departure inspection protocol, or avoiding stopping key trains on crossings.
Overmod -
A couple days late, but -
Regarding the common language and emphasis, I would not at all be surprised that any number of congressional offices have at hand "boiler plate" issues and texts that fit the agendas of the current office holders. Particularly in areas related not only to their committee assignments but their regional concerns and hobbyhorses as well. When an event happens the staffers hop to it, dust off past bills and proposals and slap together portions of new ones paragraphs at a time. "Hey, Sandy, this one's related - kinda - let's throw it in. Maybe it'll stick this time around."
Attuvian John
Regarding the overhead photo of the wreck from the article posted above, at this link:
https://www.npr.org/2023/03/03/1160481769/east-palestine-derailment-toxic-waste-cleanup
Does the photo show the scene before or after the controlled burn?
EuclidBut I have read news reports in which others have implied as opinion that the purpose of burning all five cars instead of just the one overheating car was to speed up the line reopening.
The thing to watch for in the docket, when it is made available, is the sequence of events concerning the NS responder who was threatened when he tried to become an incident commander. If the decision to execute the (probably botched, but we shall see) controlled breach was made subsequent to that... chickens, prepare to engage roost.
ns145 Overmod Another thing that is going to require very careful commentary: note the position of the 'five' vinyl-chloride cars in the train (one being over 20 cars away from the other four) yet all five of them were subjected to controlled release simultaneously. Which of these cars was suffering the pressure runaway? I thought at the time that NS might have rushed the controlled release on all 5 vinyl chloride tank cars to avoid a "Weyauwega" type scenario where their primary mainline to the East Coast would be out of service for weeks. I remember at the time of the Weyauwega derailment in 1996 that the fires and evacuation seemed to just go on and on forever. From a practical standpoint, the country could do without the Wisconsin Central's mainline for 2 weeks. Two weeks or more without NS' primary route to the East Coast could have been pretty brutal to already struggling supply chains.
Overmod Another thing that is going to require very careful commentary: note the position of the 'five' vinyl-chloride cars in the train (one being over 20 cars away from the other four) yet all five of them were subjected to controlled release simultaneously. Which of these cars was suffering the pressure runaway?
Another thing that is going to require very careful commentary: note the position of the 'five' vinyl-chloride cars in the train (one being over 20 cars away from the other four) yet all five of them were subjected to controlled release simultaneously. Which of these cars was suffering the pressure runaway?
I thought at the time that NS might have rushed the controlled release on all 5 vinyl chloride tank cars to avoid a "Weyauwega" type scenario where their primary mainline to the East Coast would be out of service for weeks. I remember at the time of the Weyauwega derailment in 1996 that the fires and evacuation seemed to just go on and on forever. From a practical standpoint, the country could do without the Wisconsin Central's mainline for 2 weeks. Two weeks or more without NS' primary route to the East Coast could have been pretty brutal to already struggling supply chains.
Mentioning Weyauwega reminded me of the Miamisburg accident in 1986, which resulted in the foundation of OHSET and (as I recall) calls for better and more complete communication of information on hazardous material in consists.
IIRC, the Nazi's attempted to blow up the fill at PRR's Horsehoe Curve during WWII because of the huge effect that it would have had on the US war effort (Operation Pastorius). A prolonged service outage at East Palestine could have had a very similar effect a hundred+ miles west on the same ex-PRR mainline. If there is an info trail that leads investigators to this particular "train of thought" having occurred at NS and without any backing from the Federal government, the outcome certainly wouldn't be good for NS. And any backroom backing from the Federal government wouldn't be good for anyone in the Administration.
Anyway if anyone needs some background info on the Weyauwega derailment, given that it happened nearly 30 years ago, there is a nice summary on Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weyauwega,_Wisconsin,_derailment.
blue streak 1Well what a lot of posters here have suspected. NTSB saying pressure relief valves seem to not have functioned properly.
The important detail here is going to involve the behavior of the specific pressure relief on the car suffering the polymerization. One early report said the PRD was 'not functioning'; another made reference to the rising scream of a relief valve subjected to a mass flow in excess of its nominal capacity -- the latter being one of the nightmare scenarios for vinyl chloride under pressure.
blue streak 1 Well what a lot of posters here have suspected. NTSB saying pressure relief valves seem to not have functioned properly. However more test of the valves will be needed, RRD23MR005.aspx (ntsb.gov)
Well what a lot of posters here have suspected. NTSB saying pressure relief valves seem to not have functioned properly. However more test of the valves will be needed,
RRD23MR005.aspx (ntsb.gov)
Thought I saw something about plastic covers melting, which may have hindered the valves operation.
BaltACD The article states that only 20 minutes of inward video was available - 15 minutes before the incident and 5 minutes after because the engine had been returned to service and and most of the video had been over written. On CSX when a incident happens, the Road Foremen of Engines is notified and is expected to respond and download all appropriate data concerning trainhandling as well as videos.
The article states that only 20 minutes of inward video was available - 15 minutes before the incident and 5 minutes after because the engine had been returned to service and and most of the video had been over written. On CSX when a incident happens, the Road Foremen of Engines is notified and is expected to respond and download all appropriate data concerning trainhandling as well as videos.
But they didn't HAVE inward-facing cameras at that time, did they?
Inward-facing cameras raise privacy concerns. Those privacy concerns are overridden by the need to investigate accidents, but the policy should be tailored to support the need to investigate by minimizing the invasion of privacy. Anyone who has a DriveCam in their company vehicle understands this - at BNSF DriveCams only save 15 SECONDS before (and 5 seconds after) a triggering event.
In this case 15 minutes before and 5 minutes after the incident is more than enough time to determine whether the crew contributed to the incident or its aftermath. The ranting and raving of politicians looking to score points by attacking others is par for the course, but is unrelated to safety.
Dan
Speaking for myself, not my employer
jeffhergertReading both, they're going to have to install a whole lot of detectors.
If what is reported in the linked article is factual - NS procedures in the immediate aftermath of the derailment are at big variance to the procedures that were in effect on CSX at the time I retired in 2016.
On CSX the Conductor was supposed to provide Train Documents to first responders upon their arrival. Part of the Train Documents was a Product Data Sheet for each of the HAZMAT commodities that the train contains as well as identification of which cars contain which HAZMAT by car initial and number.
I have no idea what NS procedures are!
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2023/03/22/senators-hear-from-norfolk-southern-ntsb-derailment-ohio/11492652002/
There's a discrepancy between the listing on the photo (Creditied to the EPA) in the NPR report and the pdf "Train 32N- East Palestine Derail list", which is on the EPA page dedicated to this wreck. On the list, RACX 51629 was carrying Dipropylene Glycol. In the photo, it's listed as carrying Vinyl Chloride (VC). The 5th car of VC was farther back in the consist (car 53 on line 55 of the pdf). Also, in the photo, some of the chemical names of the cars following GATX 95098 were incomplete, but that could've been a space issue.
The first four VC cars, TILX 402025 thru GATX 95098, vented VC through their Pressure Relief Devices during the initial fire. The product did ignite, but outside of the cars. The closest car that were placarded for combustibles or flammables was SHPX 211226. The status of that car was listed as unknown on the report.
Two covered hoppers of Polyethylene, roughly 100 feet on the ground in front of the VC block , also caught fire.
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