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What should Biden do in East Palestine following the train accident?   The Serious You: How Current Events Affect You

Started 2/20/23 by Showtalk; 2692 views.
Showtalk
Host

From: Showtalk 

3/5/23

WALTER784
Staff

From: WALTER784 

3/6/23

I saw that, but luckily, there were no hazardous material cars.

Edited to add: This is the 12th derailment this year...

FWIW

 

  • Edited March 6, 2023 4:04 am  by  WALTER784
Showtalk
Host

From: Showtalk 

3/6/23

Why so many derailments? Are the tracks themselves at fault? The trains? Or is it operator error?

WALTER784
Staff

From: WALTER784 

3/6/23

Overworked and understaffed employees, lax preventative maintenance partially due to lack of staff... and, they've lobbied government numerous times in the past to reduce many regulations which cost them a lot of money... which in turn, also increased safety risks!

FWIW

In reply toRe: msg 32
WALTER784
Staff

From: WALTER784 

3/7/23

Plan to INJECT toxic Ohio wastewater underground in Texas alarms locals

Monday, February 27, 2023
by: Arsenio Toledo

(Natural News) Residents and local officials of Harris County, Texas, have sounded the alarm after learning that the now-contaminated water used to extinguish the fiery aftermath of the Norfolk Southern train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, has been transported to their neighborhood for disposal.
 
Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo noted at a press conference on Thursday, Feb. 23, that 500,000 gallons of the wastewater had been delivered to the city of Deer Park for disposal. The county learned about the delivery of the wastewater just a day earlier. (Related: EPA chief downplays Ohio chemical spill, says he’ll allow his kids to drink and bathe in East Palestine’s water.)
 
The wastewater was transported to Texas Molecular, which injects hazardous waste into the ground for disposal. The company claims it is experienced in this disposal technique and that the process is very safe.
 
“Our technology safely removes hazardous constituents from the biosphere. We are part of the solution to reduce risk and protect the environment, whether in our local area or other places that need the capabilities we offer to protect the environment,” claimed the company.
 
George Guillen, a biology and environmental science professor at the University of Houston-Clear Lake, claimed that the deep well injection process used by Texas Molecular is a common practice that poses minimal risks to the millions of residents of Harris County.
 
“This injection, in some cases, is usually 4,000 or 5,000 feet down below any kind of drinking water aquifer,” claimed Guillen. “Could it come up someday? Yes, maybe, but hundreds of years from now or thousands of years from now.”
 
Brighteon.TV
 
Locals, officials in uproar over disposal plan
 
Hidalgo noted that Texas Molecular informed county officials of the delivery of a half million gallons of wastewater and warned that an additional 1.5 million gallons will be hauled to the company’s site by about 30 trucks in the coming days.
 
Despite only learning about the presence of the wastewater in the county on Wednesday, Hidalgo noted that Texas Molecular has been receiving wastewater from East Palestine for the past week.
 
Hidalgo was told that there was no law requiring her office to be informed about the wastewater. But the judge noted that she and other local officials are still very upset that they were kept out of the loop by a “fundamentally broken system.”
 
“This is a wake-up call. It doesn’t look like any regulations necessarily were broken by the fact that nobody told us. But it doesn’t quite seem right,” said Hidalgo. “There are many things we don’t know that we should know. That doesn’t mean that something is wrong, but it’s worth noting.”
 
Local residents and organizations are also concerned by the sudden appearance of half a million gallons of toxic water in their neighborhoods. Tammy Baxter, a resident of Deer Park, is concerned by the fact these toxins will be present in the ground she walks.
 
Baxter was informed that the wastewater will be deposited into a deep well injection site from a news broadcast. When she called the mayor’s office in Deer Park, she expected a return phone call dispelling the rumor. Instead, her worst fears were confirmed.
 
“There has to be a closer deep well injection [site]. It’s foolish to put it on the roadway. We have accidents on a regular basis. Do they really want to have another contamination zone? It is silly to move it that far,” said Baxter.  “I am disturbed. I am shaken by the information.”
 
“We are disturbed to learn that toxic wastewater from East Palestine, Ohio will be brought to Harris County for ‘disposal,'” wrote the Houston branch of the Coalition for Environment, Equity and Resilience. “Our county should not be a dumping ground for (the) industry.”
 
Learn more about the toxic chemicals released in the aftermath of the East Palestine train derailment at Toxins.news.
 
Watch this episode of the “Health Ranger Report” as Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, discusses how to block the toxic chemical fallout from the East Palestine disaster from getting into the food, water and air.

Plan to INJECT toxic Ohio wastewater underground in Texas alarms locals – NaturalNews.com

FWIW

 

Showtalk
Host

From: Showtalk 

3/7/23

So the railroad companies are to blame and were supported by the government. 

Showtalk
Host

From: Showtalk 

3/7/23

They are punishing Texas?

WALTER784
Staff

From: WALTER784 

3/7/23

Showtalk said...

So the railroad companies are to blame and were supported by the government. 

Yes, they spent millions on lobbying our government to remove some of the strict and expensive regulations so that they could make more profit... and our government did so. 

FWIW

WALTER784
Staff

From: WALTER784 

3/7/23

Showtalk said...

They are punishing Texas?

It looks that way. Texas is a red state.

Why would they haul this hazardous waste from Ohio all the way down to Texas?

Aren't there closer dumping grounds closer by in blue states?

FWIW

Showtalk
Host

From: Showtalk 

3/7/23

No one wants the waste.

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