House Republicans are pushing forward with several inquiries into the Biden administration’s response to the Feb. 3 Norfolk Southern train derailment and subsequent chemical spill in East Palestine, Ohio.
Graves is chairman of the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, while Nehls chairs that panel’s Subcommittee on Railroads, Pipelines, and Hazardous Materials.
While the EPA has since deemed the air and water to be safe, the lawmakers noted that residents in the affected area “continue to report noxious odors, pollutants in the water and soil” and are still concerned about the long-term effects of the leaked chemicals.
“Further, questions have arisen regarding the decision to conduct the controlled burn of hazardous chemicals versus employing other, potentially safer alternatives,” the congressmen wrote.
Questions on Capitol Hill
The inquiry is the latest in a spree of oversight activity by Republicans in the House and Senate.House Energy and Commerce Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.) and Rep. Bill Johnson (R-Ohio), who represents the district that includes East Palestine, also wrote to the EPA chief, seeking answers about the agency’s response to the toxic derailment.
While DOT declined to comment on the investigation, it pointed to the secretary’s “alarm” that the committee had referred to the NTSB as being part of the department in its letter.
White House Responds
President Joe Biden has also faced criticism over his response to the crisis, including over the timing of his trip last week to Ukraine and subsequent confirmation on Feb. 24 that he has no plans to visit East Palestine.“That was the biggest slap in the face,” East Palestine Mayor Trent Conaway told Fox News on Feb. 20. “That tells you right now he doesn’t care about us. He can send every agency he wants to, but I found that out this morning in one of the briefings that he was in Ukraine giving millions of dollars away to people over there and not to us, and I’m furious.”
“At the president’s direction, the Environmental Protection Agency, FEMA [Federal Emergency Management Agency], and CDC [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] went door-to-door this weekend to personally check in on each family in East Palestine, provide flyers with additional resources, and conduct health surveys,” a White House official told The Epoch Times in an emailed statement.
Noting that the agencies had been on track to reach more than 400 families by the end of the weekend, the official also stressed that the EPA and Transportation Department had arrived on the scene of the derailment within two hours of their receiving notification of the incident and “quickly got to work holding the rail company accountable, containing the damage, and monitoring for environmental impacts.”
The White House also credited the president for reaching out to Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine and Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro after the crash to offer federal assistance and keeping elected officials updated on response efforts.
“At Governor DeWine’s request and President Biden’s direction, federal teams have continued to arrive in East Palestine—investigating the cause of the derailment, making Norfolk Southern clean up its mess and reimburse families, conducting public health screenings, monitoring the air and water, and screening over 550 homes,” the official said. “The administration also continues to call on Congress to pass commonsense rail safety measures, like increasing maximum fines for safety violations and strengthening rules governing high-hazardous shipments.”