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FRA 25-05
Contact: Steve Kulm
or Warren Flatau, Tel.: (202) 493-6024
Wednesday, October 05, 2005
Federal Railroad Administration Urges Safer Shipments of Time-Sensitive
Hazardous Materials by Rail
Railroads, manufacturers, refiners, and businesses that ship or receive
hazardous materials by rail should immediately improve procedures for tracking
the movement of time-sensitive shipments, according to a Safety Advisory
distributed by the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) today.
“Anyone involved in shipping hazardous materials must take the necessary steps
to ensure that time-sensitive products are properly tracked from origin to final
destination,” said FRA Administrator Joseph H. Boardman. “There is no margin for
error when it comes to shipping hazardous materials. Everyone involved in this
process has to get it right.”
The Safety Advisory requests that all railroads conform to a recently updated
railroad industry standard that identifies a list of 20-day and 30-day
time-sensitive hazardous materials, and requires specific actions to speed up
movement of such cars if they are delayed in transit. The advisory also
emphasizes that all railroad employees who handle such shipments be aware of,
and clearly understand, the procedures.
In addition, hazardous materials shippers and end users should closely monitor
the products they order and/or transport by increasing communication between one
another and the railroad as shipments are in-transit to ensure all parties are
aware of their location and expected delivery date, the FRA said.
The Safety Advisory is a direct result of an incident that occurred in
Cincinnati, Ohio this August, Boardman said. A tank car carrying the
time-sensitive chemical styrene was not delivered to its final destination, and
instead apparently sat idle on the same railroad for seven months. As a result,
the stabilizing agent in the styrene expired causing a reaction that ultimately
led to an unintended release of the product and a precautionary evacuation of
the surrounding area. The FRA’s investigation of this incident is ongoing,
Boardman added.
There are more than 1.7 million shipments of hazardous materials by rail each
year, and almost all arrive at their destination safely and without incident.
FRA said the Safety Advisory will further reduce the likelihood of an event
similar to the Cincinnati incident.
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