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BNSF TRAIN CARS CARRYING PAINT, OXYGEN AND LITHIUM BATTERIES 🚆🎨🔋⚗💥 DERAIL INTO MISSISSIPPI RIVER

37 Views· 04/28/23
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⁣Here's the important question: WHAT ARE (((THEY))) MIXING?!?

ANY CHEMISTS OUT THERE WORTH THE NAME...THIS IS WHERE YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE

Source: https://www.youtube.com/@livenowfox

A few train cars have derailed into the Mississippi River in Wisconsin, according to authorities. There appear to be no fatalities, but the extent of injuries are unknown.

https://lacrossetribune.com/ne....ws/local/multiple-tr

Kaitlin Nolan - excellent piece, by the way

Four BNSF railroad crew members were transported to a nearby hospital for medical examinations after a southbound freight train derailed in southwestern Wisconsin, sending some rail cars into the Mississippi River.

Residents of De Soto said it was the "loudest shriek they ever heard" when a BNSF Railway freight train derailed shortly after noon Thursday between De Soto and Ferryville in Crawford County.

The cause of the derailment is still unknown. Two locomotives and an unknown number of cars derailed on the eastern side of the river, a BNSF spokesperson said in a statement.

Crawford County Emergency Management Director Jim Hackett said the derailment poses no immediate threat to public safety.

Hackett said the derailed train cars contained paint, oxygen and lithium batteries.

"At this time, we're not concerned about any hazard to the public, the batteries have not gone into the water," he said.

A Vernon County hazmat team is on site in the event of a hazardous waste situation. If lithium is exposed to water, a rupture or explosion can occur.

Two of the freight train's three locomotives derailed and a diesel fuel leak from one of the locomotives has been "fairly contained" to the river bay, said Brandon Larson, director of Vernon County Emergency Management and Hazmat.

Larson's team has deployed absorbent booms to soak up the spillage.

Two cars holding painted floated south down the river. Hackett said boat crews were able to secure the rouge cars to the bank.

Nearly 30 state, local and public agencies responded to the incident. Hackett said the community response — many volunteer firefighters — was "quick" and "amazing."

First responders are expected to work through the night at the site. Officials said they do not know how long the clean up process will take.

BNSF is working to build "access ways" of rock and sand from Highway 35 to the railroad that runs parallel to the highway. Due to the waterway in between the railroad and the highway, a platform must be constructed so crews can access and remove the cars.

Private truck drivers contracting with BNSF have been hauling sand and rock from a quarry in Genoa to the accident location.

The cause of the derailment is under investigation, said BNSF spokesperson Lena Kent said. She did not immediately respond to a follow-up email inquiring about whether whether the derailment had caused any environmental contamination.

The Federal Railroad Administration, a division of the U.S. Department of Transportation that regulates safety across the nation's railroads, said it was sending a team to the site to gather information and help local emergency workers.

Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources spokesperson Katie Grant did not immediately respond to an email asking if the derailment has resulted in any environmental contamination.

U.S. Rep. Derrick Van Orden, who sits on the House of Representatives Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, said in a statement he was working with BNSF, the Federal Emergency Management Association, Wisconsin Emergency Management, the state and national Departments of Transportation and Crawford County officials to find out what occurred.

“My staff is traveling to the site, and Congressman Troy Nehls, who Chairs the Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee on Rail, has also made staff available to assist our team," Van Orden said. "We will continue to monitor the situation and determine next steps.”

Eileen Brown, who works at the Great River Roadhouse in De Soto, near where the derailment occurred, said, “We have flooding right now and it’s causing business to be a little slow so I’m kind of worried about what’s going on down there.”

I'm not doing this piece justice - check it out at the above URL - many images and a great story archive

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