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-Short Attention Span Theater-
East Palestine resident says whistleblower is 'tip of the iceberg' for disaster response 'cover-up'
2024-05-18
[FoxBusinessNews] EPA disputing whistleblower’s claims that mistakes were made in train derailment response

East Palestine, Ohio, residents are expressing frustration after learning that the emergency response to the toxic train derailment last year was riddled with mistakes.

"We're just hanging in there. It's all we can do," East Palestine local Linda Murphy said on "The Bottom Line" Thursday.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is disputing whistleblower claims of mistakes and "no confidence" in early data collected from the site where a Norfolk-Southern train hauling caustic materials derailed along the Pennsylvania-Ohio border.

A person who said he helped craft the technology and interpret data from advanced radiological sensors on a high-tech EPA plane used to survey the damage and take hazmat readings told The Associated Press the aircraft was enlisted too late. In turn, the whistleblower told the outlet, it may have been unnecessary to burn off toxic vinyl chloride from five rail cars in a controlled release.

"My understanding is [the plane] was supposed to be here and collect hundreds of hours worth of data, and it didn't do that. It didn't collect the data where it was supposed to, when it was supposed to. The whole thing was a fail," Murphy said. "I think that this has been a cover-up."

In a lengthy response to a Fox News Digital inquiry, the EPA pushed back on the allegations, saying whistleblower characterizations of the plane's response are "false," adding weather conditions prevented the plane from promptly surveying the location.

"That sort of information that they're giving people, it's very disheartening," Murphy responded. "I'm so elated that he has come forward. And hopefully this is the tip of the iceberg and we're going to start getting some truth, because we certainly haven't been getting it up until this point."

Since the disaster, the agency said it has collected 28,000 air samples and that, in the time since residents were allowed back to their homes, there have not been "sustained chemicals of concern found in the air." The agency added it will continue to honor public records requests and be transparent in its response to the tragedy.

Ohio Republican Gov. Mike DeWine's office said that when it comes to whistleblowers, anyone with time-sensitive and pertinent information has been asked repeatedly to come forward, including in the immediate aftermath of the Norfolk-Southern spill.

However, East Palestine residents remain skeptical of the EPA’s defense and worried over potential health impacts from the controlled burn.

Related:
East Palestine: 2024-05-15 Whistleblower's chilling claims about East Palestine train derailment
East Palestine: 2024-04-10 Norfolk Southern to Pay $600 Million to Settle Ohio Train Derailment Lawsuit
East Palestine: 2024-04-05 The Ruling Class Screwed Over Manufacturing Towns Like East Palestine Long Before A Train Derailed
Posted by:Skidmark

#3  "sustained chemicals of concern found in the air."

There is your Lawyerly Denial. Yes, there were "chemicals of concern" (aka nasty stuff) but we only detected them when the wind was from a certain direction, so it was more of an on and off sort of thing. Definitely not sustained.
Posted by: SteveS   2024-05-18 19:00  

#2  weather conditions prevented the plane from promptly surveying the location.

In other words, 'We didn't fail, the weather prevented us from doing it'.

At least it wasn't the fault of climate change.
Posted by: Bobby   2024-05-18 17:18  

#1  Not sure I would whistleblow to DeWine’s office or the EPA. I would try JD Vance at this point.
Posted by: Super Hose   2024-05-18 13:18  

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