Weeks after the train derailment carrying hazardous chemicals in Ohio, an analysis shows that residents could be subject to a range of long-term health complications after finding nine air pollutants at higher-than-normal levels.
EPA Response
A spokesperson for the EPA told The Epoch Times on Friday that its “24/7 air monitoring data continues to show that exposure levels of the 79 monitored chemicals are below levels of concern,” referring to chemicals that would present short-term adverse health impacts.The analyses Friday “assume a lifetime of exposure, which is constant exposure over approximately 70 years,” said the agency spokesperson, adding that the EPA doesn’t anticipate such chemicals to remain elevated “for anywhere that long.”
“We are committed to staying in East Palestine and will continue to monitor the air inside and outside of homes to ensure that these levels remain safe over time,” it said.
Some locals in East Palestine have complained of various adverse health symptoms, including rashes, nausea, vomiting, and headaches. Animals have been impacted, too, as the Ohio Department of Natural Resources said Thursday that thousands of small fish were found dead in East Palestine after the derailment and release of the chemicals on board.
“We can’t say whether these levels are causing the current symptoms,” Chiu said. The EPA “would want to definitely make sure that these higher levels that are detected would be reduced before they left and declared everything cleaned up,” he told the paper.
Following the Feb. 3 derailment, officials intentionally released and burned toxic vinyl chloride from the rail cars, sending a massive cloud of black smoke into the sky that could be seen for miles around and was likened to a mushroom cloud caused by a nuclear weapon. The burn triggered questions about the health effects that could potentially befall the residents of East Palestine.
At the time, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine said the release and burning of chemicals was needed to avoid a potentially catastrophic explosion that may have sent shrapnel in every direction. Days after an evacuation was ordered, officials allowed residents to return to the village.
The EPA has ordered Norfolk Southern, the operator of the train, to conduct a cleanup of the chemicals from the water and soil around the derailment site.
The Epoch Times has contacted the EPA for comment on the analysis.