Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Pacific Train Derails In Wisconsin, Spills Oil; 2nd Consecutive Day With Derailment

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Nov, 2015 11:14 AM
    WATERTOWN, Wis. — A Canadian Pacific Railway train derailed Sunday, spilling less than 1,000 gallons of crude oil and prompting evacuations in Wisconsin, the second day in a row a freight train derailed in the state.
     
    Thirteen cars of an eastbound CP train went off the tracks around 2 p.m. in Watertown, in the southeastern part of the state, the railroad said. One tank car was punctured and leaked oil.
     
    The company said in a statement late Sunday night that the leaking car had been sealed, the spilled product was contained and had been siphoned off, and no product had reached a waterway. The company was working to confirm the exact amount of spilled crude but said it was no more than 1,000 gallons.
     
    No fires or injuries were reported.
     
    Federal Railroad Administration investigators were at the scene, the agency tweeted.
     
     
    Residents of about 35 homes were asked to evacuate around 4 p.m., said Donna Haugom, director of the Jefferson County Office of Emergency Management.
     
    CP said in its statement that it had reserved hotel rooms for all affected family.
     
    The incident came a day after a freight train derailed near Alma in western Wisconsin, spilling thousands of gallons of ethanol. BNSF Railway said crews continued Sunday to transfer ethanol from the derailed cars and get the cars back on the tracks.
     
    The BNSF train derailed at 8:45 a.m. Saturday about two miles north of Alma, a town along the Mississippi River. Some of the 25 derailed cars were empty auto racks and tanker cars.
     
    BNSF said railroad crews stopped the leaks from five tanker cars and placed containment booms along the shoreline. One tanker released an estimated 18,000 gallons of ethanol, and the other four released an estimated 5 to 500 gallons each.
     
    No one was hurt. BNSF said it expects the tracks to return to service Monday morning.
     
    A statement from the Railroad Administration said officials from the Environmental Protection Agency, Coast Guard, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the state Department of Natural Resources were responding.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Leaders Get On Board Rail-Safety Alliance Under Threat Of Train Derailments

    B.C. Leaders Get On Board Rail-Safety Alliance Under Threat Of Train Derailments
    The American-led Safe Energy Leadership Alliance is lobbying for new protections from train accidents in Canada and the United States.

    B.C. Leaders Get On Board Rail-Safety Alliance Under Threat Of Train Derailments

    Police Search For Driver Who Tried To Hit Cops With Vehicle In Langford, B.C.

    Police Search For Driver Who Tried To Hit Cops With Vehicle In Langford, B.C.
     Mounties on southern Vancouver Island are searching for a man who allegedly tried to hit officers with a stolen vehicle.

    Police Search For Driver Who Tried To Hit Cops With Vehicle In Langford, B.C.

    There Will Be Consequences After Death Of Teen In Government Care: B.C. Premier Christy Clark

    British Columbia Premier Christy Clark says there will be consequences for the tragic death of a teenager in government care.

    There Will Be Consequences After Death Of Teen In Government Care: B.C. Premier Christy Clark

    B.C. Electoral Commission Proposes 2 New Surrey, Richmond Ridings For 2017 Vote

    B.C. Electoral Commission Proposes 2 New Surrey, Richmond Ridings For 2017 Vote
    A three-member electoral boundaries commission has proposed two new ridings — one in Surrey and the other in Richmond — increasing the total number to 87 across the province

    B.C. Electoral Commission Proposes 2 New Surrey, Richmond Ridings For 2017 Vote

    One Man Safe, Another Still Missing In Separate Searches Near Vancouver

    One Man Safe, Another Still Missing In Separate Searches Near Vancouver
     A search has resumed for a 49-year-old hiker overdue on a lengthy expedition through bush near Pitt Lake, northeast of Vancouver.

    One Man Safe, Another Still Missing In Separate Searches Near Vancouver

    Keith Caouette, Man Considered High Risk To Reoffend Missing From Vancouver Halfway House

    Keith Caouette, Man Considered High Risk To Reoffend Missing From Vancouver Halfway House
    Police say he is a two-time federal offender who has served 14 years in prison for kidnapping and sexual assault with a weapon.

    Keith Caouette, Man Considered High Risk To Reoffend Missing From Vancouver Halfway House