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DESCRIPTION:Register in advance for this 
 meeting:\nhttps://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/NTFHXHa6StG_al1M4xQ6PA 
 \n\n\n1/18 JFEPRW Panel:  The Struggle Continues To Defend East Palestine 
 Residents & Workers\nAfter nearly two years, the residents and workers of 
 East Palestine are still being poisoned, without healthcare and waiting for 
 funding to move out of their contaminated homes. This panel will look at 
 their struggle, the fight against Norfolk Southern and the efforts to 
 defend railroad workers and other communities around the country.\nAlso 
 there will be a discussion of plans for the 2nd annvivery and the fight to 
 get the new government to implement the\n Stafford Act on the weekend of 
 Feb 1 & 2.\nSpeakers For Panel:\nChris Albright, Resident & Member Of LIUNA 
 1058\nJeff Kurtz, BNSF BLET Engineer ,  Retired Iowa State Leg Director  & 
 RWU \nVina Colley, National Nuclear Workers for Justice/OSHA EPA, Pres 
 P.R.E.S.S./EEOICP Claimant Worker-National \nAdvocate/Downwinder, President 
 of Portsmouth/Piketon Residents for Environmental Safety and Security 
 (PRESS) \nJami Rae Wallace, East Palestine Resident & Unity Council\nChris 
 Silvera, Preident Of IBT 808\nIan Resident of East 
 Palestine\n\nhttps://www.justiceforeastpalestineresidentsandworkers.com/\n\nYou 
 are invited to a Zoom meeting. \nWhen: Jan 18, 2025 02:00 PM Pacific Time 
 (US and Canada)/4PM CST/5PM EST\n\nRegister in advance for this 
 meeting:\nhttps://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/NTFHXHa6StG_al1M4xQ6PA 
 \nAfter registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing 
 information about joining the meeting.\n\nThe Checkered Past of the 
 Contractor Monitoring the Air in East Palestine\nCTEH has been cited by 
 lawmakers for ‘releasing findings defending the corporate interests that 
 employ 
 them.’\nhttps://prospect.org/environment/2023-03-03-cteh-contractor-air-monitoring-east-palestine/?fbclid=IwY2xjawHSlNlleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHVrdYVCSx6iSZFd0fMDFuv0m2FkNQwVHw8AjZxqbj92UuXBh5RYZ59wlFQ_aem_tSgFf3osf92ms29jvEDgmA\n\nBY 
 DAVID DAYEN \nMARCH 3, 2023\n\nGENE J. PUSKAR/AP PHOTO\nA black plume and 
 fireball rise over East Palestine, Ohio, as a result of a controlled 
 detonation of a portion of the derailed Norfolk Southern freight train, 
 February 6, 2023.\n\nA contractor for Norfolk Southern that is conducting 
 air quality monitoring in East Palestine, Ohio, has a controversial history 
 of what critics have described as inaccurate testing tilted toward the 
 corporations that hire it. The company has been the subject of several 
 lawsuits over its conduct, and members of Congress have warned corporations 
 not to hire the firm in the past.\n\nThe Center for Toxicology and 
 Environmental Health (CTEH) has a name that might sound like a state or 
 federal agency, but in reality it is a private, for-profit corporation that 
 has been present after hundreds of ecological disasters—from 9/11 to 
 Hurricane Katrina to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill to COVID-19. Norfolk 
 Southern has hired them on at least two other occasions, and they have done 
 work for other rail giants, including one job in 2012 that led to an $18.5 
 million settlement with two cleanup workers who were burned in a 
 fire.\n\nThree years ago, CTEH hooked up with an “environmental 
 solutions” giant, Montrose Environmental Group, in a private 
 equity–funded merger. Montrose has engaged in numerous acquisitions over 
 the past year, rolling up both the emergency environmental response space 
 and the market for corporate and government consulting on environmental 
 matters.\n\nMore from David Dayen\n\n\nThe use of a controversial 
 contractor comes amid continued reports of sickness in the area around the 
 derailment. The Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes Division, which 
 represents 3,000 Norfolk Southern workers, sent a letter to Secretary of 
 Transportation Pete Buttigieg on Wednesday, explaining that union members 
 sent to do cleanup at the site were coming down with migraines and nausea. 
 Leaders of other unions met with Buttigieg this week to deliver the same 
 message.\n\nResidents and workers near the site, both in Ohio and 
 Pennsylvania, have spoken about similar ailments; several have received a 
 clinical diagnosis of “acute bronchitis due to chemical fumes.” 
 Contamination fears among residents have been rising.\n\nOfficially, the 
 Environmental Protection Agency has reported no unusual detections of 
 contaminants in the Ohio River, the air around East Palestine, or in 
 screened homes. But residents have indicated that the bulk of the 
 monitoring is being conducted by CTEH, which makes their track record 
 relevant.\n\nARKANSAS-BASED CTEH has engaged in thousands of what they call 
 “projects” across the country, including 77 in Ohio. Formed in 1997, 
 CTEH claims to “help companies, governments, and communities prepare for, 
 respond to, and recover from threats to their environment and 
 people.”\n\nHazards unleashed by East Palestine derailment are ‘the 
 worst I’ve ever seen,’ toxicologist 
 says\nhttps://www.unionprogress.com/2024/09/18/hazards-unleashed-by-east-palestine-derailment-are-the-worst-ive-ever-seen-toxicologist-says/\n\nLast 
 year, toxicologist George Thompson began raising an alarm about the hazards 
 created by the Norfolk Southern train derailment.\nThe situation is worse 
 than officials have indicated, he said. The chemicals unleashed by the 
 disaster created a stew of dangerous agents with the potential to reach 
 much farther than the immediate area in and around the Ohio town of East 
 Palestine. People in Pittsburgh, 50 miles southeast, should be concerned. 
 So should people in Washington, D.C. In fact, after studying weather 
 models, Thompson estimated the toxic fallout from the train crash could 
 cover more than 126,000 square miles.\nDespite Thompson’s experience — 
 he’s now retired after working as a toxicologist for more than five 
 decades — few people knew of his warnings. That’s changing.\nThompson 
 will present his detailed report at two Ohio town hall meetings next week. 
 The first begins Saturday, Sept. 28, at 1:30 p.m. at the Nazarene Church in 
 East Palestine. That will be followed at 5:30 p.m. by another presentation 
 at the Columbiana Arts Theater in Columbiana. The meetings are free and 
 open to the public.\nIn addition, Thompson’s information will be detailed 
 in an affidavit he hopes will be admitted into a final hearing Wednesday, 
 Sept. 25, before a federal judge in Youngstown, Ohio, who will decide 
 whether to approve Norfolk Southern’s $600 million class action 
 settlement offer.\nThompson’s findings may surprise people who’ve been 
 paying only casual attention to the disaster and its aftermath. Indeed, the 
 report is at odds with the message from the Environmental Protection 
 Agency, which has maintained that residents face no danger from 
 contaminated drinking water, soil or air. (The EPA has not responded to a 
 request for comment.) But his information comes as little surprise to many 
 of those affected by the derailment. They say they’ve known all along 
 that something wasn’t right.\nThompson’s concerns began as he sat in 
 his home in Sussex County, New Jersey, and watched TV images of the black 
 smoke rising over East Palestine 20 months ago, when officials 
 intentionally burned tons of dangerous chemicals in damaged railcars. 
 Thompson wondered about the agents carried aloft in that roiling mass of 
 ash and soot.\nA few days later, when government officials told residents 
 they could safely return to their homes, Thompson thought, “That can’t 
 be true.”\nSo he went to his computer and found on the Norfolk Southern 
 website a description of the contents of the damaged rail cars. The 
 “manifest,” as it is known, indicates 52 cars were involved in the 
 derailment.\nThose cars contained 24 different chemicals and products — 
 from seemingly harmless products such as flour, frozen vegetables and 
 paraffin wax to chemicals with names that sound ominous, such as vinyl 
 chloride, diethylene glycol and ethylhexyl acrylate.\nEight of the derailed 
 cars contained cancer-causing chemicals, Thompson said, although news 
 reports focused on only one: vinyl chloride.\n“Then I asked, ‘What 
 happens when you burn the contents of these cars?’” he said.\nFor more 
 than three decades, Thompson ran a company that specialized in hazardous 
 materials management and health and safety compliance. He holds a doctorate 
 in toxicology and pharmacology from Oregon State University and has written 
 21 books on hazardous chemicals. In addition, he has acted as an expert 
 witness in 56 lawsuits. But he said he was not prepared for what he found 
 when he examined the effects of combustion on the chemicals involved in the 
 East Palestine derailment.\n“Frankly, I was a bit stunned,” he 
 said.\nBurning the eight cancer-causing chemicals in East Palestine 
 generated even more cancer-causing agents, he said. Thompson identified a 
 total of 119. Exposure could cause up to 21 different types of 
 cancers.\n“I’ve been a toxicologist for 55 years, and this is the worst 
 event I’ve ever seen,” he said. “And I’m talking about worldwide. 
 None are as dangerous.”\n📷Toxicologist George Thompson.\nCancer 
 isn’t the only potential problem. The chemical “stew” created that 
 day, he said, can cause dozens of other health issues, including seizures, 
 memory loss, mood and behavioral changes, joint pain, a tingling in the 
 mouth, tooth pain, bloody stools and hair loss. This list closely matches 
 the symptoms that a number of residents have complained about since the 
 derailment.\nThompson estimated up to 8.5 million pounds of chemicals were 
 burned during and after the derailment. He’s basing this number on the 
 200,000-pound capacity of each car that Norfolk Southern said was emptied 
 during the intentional burning, as well as the capacity of those cars that 
 were listed on the Norfolk Southern site as “impinged.”\nThe chemicals 
 created and released by the fires in East Palestine on Feb. 3 and Feb. 6, 
 2023, attached themselves to ash and became airborne, Thompson said. How 
 far did those particles travel?\n“A cloud of 8½ million pounds of dust 
 isn’t all going to fall out in the first 5 miles or 20 miles,” Thompson 
 said. “Fine particles will go further, and if they get caught up in 
 moisture — rain or snow — it’ll come down in high 
 concentrations.”\nThompson used a HYSPLIT trajectory model to determine 
 where the particles from the East Palestine fires traveled. HYSPLIT, 
 according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, is “one 
 of the most extensively used atmospheric transport and dispersion models in 
 the atmospheric sciences community.”\nThe plume created by the initial 
 fire on Feb. 3 first headed southeast toward Pittsburgh, Thompson said. By 
 10 p.m. the following day, it had expanded to the northeast, as far as Lake 
 Erie and Lake Ontario. This plume spread across parts of New York State and 
 southern Canada through Sunday, Feb. 5.\nThe plume created by the Feb. 6 
 intentional burn reached farther. It created three separate plumes, 
 Thompson said. One drifted across northern West Virginia, Virginia, central 
 Pennsylvania and into Maryland and Washington, D.C. Another headed over New 
 York state, northeastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey, and western Vermont. 
 The northernmost plume crossed eastern Ohio and Lake Erie and drifted into 
 southern Canada.\nThompson estimated the affected area to be as large as 
 126,000 square miles in at least eight states. That figure doesn’t 
 include the parts of Canada that Thompson said also were affected.\nOne of 
 the most concerning aspects of the disaster is that residents were exposed 
 to a slew of hazardous chemicals in a single incident. Little is known 
 about this type of exposure, Thompson said. Safe limits of exposure are 
 based on studies of single chemicals, not dozens of agents. What happens 
 when a population is bombarded with hundreds of hazardous chemicals and 
 substances simultaneously, even if the level of each is below the 
 established safe limits?\n“We don’t know,” Thompson said. “Nobody 
 has ever studied a fire with the high temperatures seen in East Palestine 
 and the number of chemicals and products involved.”\nThompson is most 
 concerned that those toxic agents would react together in a way to increase 
 the hazards to people exposed.\n“When I was growing up, a lot of people 
 smoked,” he said. “Almost all smokers drank. When you smoke, it affects 
 the lungs. When you drink, it affects the liver. When you smoke and drink 
 together, your incidence of cancer quadruples. The combination makes it 
 many times worse.”\nIn many ways, the situation in East Palestine is 
 similar to that in New York City after the terrorist attacks that brought 
 down the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, he said. About 3,000 people 
 died in the initial attacks. The World Trade Center Health program says 
 that since the attacks, exposure to the dust, smoke, debris and trauma has 
 claimed more than 4,000 lives. Another 71,000 have been diagnosed with 
 physical and mental health conditions.\n“This is absolutely 
 unprecedented,” Thompson said. “The science of  toxicology and medicine 
 has no way to account for the hazards or risks associated with simultaneous 
 exposure to hundreds of chemicals. It’s never been researched. It’s not 
 in the medical literature. We don’t know how to interpret 
 it.”\nThompson’s concern is that the chemical stew will cause diseases 
 that won’t be realized or diagnosed for another 10 to 20 years. He says 
 Norfolk Southern should fund an East Palestine Health Program that 
 functions in much the same way as the World Trade Center Health Program, 
 which provides screening and treatment for a list of 9/11-related illnesses 
 and conditions. The East Palestine version of this program, he said, should 
 offer free enrollment to anyone in the exposure area for the next 30 
 years.\n“There is still much research that needs to be done to fully 
 understand the long-term effects of this apocalypse,” he 
 said.\n***\nThompson presented his report to a dozen residents gathered in 
 Darlington, Pennsylvania, in an early August live stream report by Status 
 Coup News. Residents nodded their heads when they heard of Thompson’s 
 findings, then discussed how the information lined up with their own 
 experiences. A Pennsylvania resident living 16 miles from the derailment 
 site described a chlorine smell the night of the train crash. Afterward, 
 she developed a sore throat and rashes.\nThompson advised the residents to 
 keep a journal of their symptoms, both physical and mental, and get a 
 thorough physical exam.\nOther residents who’ve become aware of 
 Thompson’s findings say the news confirms their suspicions.\n“It’s 
 what common sense has told me all along,” said Christian Graves, who 
 lives in Unity Township, about 1.2 miles from the derailment. “It’s in 
 more scientific detail, but I knew nothing good would come of the 
 derailment. I’ve been sitting here thinking, ‘What is wrong with all 
 these people pushing the ‘everything is fine’ 
 narrative?’’”\nResidents had already been informed — in less 
 technical terms — about the potential dangers resulting from 
 environmental disasters like the one in East Palestine. “But it came in 
 bits and pieces,” Graves said.\nMore than a year ago, for example, 
 Marilyn Leistner, who served as the last mayor of Times Beach, Missouri, 
 traveled to East Palestine and delivered a stark warning about the dangers 
 residents could be facing. In 1983, the EPA evacuated Times Beach after a 
 dioxin contamination, then bought out residents and demolished the 
 town.\nFormer residents of Love Canal, a neighborhood in Niagara Falls, New 
 York, also reached out to the people in the East Palestine area. 
 Long-buried toxic wastes were discovered in Love Canal in the 1970s. The 
 result was one of the nation’s most appalling environmental 
 disasters.\nThompson’s report raises residents’ level of frustration 
 with agencies tasked with keeping people informed. It’s been a problem 
 from the beginning, said Jess Conard, who lives in East Palestine with her 
 husband and three children.\n“We all heard from EPA officials that the 
 smell was not toxic,” Conard said. “That could have been the first 
 indication that we are not being fully informed. We know those chemicals 
 are toxic. Every day we find more information that just confirms our 
 intuition that something is not right. We are not getting all the 
 information. And I will not consent to continue getting this type of 
 treatment in my community.”\nThis constant release of new information 
 “reopens the wounds and reopens that trauma” of the derailment and, she 
 said, proves exhausting, because it forces residents to adjust their 
 choices based on the revelations.\n“As a mom, I have to make decisions 
 for myself as well as my family, for our kids, our pets, and it’s hard to 
 do that when you don’t have all the information,” Conard 
 said.\nChristina Siceloff of South Beaver Township, Pennsylvania, already 
 had some familiarity with the chemicals involved in the disaster. She’s 
 part of a community of locals known as Creek Rangers who document evidence 
 of chemical contamination in Sulphur and Leslie runs, two waterways that 
 flow through East Palestine.\nAfter spending time in and near the creek, 
 Siceloff experienced a number of symptoms – tremors, rashes, headaches, a 
 metallic taste in her mouth, and burning in her nose and throat. And 
 “brain fog,” which other residents have experienced.\n“You just feel 
 like you’re walking around, and you know what’s going on in the world, 
 but you feel like you’re in a cloud,” she said. “You’d be driving 
 ’round, and you’d be aware but you don’t know how you got to where 
 you are.”\nShe heard Thompson give a report about his findings this past 
 summer, and said she’s grateful for his work.\n“I’ve talked to George 
 Thompson on the phone about us being in the creek, and he really seems to 
 care,” she said. “He was concerned for us. I told him the things 
 we’ve experienced healthwise, and I feel like he’s really looking out 
 for everyone.”\nChris Albright, who lives a few blocks from the 
 derailment, is concerned that so much information is becoming available 
 after a deadline to sign on to a $600 million class action settlement with 
 Norfolk Southern. That deadline passed in August.\nLawyers who negotiated 
 the settlement said last week that most residents within the agreement’s 
 20-mile radius signed up for the settlement, despite concerns that 
 residents were required to give up their right to sue in the future if they 
 develop cancer or other serious health issues.\nA federal judge in 
 Youngstown is scheduled to hear evidence whether to approve the settlement 
 next Wednesday.\n“They’re making a judgment on this settlement, and 
 they don’t have all the information,” Albright said. “There are so 
 many things they don’t know about. It’s really going to screw us 
 over.”\n https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2025/01/15/18872266.php
SUMMARY:JFEPRW Panel: The Struggle Continues To Defend East Palestine Residents & Workers
LOCATION:Online
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2025/01/15/18872266.php
DTSTART:20250118T220000Z
DTEND:20250119T000000Z
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