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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Union Pacific resumes service after derailment

Booms have been set up in the Columbia River as seen the morning of Saturday, June 4. The booms are meant to contain any oil that may seep into the river from a Union Pacific oil train that derailed near Mosier, Ore., on Friday. (Dave Killen/The Oregonian / Via Associated Press)
Associated Press

PORTLAND – Dozens of residents of a Columbia River town in northern Oregon have been given the all clear to return home after crews made progress in repairing damage caused by the derailment of an oil train that sparked a fire.

About a hundred people – a quarter of Mosier’s population – were evacuated Friday after several cars carrying the volatile oil went off the tracks.

But officials said late Sunday night that the Wasco County Sheriff’s office lifted the evacuation order after progress was made in cleaning up the derailment and restoring essential services, including a waste water treatment plant.

A statement by incident spokeswoman Judy Smith of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said 10,000 gallons of oil had been removed from the waste water treatment plant. She said water and sewer services were usable, but a boil water order remains in effect.

Meanwhile Union Pacific has resumed train service through Mosier. As a precaution, the trains speed for passing through is limited to 10 mph. The usual speed is 30 mph.

The company restarted service despite objections from the Mosier City Council.

At an emergency meeting Sunday afternoon, the council approved a motion demanding that oil be removed from derailed cars before traffic is restarted. They also wanted a thorough investigation before the resumption of “high-risk” traffic.

Espinoza said a failure of the fastener between the railroad tie and the line was the likely cause of the problem, but more investigation will be required before railroad officials know for sure.

Union Pacific inspects the tracks that run through Mosier twice a week, and the most recent inspection took place on May 31, Espinoza said. Union Pacific had completed a more detailed and technical inspection of this section of track at the end of April and found no problems.

No injuries were reported in the derailment in which 16 of 96 tank cars went off the tracks and started a fire in four of the cars. Authorities were working Sunday to clean up oil sheen in the Columbia near the derailment.

Including Friday’s incident, at least 26 oil trains have been involved in major fires or derailments during the past decade in the U.S. and Canada, according to an Associated Press analysis of accident records from the two countries. The worst was a 2013 derailment that killed 47 people in Lac-Megantic, Quebec. Damage from that accident has been estimated at $1.2 billion or higher.