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USDOT's Federal Railroad Administration Announces New Safety Initiative with a Focus on Hazardous Materials | US ...
Protecting Public Health and the Environment in the Wake of the Norfolk Southern Train Derailment and Chemical ...
Crews release toxic chemicals from derailed tankers in Ohio
By John Seewer & Patrick Orsagos
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Waste from Ohio derailment prompts health concerns up to 1,300 miles away
By Elizabeth Chuck, Halle Lukasiewicz & Gabe Gutierrez
Is LNG by rail safe?
By Shelby Webb
Michigan, Texas officials unaware Ohio contaminated soil, water, taken to their areas: 'We were sandbagged'
By Adam Sabes
Carnegie Mellon air quality data shows levels of 'potential concern' from Ohio derailment site
By Ryan Deto
Michigan injection well that took Ohio train waste has checkered past
By Garret M. Ellison
'Sound like Mickey Mouse': East Palestine residents' shock illnesses after derailment
By Dana Kennedy
Independent lab testing finds elevated level of chemical of concern in air near East Palestine, Ohio, train derailment
By Jen Christensen
Ohio train derailment: Federal interagency teams go door-to-door in East Palestine
By Sasha Pezenik & Morgan Winsor
East Palestine's record of devastating derailments
By Tyler Buchanan
East Palestine train derailment: Toxic waste removal restarts in Ohio town
By Bernd Debusmann Jr. & Bernd Debusmann
Train crew had little warning before Ohio wreck, probe finds
By John Seewer, Michael Rubinkam & Geoff Mulvihill
Did dioxins spread after the Ohio train derailment?
By Maddie Burakoff & Drew Costley
EPA orders Norfolk Southern to clean up toxic derailment
By John Seewer & Michael Rubinkam
Ohio derailment: CDC begins investigation of toxic train disaster
By Erika Edwards & Jesse Kirsch
It’s been more than a month since a freight train carrying hazardous chemicals derailed in Ohio. Here’s what’s happened since
By Holly Yan & Alisha Ebrahimji
Ohio toxic train disaster leads to more concerns in other states while scientists say chemical tests in East Palestine are unusually high
By Holly Yan, Celina Tebor & Jen Christensen
As crews remove contaminated soil and liquid from Ohio toxic train wreck site, concerns emerge about where it’s going
By Holly Yan, Artemis Moshtaghian & Nouran Salahieh
Texas and Michigan officials say they didn’t know water, soil from Ohio train wreck would be transported into their jurisdictions
By Nicki Brown, Ralph Ellis & Sara Smart
East Palestine residents worry rashes, headaches and other symptoms may be tied to chemicals from train crash
By Caroll Alvarado & Brenda Goodman
High levels of chemicals could pose long-term risks at Ohio train derailment site, researchers say
By Jen Christensen