ROSEDALE, Md. -- Federal
investigators planned to spend the coming days piecing together what
caused a chemical-carrying CSX train to collide with a garbage truck,
derail and explode at a rail crossing in suburban Baltimore.
In the third serious derailment this month, a dozen or so rail cars —
at least one carrying hazardous materials — went off the tracks around 2
p.m. Tuesday in Rosedale, Md., a suburb east of Baltimore. Several rail
cars caught fire, sending a plume of black and gray smoke into the air
that could be seen for miles, and an explosion rattled homes at least a
half-mile away.
While local officials breathed a sigh of relief that only one person —
the garbage truck driver — was seriously injured and that the chemical
fire didn't pose a greater risk to nearby residents, some areas of
inquiry for investigators were beginning to take shape.
Robert Sumwalt of the National Transportation Safety Board said late
Tuesday that the collision occurred at a private crossing where the only
marking was a stop sign. He said it wasn't clear why the truck was
crossing the tracks or whether it was authorized to be there.
The truck driver, 50-year-old John J. Alban Jr., was in serious
condition Tuesday night at Maryland Shock Trauma, a hospital spokeswoman
said. Two CSX workers aboard weren't hurt.
A team of 15 NTSB investigators was on the scene and would likely remain there for up to a week, Sumwalt said.
Both the NTSB and the Federal Railroad Administration are
investigating Tuesday's crash of the 45-car train en route from Selkirk,
N.Y., to Waycross, Ga. It contained a variety of products from lumber
to printing paper.
Police also planned to investigate the circumstances that led to the
track collision, but it was not clear what, if any, charges the truck
driver or anyone would face, said Baltimore County spokeswoman Elise
Armacost.
Gary Sease, a spokesman for CSX Transportation Inc., said four of the
cars believed derailed carried terephthalic acid, which is used in the
production of plastics and polyester, among other things. He said it is
not listed as a hazardous material.
It was, however, the chemical that exploded as a result of the derailment, Sumwalt said.
A hazardous materials team responded, but Baltimore County Executive
Kevin Kamenetz said at a news conference that no toxic inhalants were
being released. Officials did not order an evacuation.
Toxic inhalation hazards are a worry when trains carrying hazardous
materials derail. They include chemicals like chlorine, which killed
nine people after a derailment of a Norfolk Southern train caused a
release of the toxic gas in South Carolina in 2005.
Following a November 2007 derailment involving a freight train
carrying hazardous materials near Baltimore's Camden Yards, CSX agreed
the following year to provide Maryland officials with real-time
information on shipments of toxic inhalation hazards. No such hazards
were present Tuesday.
By nightfall Tuesday, the hazmat team had left, meaning there was no
more danger posed from the chemicals in the rail car, Baltimore County
police Capt. Bruce Schultz said.
Dale Walston said he lives about a half-mile away and that he thought
he could smell chemicals after the explosion Tuesday.
"It shook my house pretty violently and knocked things off the shelves," he said in an email to The Associated Press.
The face of one warehouse near the train tracks was blown off.
Even hours after the blast, the thick plume of black smoke could be
seen for miles and had drifted and covered the eastern part of
Baltimore. Later, the smoke that was left had lightened considerably,
changing from black to gray, and Schultz announced early Wednesday that
the fire was called under control late Tuesday just before midnight. He
said CSX had moved unaffected cars away from the derailed cars and fire
department operations had been reduced to a fire watch.
An Amtrak spokeswoman said its Northeast Corridor passenger service was not affected.
CSX's Sease said in an email that one of the rail cars in Tuesday's
derailment was carrying sodium chlorate, which the Department of
Transportation classifies as a hazardous material. However, Hohman said
the chemical was not in either of the cars that were still burning into
the evening. The bleaching agent is used in making paper.
Nick Materer, an Oklahoma State University chemist, said sodium
chlorate, when combined with fuel, makes a more volatile mixture. "When
you mix them together and add fire, they go boom," he said in a phone
interview.
Materer said the chemical is usually shipped as a white powder but it
can also be in a liquid solution. Either way, he said, the fumes can
irritate the lungs if inhaled.
Exactly what triggered the explosion was being investigated, and
Hohman said firefighters told residents of about 70 nearby homes that
they could leave if they wanted to and shelter would be provided.
While one of the cars still burning late Tuesday was carrying
terephthalic acid, the substance used in making plastics, another was
carrying fluoroacetic acid, Hohman said. Although county officials
played down the health risks posed by the burning rail cars, the
National Institutes of Health website describes fluoroacetic acid as an
"extremely toxic" constituent of many poisonous plants that is used to
make products that kill rodents. It produces poisonous gases when
burned, according to the NIH.
Materer said the gases contain chlorinated organics. He was less
familiar with terephthalic acid but said it, too, contains chlorine.
"It just doesn't sound good," he said.
Kevin Lindemann, 29, a salesman for industrial pipe supplier
Baltimore Windustrial, near the tracks, said he and about 10 co-workers
felt the ground shake, ran to a window and saw several rail cars on
their sides and flames he estimated at 50 feet high.
"You could feel the heat as soon as you walked out the door," Lindemann said.
"We kind of panicked pretty quick," he said. "We didn't wait around
to see what was happening. So as soon as we saw the flames I took a
quick picture and got in my truck and drove away."
Everyone left the building and drove several blocks away. Then they
heard the explosion, five to 10 minutes after the derailment, he said.
"Even like three blocks away, it was loud. I mean, it just about took you to your knees," Lindemann said.
Derailments have done great damage before in Baltimore, a city with
countless train tracks. Twelve years ago was the derailment and chemical
fire in Baltimore's Howard Street tunnel. Rail cars burned for five
days underground in July 2001. Portions of downtown were closed and rail
traffic across the U.S. was affected for days.
Also hit by a serious derailment this month was Bridgeport, Conn. On
May 17, more than 70 people were injured when a commuter train went off
the tracks. The eastbound train from New York City derailed during
evening rush hour, came to a stop and was struck about 20 seconds later
by a westbound train. In Rockview, Mo., on Saturday, a cargo train crash
injured seven people and destroyed a highway overpass, which could take
a year to repair.
Despite the high-profile railroad accidents, the overall number of
such crashes has been declining industry wide and for CSX over the past
decade.
Last year was the safest year on record for the railroad industry,
according to the railroad administration. All train accidents are down
43 percent since 2003, and derailments have fallen 40 percent over the
same period, according to data provided by the administration. Freight
train derailments specifically are also down 40 percent.
Sumwalt said there were nearly 2,000 accidents at railroad crossings last year, leading to 300 fatalities.
In each of the past five years, CSX has reported more than 100 deaths
in accidents and incidents involving the railroad.
CSX, based in Jacksonville, Fla., operates over 21,000 miles of track in 23 eastern states and two Canadian provinces.
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