24 Wednesday, June 15, 2016 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon State advances plan to test for lead Railroad says broken bolt caused derailment By Keith Ridler Associated Press At least one broken bolt holding the rail in place caused the fiery derailment of a Union Pacific train mov- ing volatile crude oil through the Columbia River Gorge on the Oregon-Washington bor- der, railroad officials say. Union Pacific spokesman Justin Jacobs said Saturday that the company filed a report Friday with the Federal Railroad Administration cit- ing one or more broken bolts as the cause of the June 3 derailment. “We are unaware of any time when this has happened in the past,” Jacobs said. “This is an unusual failure.” He said there’s no evi- dence of malevolent activ- ity by anyone to damage the tracks. “There’s nothing to indi- cate that would be the case,” he said. The type of bolt that broke is unique in that it’s only used on curved sections of track, Jacobs said. He noted the train was going 26 mph in a 30 mph zone so it’s not clear why the bolt failed. As a result, he said, the com- pany is now in the process of checking similar bolts in curved sections of its 32,000 miles of track in 23 states. No one was injured in the derailment, but the tiny town of Mosier, Oregon, was evac- uated after four cars caught fire. Of the 96 cars all loaded with crude oil, more than a dozen derailed. Mosier Fire Chief Jim Appleton, who fought the blaze after the derailment, said he appreciated Union Pacific’s maintenance and safety procedures but the risk of one broken bolt resulting in such a disaster or poten- tially worse disasters means regulators should not allow shipments of crude oil to travel by train through the area. “We have to accept that there are going to be failures in the rail system,” he said. “But we have to recognize that there are some risks that are unacceptable.” Officials have said 42,000 gallons of crude oil were released in the derailment of the unit crude oil train, called such because it hauled only one type of commod- ity. About 10,000 gallons were recovered in wastewa- ter systems, while the rest was burned off, captured by booms or absorbed into soil. Jacobs said bolts in that section of track, following the derailment, have been replaced with heavier-duty bolts. He also said inspections have been increased in the Columbia River Gorge from once every 18 months to four times a year. He said the bro- ken bolt possibly escaped detection because the break occurred out of sight. He said the testing going on now on the company’s network of tracks is much more labor- intensive and will detect bro- ken bolts. Union Pacific has tem- porarily halted sending unit crude oil trains through the area, and it’s not clear when they will resume. “We will notify the com- munity before we start run- ning unit crude oil trains through the gorge,” Jacobs said. PORTLAND (AP) — Oregon health and education officials said June 8, they will team up with school districts and licensed child care programs statewide to facilitate testing for lead in school drinking water over the summer. The plan responds to a directive from Gov. Kate Brown in April and comes on the heels of belated disclo- sures about lead in the drink- ing water of some Portland Public Schools. In March, the district arranged to test for lead at two schools at the request of parents who were con- cerned about the unfold- ing public health crisis in Flint, Michigan. Those tests revealed elevated levels of lead in 14 of 92 water sources at the schools, includ- ing a handful of drinking fountains, but parents were not told for weeks. That disclosure has moti- vated other school districts around the state to test their water for lead, which is a neurotoxin. The Oregon Department of Education, the Oregon Health Authority and the state’s Early Learning Division will provide techni- cal support and information for the state’s 197 school dis- tricts and recommend a list of state-certified labs to test the water. The plan also calls for those labs to report results to the Oregon Health Authority, which will build a data- base for public use this fall, said Robb Cowie, an OHA spokesman. The announcement is a recommendation only, how- ever, and the state can’t require school districts to test. Currently, districts that have their own water supply are monitored by the state health officials for lead in the water. But the majority of schools receive water from municipal systems. These schools aren’t monitored for lead in the water beyond the testing done by the municipal network. That can be a problem because many older schools have pipes that can leach lead into the water at the site. “There’s growing con- cerns in the school dis- tricts and we just wanted to do what we could to get information out on best practices,” said Amy Wojcicki, spokeswoman for the Oregon Department of Education. Seniors staying active... photo provided Sisters seniors got into the rodeo spirit at their Tuesday luncheon last week, all gussied up Western-style and doing some two-steppin’ at a dance. Hope for a child. Change for a nation. There are a million perfectly understandable reasons not to help. Thankfully, love trumps them all. $37 a month. All the difference in the world. Sponsor a child with a local organization at HopeAfricaKids.com This ad sponsored by The Nugget Newspaper.