editorial: A cost of rail oil profits
TU Editorial Board
First, 47 people were killed and a town flattened last summer when a crude oil-filled freight train exploded in Lac-Mégantic, Quebec. Then, as residents mourned the death and destruction, the railroad at fault declared bankruptcy, leaving the Canadian government holding a nearly $3 billion bill.
The Canadian tragedy has helped fuel a national cry on this side of the border for greater scrutiny of what has become a boom in crude oil rail transport. Capital Region residents need look no farther than the continual ring of tanker cars around downtown Albany for reason to worry that a disaster could happen here, and to wonder: If it does, who will be held responsible?
As we wait for the White Houses release of new federal rules regarding the railroads themselves, state Assemblywoman Patricia Fahy, an Albany Democrat, has proposed that terminal operators also be required to have some responsibility in controlling this surge.
http://blog.timesunion.com/opinion/a-cost-of-rail-oil-profits/29383/