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West Point, Kentucky Fire Erupts At Chemical Train Derailment Site

BRUCE SCHREINER and DYLAN LOVAN   11/01/12 07:22 PM ET EDT  AP

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The blaze that authorities initially said would end in a couple of hours instead spewed flames and smoke from a derailed tanker car for a second day Thursday with no end in sight, as crews scrambled to prevent it from igniting railcars loaded with toxic chemicals nearby.

Hundreds of people have had to evacuate, including the entire town of West Point and some people from the outskirts of Louisville. The burning butadiene, a chemical commonly found in rubber used to make tires, can damage the central nervous and reproductive systems. Workers were hosing down other railcars nearby filled with another corrosive chemical, hydrogen fluoride, which can cause severe respiratory damage.

All the water used to keep those cars cool, however, raised fears that contaminated water could wash into the confluence of the Salt and Ohio rivers. The Environmental Protection Agency was monitoring water quality and quickly erected a dam to keep out contaminated water.

"This is as bad as it gets as far as a haz-mat incident, if it were to be released," said Art Smith, an emergency coordinator with the EPA.

Three workers were hospitalized after the blaze ignited while they used a torch Wednesday to try to separate derailed train cars.

One of the workers remained in critical condition. Another worker, a contracted consultant, was released on Thursday, said officials with Paducah & Louisville Railway, which was operating the train. The workers had been told the air was clear and they could use a cutting torch, said Gerald Gupton with P&L.

Asked if the workers who supplied those air measurements were responsible for the fire, Gupton replied, "Absolutely not. It was an accident."

When further pressed about who was responsible, he said, "I'm not prepared to answer that right now. The investigation is being conducted."

On Thursday, workers were siphoning styrene – another toxic chemical used in rubber – from one stricken railcar. Otherwise, the main concern and biggest threat of danger was the cars filled with hydrogen fluoride that were within about 10 feet of the burning car. Gupton said those cars would be carefully moved so that the chemical can be removed.

Officials had expected the fire to burn itself out within a couple of hours, but more than 24 hours later, it was unclear exactly how long it would burn.

"We can't get up and look in the hole and take any measurements with the conditions as they are," Gupton said.

Evacuated residents who had lined up at a P&L outreach center to receive financial assistance were left with uncertainty.

"I've never heard anything about how long it's going to be, I guess we're just going with the flow," said Casey Bynum, a West Point resident who had evacuated with her six children.

P&L Railway were reimbursing those forced from their homes for lodging, food, lost wages and other expenses. They can also receive $100 per day for adults and $50 for each child for each day they are displaced.

The train derailed on a line that runs between Paducah in western Kentucky and Louisville, which is home to rubber manufacturers and other chemical plants, most concentrated in the Rubbertown neighborhood.

The train derailed near Dixie Highway, a main corridor between Louisville and Fort Knox. Nine of the 13 derailed cars were carrying hazardous chemicals. The train was traveling from the company's headquarters in Paducah to its Louisville switching facility, said spokeswoman Bonnie Hackbarth. She said she did not know whether Louisville was the final destination for the chemical cars or if they were going elsewhere.

Records provided by the company show it reported a total of 13 derailments to the Federal Railroad Administration since 2008. No injuries, casualties or evacuations were reported, the chart showed.

CSX listed Paducah and Louisville Railroad as one of its 51 majority-owned subsidiaries included in its annual report to the Surface Transportation Board, an arm of the Department of Transportation that regulates railroad rates, services and transactions.

___

Associated Press writer Janet Cappiello in Louisville contributed to this report.

Also on HuffPost:

Loading Slideshow...
  • Rail cars are shown after a derailment Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, the Salt River and West Point, Ky. Emergency officials have evacuated a few dozen homes near a derailed train in southern Jefferson County over concerns of hazardous material leaks. The derailment is causing traffic jams in the area along Dixie Highway and officials are only allowing local traffic north of the intersection with US 60 intersection in Meade County. (AP Photo/The Courier-Journal, Michael Clevenger)

  • Lisa Johnson smokes outside with other residents of West Point, Ky., living within a mile-and-a-half radius of the site of a train derailment wait at a Red Cross shelter Wednesday, Oct. 31, 2012 at the Muldraugh Elementary School in Muldraugh, Ky., after being asked to evacuate. A Paducah & Louisville Railway train carrying hazardous chemicals derailed just after 6 a.m. EDT Monday and a leak of a potentially explosive material was contained, but authorities say three workers were severely burned in a fire that erupted while contractors were removing debris from the train today in southwest Louisville, Ky. (AP Photo/Brian Bohannon)

  • Residents of West Point, Ky., listen as Billy Ash, Mayor of West Point updates the situation as they wait at a Red Cross shelter Wednesday, Oct. 31, 2012 at the Muldraugh Elementary School in Muldraugh, Ky. A Paducah & Louisville Railway train carrying hazardous chemicals derailed just after 6 a.m. EDT Monday. A leak of a potentially explosive material was contained, but authorities say three workers were severely burned in a fire that erupted while contractors were removing debris from the train today in southwest Louisville, Kentucky. (AP Photo/Brian Bohannon)

  • Residents of West Point, Ky., living within a mile-and-a-half radius of the site of a train derailment wait at a Red Cross shelter Wednesday, Oct. 31, 2012 at the Muldraugh Elementary School in Muldraugh, Ky. A Paducah & Louisville Railway train carrying hazardous chemicals derailed just after 6 a.m. EDT Monday, A leak of a potentially explosive material was contained, but authorities say three workers were severely burned in a fire that erupted while contractors were removing debris from the train today in southwest Louisville, Kentucky. (AP Photo/Brian Bohannon)

  • Billy Ash, Mayor of West Point updates residents of West Point, Ky., living within a mile-and-a-half radius of the site of a train derailment as they wait at a Red Cross shelter Wednesday, Oct. 31, 2012 at the Muldraugh Elementary School in Muldraugh, Ky. A Paducah & Louisville Railway train carrying hazardous chemicals derailed just after 6 a.m. EDT Monday, A leak of a potentially explosive material was contained, but authorities say three workers were severely burned in a fire that erupted while contractors were removing debris from the train today in southwest Louisville, Kentucky. (AP Photo/Brian Bohannon)

  • Residents of West Point, Ky., living within a mile-and-a-half radius of the site of a train derailment, wait at a Red Cross shelter Wednesday, Oct. 31, 2012 at the Muldraugh Elementary School in Muldraugh, Ky. A Paducah & Louisville Railway train carrying hazardous chemicals derailed just after 6 a.m. EDT Monday, A leak of a potentially explosive material was contained, but authorities say three workers were severely burned in a fire that erupted while contractors were removing debris from the train today in southwest Louisville, Kentucky. (AP Photo/Brian Bohannon)

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The blaze that authorities initially said would end in a couple of hours instead spewed flames and smoke from a derailed tanker car for a second day Thursday with no end in sig...
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The blaze that authorities initially said would end in a couple of hours instead spewed flames and smoke from a derailed tanker car for a second day Thursday with no end in sig...
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11:58 AM on 11/07/2012
HazMat Experts and Firefighters petition Dow Chemical and Union Pacific for safe rail tank cars transporting gas chlorine. Secondary containment is a necessary improvement that must be implemented. See--PETITION C KIT for First Responders Comments.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jtobend
10:17 PM on 11/01/2012
OBAMA TRYING TO MAKE SURE KEYSTONE DOES NOT KILL US, AND KNOWS WE NEED EPA, AND MEASURES TO PROTECT THE PEOPLE THAT ARE THE HEART OF AMERICA
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oneman689
hard to see the picture from inside the frame
11:35 PM on 11/01/2012
Obama stalled Keystone for purely political poker chips. Warren Buffet's BNSF railroad is tooling up and hauling hundreds of trainloads of crude oil out of NW North Dakota - Oil that was supposed to be going into Keystone. The oil is transported on tank cars built by Obama's contributor union buddies in Chicago.

Rail is more dangerous as far as spillage than pipelines plus hundreds of trucks beat up the roads/highways delivering the oil to the rail terminals.
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jtobend
12:15 AM on 11/02/2012
INTERESTING INFO, BUT WHAT ABOUT AQUIFERS IN THE AREA, AND POTENTIAL UNDERGROUND CONTAMINATION...NOT CRITICAL..JUST UNSURE AND ASKING??
01:49 AM on 11/02/2012
Oil is currently America's #1 export. The Keystone Pipeline will shoot oil from Canada to the Port of Houston ...and of to China where it will be sold for more than it is sold in the US. With easy pipeline access to the port, oil produced anywhere along that pipeline will no longer be reasonably priced in the Midwest...but will escalate in price for Americans. The Keystone will make Oil Cos rich and cost American consumers plenty.
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oneman689
hard to see the picture from inside the frame
09:29 PM on 11/01/2012
This brings to mind the hazard that President Obama has accelerated. He stalled the TC crude oil pipeline...coincidentally his buddy Warrn Buffet (BNSF Railroad) has geared up and many terminals have been built when crude oil is loaded into trains and whole trainloads go to refineries. I know of at least six of these just in NW North Dakota. This is not a safe way to transport. Pipeline is much safer and more economical. One more thing...the tank cars...all new...are built by Obama's pals in Chicago.
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altheschrod
I'm pedaling hard.
10:09 PM on 11/01/2012
And I suppose the environmental hazard to the entire Mississippi is a negligible consideration (? To say nothing of the desirability of limiting the Gulf as an oil distribution point. N.Dakota is ideally located for crude and gasoline distribution to many industrial and city locations by transporters with vast experience. Furthermore, the Canadian shale oil need only go as far those dakota refineries
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oneman689
hard to see the picture from inside the frame
10:24 PM on 11/01/2012
altheschrod - I sure did not say anything about ignoring the Mississippi. The TC pipeline does not cross the Mississippi but it will cross the Missouri and Yellowstone which ultimately flow into the Mississippi. Great precautions are taken to prevent failure that would endanger the rivers -in addition there is equipment in place to limit the volume if there is a failure.

I know you mean well but there are a couple of things you may not know. Deals are in place for the TC pipeline to take on eastern Montana/western North Dakota crude. This transportation is desperately needed. North Dakota's production increases dramatically every month, recently becoming number two in the nation.

At present there is one refinery in North Dakota - The Tesoro Refinery located at Mandan. It is operating at capacity and does not produce enough to meet the needs of North Dakota. There is no room for Canadian oil at the Tesoro facility - they have more than they can handle.

Thank you for the civil exchange.
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bushbinlion
Methinks it is no journey...
09:03 PM on 11/01/2012
"The Environmental Protection Agency was monitoring water quality and quickly erected a dam to keep out contaminated water."

Thank goodness for these federal agencies that respond quickly during times of crisis. I wouldn't want the country to be without them, unlike some of the politicians running for office these days.
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OEM01
Only a fool follows blind
08:08 PM on 11/01/2012
Trains can carry some very nasty stuff.
07:41 PM on 11/01/2012
I live about an hour away, in southern Indiana. I was really surprised when I heard the news. They had said on TV that it was all fine and we just shrugged and went on with school/work. Later I hear about a fire and train and I think: is it out of state? Probably.
Yeahhh it wasn't. I was really confused but then I looked it up and it's freaky. That chemical is a cancer agent. Just what we need. More cancer.
Oh, and you people below who are writing 'stereotypes' about a whole state full of people with different opinions, beliefs, and lives. Get a life. Honestly. I live on a farm and I hate country music. First stereotype disproved.
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jtobend
10:18 PM on 11/01/2012
AMEN THAT FRIEND
05:47 PM on 11/01/2012
I always know when I read any article that mentions West Virginia and Kentucky, in particular, that the ignorant, pompous, insulting comments by those who know nothing about the people of those states will follow. What ever happened to the UNITED States? If the comments made in HuffPost are a mirror of the American people, we are indeed a nation on its way out.
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Lisa29
Thank GOD there IS a GOD 100% APBT lover
06:14 PM on 11/01/2012
Thank you.......I find the people that make the stupid remarks know nothing about what they're talking about.
06:31 PM on 11/01/2012
the UNITED STATES is lost to Mitt and his palls looking for states rights and control remember it is a republican montra small federal government and more power to the states
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OEM01
Only a fool follows blind
08:02 PM on 11/01/2012
ok that was random
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OEM01
Only a fool follows blind
08:22 PM on 11/01/2012
your spew there has like nothing at all to do with this article
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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05:17 PM on 11/01/2012
I live in Louisville and I find it really disturbing that this story has turned into something political. No matter how it started (whether human error or not) one man has 3rd degree burns over 90% of his body and the other two who are seriously injured are not stable as this story wants you to believe. Two others that were injured are in critical condition on the burn unit at University of Louisville Hospital. The last two of the five are in stable condition. I am sometimes ashamed at the amount of idiocy that some people show in comments over something that has NOTHING to do with politics.
06:33 PM on 11/01/2012
Come on it is simple profit above safty, dead coal miners thats ok as long as profit is good, 11 men dead and 22 injured on an oil rig in the name of profit who needs regulation not the righties not as long as it isnt them dieing
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gmjonn
Laughing at the Loopy Left
07:33 PM on 11/01/2012
Instead of laughing, I'm just going to shake my head,
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:57 PM on 11/01/2012
I think it is called business. Do you know any businesses no matter what that doesn't suffer deaths and injuries, Construction, Trucking or even in what ever field you are in? Without profits none of this country would work. As far as rightie's what does politics have to do with what danger there is in even walking down the street. You should live up to your bio and start thinking instead of echoing silly stuff trying to make a politic point. Mining, oil rig workers aren't even in the top ten most dangerous jobs both being the most regulated already..
07:29 PM on 11/01/2012
thanks for the update.i personally hope the damage is not very bad.the state and fed should be there to help.i hope the best for everyone there.
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slickmonkyz
07:39 PM on 11/01/2012
thinksoiam obviously cant read the spell check lol
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09:41 PM on 11/01/2012
It wasn't that were so much damage as much as the workers that were injured. They evacuted the area and moved nearby residents to some shelters and canceled classes for the schools by the site. The damage was contained to that area but the fumes from the butidine (sp) is what lead to the evacuation. It has been shown that inhaling it has caused cancer in some people. As far as helping the residents the local Red Cross has stepped up and of course local residents have also. I do not know about any state or federal agencies that have been mentioned. With the other disasters going on I'm sure this one ranks low on federal radar BUT for the people displaced and injured it doesn't. Just keep the families of the injured workers in your prayers please.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
04:39 PM on 11/01/2012
"a sharp, pungent, irritating odor". That's a mighty fine understatement of the toxicity of HF.
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CHOPINLIB358
Militant Liberal Veteran
04:33 PM on 11/01/2012
How do ya know that the tooth brush was invented in Kentucky ?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
irocker350
Be the person your dog thinks you are
09:31 PM on 11/01/2012
because if it had not been invented there it would be called a "teeth" brush
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CHOPINLIB358
Militant Liberal Veteran
10:50 PM on 11/01/2012
:) 
03:28 PM on 11/01/2012
That's the same fluoride they put in your drinking water.
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CHOPINLIB358
Militant Liberal Veteran
04:32 PM on 11/01/2012
They dont need no yankee stinking flouride in west point and muldraugh !! It's a libural conspitricy. And we wonder why Kentucky stays a RED state.. lol
05:52 PM on 11/01/2012
I'm sure the men who were burned, their families and all those suffering and moved out of their homes would think your comment hilarious.
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Molly D
12:26 AM on 11/02/2012
Nope. That would be sodium fluoride. Same as toothpaste. Hydrogen fluoride dissolves glass.
12:19 PM on 11/01/2012
Sure hope old Mitch isn't campaigning any where close to there,wouldn't want him to see how the people that he represents live.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
trishinpitt
No, your micro-bio is empty!
02:32 PM on 11/01/2012
Sadly, old Mitch has 4 years left of his term and is comfortably ignoring his consituents while he plays politics in Washington.
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CHOPINLIB358
Militant Liberal Veteran
04:34 PM on 11/01/2012
Ya dont have to worry about that.. I'm sure he steers clear of places like that and stays closer to lexington as much as possible.
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sonnym941
01:03 PM on 11/05/2012
Hmmmmmmmmmmm, why would he do that, when he lives in Louisville? But you are a liberal veteran....................so that explains it. I hoped you washed your foot first............mr. liberal vet............probably washed dishes in the mess haul most of your time in..........
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FedupMark
12:10 PM on 11/01/2012
Two important notes about this story. Obviously, the workers igniting the fire were not "highly trained". Any worker with the most basic safety training would not have used an open flame (cutting torch of any kind) around a leaking flammable gas. Second, hydrogen fluoride,HF, is not going to burn. Hydrogen fluoride is one of the most dangerous products around in that if released, the vapors spread very rapidly and will attack lungs and many could die of that. Also, HF gas will attack the eyes and in particular the corneas and can cause blindness. The evacuations were the right thing to do, and those firemen spraying the butadiene cars and the Hydrogen fluoride cars to slow down the burning of butadiene and prevent the overheating of the other cars are true heroes.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kenda524
0000
02:10 PM on 11/01/2012
cheap labor
06:35 PM on 11/01/2012
non union labor with no reguard to safty
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wbearl
Retired Manager Mechanical Operations
06:45 PM on 11/01/2012
I hate to rain on the parade of all the Pro Union people posting, but more than likely a private contractor named Hulcher was handling the accident. Hulcher specializes in Railroad Wrecks. Hulcher pays their employees better than the railroads do or for that matter than just about anyone and they aren't Union. Their employees are on call 24/7, getting only one weekend a month that they can leave their pager at work. I have known several Hulcher Employees and I also know that their turn over in employees is unbelievable. The pay is out of sight, over 6 figures a year, but there is no such thing as a family life or personal life and the hours are brutal.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
04:40 PM on 11/01/2012
Even in Kentucky it should be possible to get `pour on water' right.
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Lisa29
Thank GOD there IS a GOD 100% APBT lover
06:16 PM on 11/01/2012
Pour on water? What are you trying to say?
12:09 PM on 11/01/2012
Hey Senator Mitch, in the event of a disaster, what do we do?
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trishinpitt
No, your micro-bio is empty!
02:32 PM on 11/01/2012
Fillibuster!!!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rhjake
07:26 PM on 11/01/2012
Vote Obama out.
Kommonman
Blame it on Dyslexic fingers..next question
12:01 PM on 11/01/2012
Ah the wonders of modern technology...so very dangerous to us all...it is no wonder so many of the population are sick with chronic diseases all the time