Special Investigation Report:
Railroad Yard Safety - Hazardous Materials and Emergency Preparedness
Authors: U.S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB)
Date of Publication: 1985
Sponsoring Agency: U.S. National Transportation Safety
Board (NTSB)
Performing Organization: U.S. National Transportation
Safety Board (NTSB)
Report No: NTSB/SIR-85/02
Abstract:
Railroad yards, unlike mainline railroad operations, are similar to
fixed-site chemical and industrial plants in terms of operating procedures,
populations at risk, and emergency response preparedness capabilities.
Like the fixed-site chemical and industrial plants, railroad yards are
permanent facilities located within the boundaries of communities and close
to schools, hospitals, businesses, apartments and housing complexes. To
solicit comments and potential solutions to this problem from the railroad
industry; involved communities; local emergency response organizations;
and local, State, and Federal governments, on July 26 and 27, 1983, the
Safety Board convened a public hearing in
Arlington, Virginia. Twenty-three witnesses representing these entities
were brought together to identify means for minimizing the potential for
catastrophic releases of hazardous materials in railroad yards and to discuss
the preparedness of communities and railroad yard operators for handling
such emergencies. The hearing revealed that intricate parts of the problem
were the hazardous materials classification system, the packaging safeguards
required for tank cars used to transport various hazardous materials, the
safety of operations within railroad yards, and their relationship to the
ability of yard operators and adjacent communities to protect the safety
and health of employees and the public during a hazardous materials emergency.
Witness testimony revealed that these areas are so intertwined that safety
deficiencies in one area can negate efforts to assure safety in one of
the other areas. Clearly, any solution to the problems of hazardous materials
releases in (Abstract truncated)
No. of Pages: 63
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