Sunday, March 5, 2023

FOCUS: Dan Rather and Elliot Kirschner | Not Just An Accident

 


 

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A plume rose over East Palestine, Ohio, after a catastrophic train car derailment leaked toxins into the environment. (photo: Gene J. Puskar/AP)
FOCUS: Dan Rather and Elliot Kirschner | Not Just An Accident
Dan Rather and Elliot Kirschner, Steady
Excerpt: "The East Palestine, Ohio, derailment of a freight train carrying hazardous materials has become headline news because of a potent mixture of health, politics, and the health of our politics. But might something good come from it? " 

Fhe East Palestine, Ohio, derailment of a freight train carrying hazardous materials has become headline news because of a potent mixture of health, politics, and the health of our politics. But might something good come from it?

We need to find out everything that happened. And that starts with an investigation into the practices and safety records of the freight rail company Norfolk Southern, whose train derailed.

Those who live in the immediate proximity of the spilled toxic chemicals, which were then burned, have every right to be worried about their health and safety and those of their families. They understandably want and deserve answers from their government. So far, health officials have tried to reassure the public that the long-term effects will be minimal.

In the immediate aftermath of an event like this, it is important that the scene is the domain of experts and not politicians looking for photo-ops. We need action, not aggrandizement, and progress, not preening. But it is also important for people to feel that their pain and suffering are being seen. So there is always a balancing act for high-ranking government officials over when and how they should show up.

In a highly politically conservative place like East Palestine, and in a highly partisan moment like the present, it was to be expected that any perceived missteps by the Biden administration would produce a heated backlash. Republicans looking for openings for a line of political attack on Biden (and on Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg, who many see as a rising star in the Democratic Party) have predictably pounced on the idea that the administration is not paying sufficient attention to these small-town Ohio residents. To be fair, if the roles were reversed, Democrats would have likely done something similar. That’s how it works when you’re the one in charge and something goes wrong.

But there are deeper currents involved beyond just the bickering over optics and attention. There is the matter of the event itself and its larger lessons.

By almost all definitions, it was an “accident,” in that no one on the train or elsewhere deliberately caused the derailment. Yet what does an “accident” really mean?

You sometimes hear that “there is no such thing as an accident.” The thinking behind that saying is that almost everything we call an accident is the result of a breakdown, by a person or a machine or a system, that could have been prevented. If a distracted driver, faulty wiring, or a lack of communication causes something to go horribly wrong, is it fair to call it an accident? In the case of the train derailment, investigators are honing in on a warning for an overheated wheel bearing as a possible cause.

When you look at “accidents” through this vantage point, you see that most of them could have been prevented. And the job of preventing future disasters often falls to a politically charged mechanism: government regulations. Regulations come in many forms, but part of what they are meant to do is shape the rules that promote safety — whether that of people or the environment. Regulations, by definition, limit what businesses and individuals can do. And restrictions are inherently unpopular with those who are being restricted.

Businesses, such as rail companies, airlines, manufacturers, and basically any big company or industry with clout, spend incredible sums of money lobbying against regulations. They argue that many of the limits they face are onerous, capricious, and ill-conceived and diminish innovation. And sometimes they are correct.

How to balance risk with other metrics like economic output, employment, etc., is part of a complicated calculus between the rule makers and those whose activities are constrained. But there is also a general recognition that without any regulations, our food wouldn’t be safe to eat, our medicine safe to take, our roads safe to drive, or our buildings safe to house us. There would be more widespread child labor and dangerous workplaces. There would be more trains going off the track, both literally and figuratively.

And here is where the derailment in East Palestine can be seen in a complicated light. The Republican Party, in particular, has railed (no pun intended) against regulations for decades. The Trump administration actually rolled back freight train regulation and boasted about it. Did that move make the Ohio derailment more likely? The Washington Post recently concluded it didn't, but that could change as we learn more.

Regardless, this disaster shines a spotlight on the power of big business to set the rules, including in ways that can directly impact the health and safety of Americans and people around the world. And increasingly, there are questions about what that means, including among some Republicans. Can this incident galvanize positive change? Can the politics around it help actually break political stalemates on rail safety?

column by two progressive op-ed writers in The Washington Post answered those questions in the affirmative under the headline, “5 good points the right is making about the Ohio train disaster.” The argument from Paul Waldman and Greg Sargent is framed by the following:

“As some Republicans are trying to demonstrate a more populist, less reflexively anti-government bent, this provides an opportunity for them to show that they mean what they say. After all, it’s easy for Republicans to pretend to be anti-corporate by criticizing a company for being 'woke.' It’s something else entirely to support government action that challenges unfettered corporate power and genuinely improves people’s lives. This is where the new breed of conservative populism often seems to wither.

But this disaster has prompted some on the right to step up and embrace big ideas that could be the basis of both a new perspective on the relationship between business and government and cooperation with Democrats.”

There is always a chance all this ends up being another case of mostly empty rhetoric, that the impetus for meaningful reforms in freight rail will falter, especially once the corporate lobbying effort swings into full gear. But sometimes a singular moment coalesces circumstances for actual change. It’s easy to be cynical, but we can hope for something better.

All the politicians who really care about blue collar rail workers and the safety of communities like East Palestine should step up and push for reform. Here’s a chance to prove you mean what you say. The goal should be better rules, not bitter partisanship. If we descend once more into a quagmire of the latter, it should be clear why.


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FOCUS: Ohio Train Disaster: Plan to Incinerate Soil Is 'Horrifying', Says Expert

 

 

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A view of the site of the derailment site in East Palestine, Ohio. (photo: Alan Freed/Reuters)
FOCUS: Ohio Train Disaster: Plan to Incinerate Soil Is 'Horrifying', Says Expert
Tom Perkins, Guardian UK
Perkins writes: "Soil is being sent to a nearby incinerator with a history of clean air violations, raising fears the chemicals will be redistributed."   


Soil is being sent to a nearby incinerator with a history of clean air violations, raising fears the chemicals will be redistributed


Contaminated soil from the site around the East Palestine train wreck in Ohio is being sent to a nearby incinerator with a history of clean air violations, raising fears that the chemicals being removed from the ground will be redistributed across the region.

The new plan is “horrifying”, said Kyla Bennett, a former Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) official now with the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility non-profit. She is one among a number of public health advocates and local residents who have slammed Norfolk Southern and state and federal officials over the decision.

“Why on earth would you take this already dramatically overburdened community and ship this stuff a few miles away only to have it deposited right back where it came from?” Bennett asked.

Incinerating the soil is especially risky because some of the contaminants that residents and independent chemical experts fear is in the waste, like dioxins and PFAS, haven’t been tested for by the EPA, and they do not incinerate easily, or cannot be incinerated.

A Norfolk Southern train carrying vinyl chloride used to produce PVC plastic derailed on 3 February in the small industrial town of 4,700 people, located at the edge of the Appalachian hills in Ohio.

As the fire threatened to ignite tankers full of the chemical days later, emergency responders, fearing a major explosion, conducted a controlled burn of the substance.

Environmental researchers say the combustion of vinyl chloride almost certainly created dioxins, a highly toxic chemical that can remain in the environment for years. However, the EPA has resisted calls to test for it, and the agency removed from its website the results of its in-depth soil analyses, so it’s unclear which chemicals are in the soil.

Chemicals like dioxins must be incinerated at extremely high temperatures, and the combustion of some substances can be difficult or unpredictable during incineration, said Carsten Prasse, an environmental health professor at Johns Hopkins University who focuses on risk science. Those issues are generating uncertainty about the plan’s safety.

“My concern is basically do we just translate the issue that’s right now in the soil into another medium by blowing it into the air?” he asked. “That is not necessarily the case, but I’m not sure that we can exclude this at this point, so it is an issue.”

The ground also likely contains PFAS, informally called “forever chemicals” because they do not naturally break down, and no human-made method to destroy the compounds has been fully developed.

“The effectiveness of incineration to destroy PFAS compounds and the tendency for formation of fluorinated or mixed halogenated organic byproducts is not well understood,” the EPA has written.

Still, it is putting residents’ health at risk by sending potentially PFAS-contaminated soil to the incinerator, Bennett said.

“The most important thing in my mind is the human health and health of the environment, so right now that should be priority number one, and things like this fly in the face of basic human decency and science,” she added.

The incinerator, owned by Heritage Thermal Services, is already burning PFAS waste from the Department of Defense, which prompted a federal lawsuit from a coalition of local environmental groups. Heritage also faced an investigation and enforcement action from the EPA in 2015 after officials determined the facility had violated the Clean Air Act nearly 200 times between 2010 and 2014.

Among the chemicals that had been released at dangerous levels was dioxin, and among the issues cited by the EPA were a failure by Heritage to maintain a required minimum temperature, raising questions about whether the facility can handle more dioxin and PFAS waste.

The facility has also recorded air quality violations in eight of the last 12 quarters, EPA records show.

Local environmental groups have been fighting with Heritage over its emissions since the incinerator was built in the 1990s, said Amanda Kiger, director of River Valley Organizing. She has been assisting residents in East Palestine about 15 miles north, but lives near the incinerator in East Liverpool, both of which are in Columbiana county.

“[Environmental officials] are just dumping more shit on Columbiana county,” Kiger said. “They say, ‘We already poisoned them so it doesn’t matter if we poison them more.’”

In a statement to news outlets, Heritage said it is “providing support at the site in accordance with the cleanup plan approved by government agencies with jurisdiction over the response to the event”.

East Palestine’s waste disposal has raised fresh questions about the disposal of toxic substances. Some of the waste is being sent to incinerators around Ohio, while about 1.5m gallons of wastewater is being injected into wells deep into the Earth’s crust near Houston. Deep wells can leak waste into groundwater, and are thought to cause earthquakes.

Meanwhile, some contaminated soil was shipped to a Michigan landfill with a history of discharging PFAS into a public sewer system. A state-of-the-art incinerator in Arkansas is likely equipped to more safely handle the East Palestine waste, Kiger said.

“But how do you say, ‘Not in my backyard – give it to someone else’?” she asked. “They got us fighting each other.”


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Faith in numbers: Fox News is must-watch for white evangelicals, a turnoff for atheists…and Hindus, Muslims really like CNN


Faith in numbers: Fox News is must-watch for white evangelicals, a turnoff for atheists…and Hindus, Muslims really like CNN

Published: May 24, 2021 8.12am EDT

Fox News possesses an “outsized influence” on the American public, especially among religious viewers.

That was the conclusion of the nonprofit Public Religion Research Institute in a report released just after the 2020 presidential election. It noted that 15% of Americans cited Fox News as the most trusted source – around the same as NBC, ABC and CBS combined, and four percentage points above rival network CNN. The survey of more than 2,500 American adults also suggested that Fox News viewers trend religious, especially among Republicans watching the show. Just 5% of Republican viewers of the channel identified as being “religiously unaffiliated” – compared to 15% of Republicans who do not watch Fox News and 25% of the wider American public.

To further explore the relationship between different faiths and the TV news they associate with as part of my research on religion data, I analyzed the result of another survey, the Cooperative Election Survey.

The annual survey, which was fielded just before the November 2020 election, with the results released in March, polled a total of 61,000 Americans over a number of topics. One question was on their news consumption habits. It asked what television news networks respondents had watched in the prior 24 hours.

Percentage of respondents who saw TV news in past 24 hours

Ryan Burge/CES












Some very interesting patterns emerged across religious traditions – and the nonreligious – and the type of media being consumed. For instance, of the the big three legacy news operations – ABC, CBS and NBC – there was no strong base of viewership in any tradition.

In most cases, about a third of people from each religious tradition said that they watched one of those legacy networks in the last 24 hours. PBS scored very low among every tradition. In most cases fewer than 15% of respondents reported watching PBS in the time frame.

However, the numbers for the three major cable news networks – CNN, Fox News and MSNBC – were much higher across the board. In eight of the 16 religious and nonreligious traditions categorized in the poll, CNN viewership was at least 50% of the sample. This was led by 71% of Hindus who watched CNN and 63% of Muslims.

The least likely group to watch CNN was clearly white evangelicals, at just 23%. In comparison, MSNBC scored lower nearly across the board. In fact, in none of the 16 classification groups was viewership of MSNBC greater than it was for CNN.

Fox News viewership was higher than that of MSNBC, but was not as widely dispersed as it is for CNN. It’s no surprise, given its reputation as a conservative news outlet, that 61% of white evangelicals say that they watch Fox News – in the last election, around 80% of white evangelicals voted for Republican candidate Donald Trump. The other three traditions where viewership was at least 50% are white Catholics, Mormons and members of the Eastern Orthodox Church. It should come as no surprise, as those are three groups that consistently vote for the Republican Party. Just 14% of atheists watched Fox, which is just about in line with the share of white evangelicals who watch MSNBC.

Fracturing right-wing media

But with the fracturing of conservative media sources seeing more competitors vying for viewers among the right, Fox News could see a drop in viewership from the religious right.

In the wake of the 2020 presidential election, Fox News viewership plunged as many Trump supporters believed that the network was not being loyal to their standard-bearer of the GOP.

Given the vast number of news options that people of faith have and the increase in political polarization in the United States, the pressure for networks to deliver the news that people want to hear will only increase as time passes.

[Explore the intersection of faith, politics, arts and culture. Sign up for This Week in Religion.]


 LINK


ALSO PUBLISHED HERE:

Faith in numbers: Fox News is must-watch for white evangelicals, a turnoff for atheists

A dive into who exactly is watching shows that it is a favorite among white evangelicals



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Another Norfolk Southern train derails in Ohio
Oh, good. ANOTHER Norfolk Southern train derailed in Springfield, Ohio, yesterday, triggering fears of further environmental catastrophe following the East Palestine derailment last month. While state officials and representatives of the embattled train company say no toxins were aboard yesterday's train, the accident caused local power outages and prompted officials to instruct residents in the area to shelter in place.


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