Federal investigators say they will determine the cause of last year鈥檚 fiery Norfolk Southern derailment in eastern Ohio at a June hearing in East Palestine.
The National Transportation Safety Board that it will hold the hearing at East Palestine High School on June 25 to approve the findings of its investigation. That will be nearly 17 months after the Feb. 3, 2023, derailment near the Ohio-Pennsylvania border that prompted evacuations and left residents with about that may develop because of the chemicals that spilled and burned.
This will be the second time the full NTSB visits the town of about 5,000 people after holding investigative hearings there last summer.
鈥淭he NTSB is returning to East Palestine for our final board meeting for the same reasons we went last summer: Because the communities most affected by this tragedy deserve to hear our findings in-person and in real-time,鈥 NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy said.
from the derailment is though Environmental Protection Agency officials said it may wrap up this summer if no additional contamination is found in the latest tests being conducted in the area. The government and railroad have reassured residents that their air and water are safe, but some doubt the test results because they don鈥檛 think enough testing has been done.
Republican lawmakers in Congress have said they want to wait until after the final NTSB report is released before considering any rail safety reforms even though they appeared to have bipartisan support. A bill that would require federal standards for trackside detectors that spot mechanical problems, additional inspections and two-person crews on freight trains has .
The NTSB said last spring in its that the derailment was likely caused by an overheating bearing on one of the railcars. Three detectors showed the bearing starting to heat up as the train approached East Palestine, but it didn鈥檛 get hot enough to trigger an alert until it passed the final detector, and then there wasn鈥檛 enough time for the crew to stop the train before it derailed.
An assortment of toxic chemicals spilled and caught fire after 38 cars piled up off the tracks. A few days later, officials decided to five tank cars of vinyl chloride, which is used to make plastic, and burn the chemical because they worried the cars might explode.