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Little Chernobyl Happening in East Palestine, Ohio Right Now


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2023 Feb 13, 8:25am   53,487 views  314 comments

by fdhfoiehfeoi   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Spoke with my sister who lives in western Michigan yesterday, told her to be careful. This is completely fucked:

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/ohios-apocalyptic-chemical-disaster-rages



Toxic train wreck.

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310   fdhfoiehfeoi   2024 Jan 29, 8:29am  

If you watch the video, they've actually done the "cleanup" ass backwards. The soil is super contaminated at this point, and they're stirring it up, into the air, for residents to breathe.
311   Bd6r   2024 Jan 29, 9:42am  

NuttBoxer says

If you watch the video, they've actually done the "cleanup" ass backwards. The soil is super contaminated at this point, and they're stirring it up, into the air, for residents to breathe.

Dioxins are not that volatile so it is fine assuming that contamination is from vinyl chloride and its combustion. However we do not know if it is only vinyl chloride and not something else
313   fdhfoiehfeoi   2024 Feb 5, 7:38am  

Heard the mayor, and a bunch of other local officials have all gotten their payoffs. Now they just need to do their job and shut up all the citizens whining about cancer and lung failure.
314   RWSGFY   2024 Sep 25, 2:51pm  

Aaaaaand itʼs settled. Eat shit, Oprah, you're not getting these chicken farms to build your pedo compaund on!


A federal judge on Wednesday approved a $600 million class-action settlement Wednesday that Norfolk Southern railroad offered to everyone who lived within 20 miles (32 kilometers) of last year's disastrous derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.

Judge Benita Pearson gave the deal final approval after a hearing where the lawyers who negotiated it with the railroad argued that residents overwhelmingly supported it, attorneys for the residents and railroad spokesperson Heather Garcia told The Associated Press. Roughly 55,000 claims were filed. Only 370 households and 47 businesses opted out.
...
The judge's approval clears the way for payments to start going out quickly. The lawyers had previously said they hoped to get the first checks in the mail before the end of the year.

As part of the settlement, any aid residents received from the railroad will be deducted from their final payments. Wallace and others who had to relocate for an extended period while the railroad paid for hotels or rental homes won't get anything.

Anyone who lived within 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) of the derailment can get up to $70,000 per household for property damage plus up to $25,000 per person for health problems. The payments drop off the farther people lived from the derailment down to as little as a few hundred dollars at the outer edges.
...


-AP

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