EAST PALESTINE, Ohio (NewsNation) — Three days after the Norfolk Southern train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, on Feb. 3, 2023, officials — with the EPA’s blessing — burned 116,000 gallons of vinyl chloride into the region.
Now, for the first time since the incident, new data reveals just how far those toxins spread.
Within minutes, a mushroom-like cloud of toxins billowed into the atmosphere and smothered the area.
New research on federal precipitation and pollution data shows 16 states from Wisconsin to North Carolina to Maine were impacted by the hazardous emissions that burned in East Palestine.
NewsNation has been committed to covering the fallout of the East Palestine train derailment over the last year. Here are the most recent updates:
David Gay, a University of Wisconsin researcher and lead study author, said his research team detected some of the highest chloride levels they’ve ever recorded the week after the burn.
Gay and other researchers with the National Atmospheric Deposition Program, which has about 260 sites across the U.S. collecting rain and snow samples, analyzed the data and were shocked by the results.
“These were some of the highest, if not the highest, we had seen in the last 12 years,” Gay said. “That fire touched a lot of points in the Midwest and the Northeast. We’re all breathing the same atmosphere. That’s a take-home story.”
Gay confirmed it was because officials decided to burn 116,000 gallons of the vinyl chloride that researchers are detecting such high chloride levels in the atmosphere. Chloride levels were the highest in northern Pennsylvania and along the Canadian border there; however, Gay said research on how it impacted Canada was not available.
“When you combust vinyl chloride, the primary admission you get is chloride ion and hydrogen ion, which we measure as chloride ion and in our pH measurement. So yes, that chloride came from that combustion,” Gay told NewsNation.
Some 1,500 residents were told to evacuate following the crash. Fearing an explosion, officials decided to vent and burn five tank cars, releasing 116,000 gallons of the carcinogen vinyl chloride into the air. Later, a toxic plume of smoke smothered the region.
However, three days later, the EPA said it had not detected contaminants at “levels of concern” and gave the all-clear for residents to return.
Since then, residents of East Palestine have complained of multiple health problems, including rashes and sickness. They’ve also criticized the government for downplaying their concerns that their community is no longer safe to live in.
Several pieces of necessary information were not shared with state and local leaders who decided to vent and burn five tank cars after being advised by Norfolk Southern contractors at the scene of the crash that it was their only option.
“They were provided incomplete information to make a decision,” Homendy said.
An investigation by the NTSB found that Gov. Mike DeWine, East Palestine Fire Chief Keith Drabick and several other officials were told they had minutes to decide whether to vent the train cars or wait and risk an uncontrolled explosion.
“There was another option: Let it cool down,” she said.
The NTSB later showed the threat of explosion was diminished and that the tank cars were cooling when they decided to burn them.
Residents plagued with health issues
Initial Environmental Protection Agency and Norfolk Southern testing done at the derailment site showed the presence of dioxins, the most carcinogenic compounds on the planet, but officials did not test any of the residents’ health.
Independent testers who visited East Palestine examined the environment and people. Some tested the soil, others the water in local creeks and air filters in homes around the derailment site. The independent testing has shown evidence of toxins in the soil, air and water.
Residents have been diagnosed with presence of vinyl chloride in their blood and complained of respiratory issues.
The NTSB is expected to hold its final hearing on the derailment next week.