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E.P.A. update: Rockford freight train derailment and Rock River fish kill

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Category: Emergency Response
Type: News
Source: EPA
Date: Friday, June 26th, 2009


No. 09-OPA118

(Chicago, Ill. - June 26, 2009) E.P.A. Region five said today that cleanup at the location of a Canadian Countrywide (CN) freight train derailment in Rockford, Ill., is well under way. The incident occurred on June 19, when 14 tanker cars containing a 95 percent ethanol/5 percent gasoline product derailed at South Mulford Road north of Sandy Hollow Road. 12 of the tanker cars caught fire, resulting in one fatality. An estimated 55,000 to 75,000 gallons of the product was released from the derailed tank cars. Most of it burned up at the scene. An undetermined quantity of the product flowed into an unnamed creek that leads to the Rock River.

This past week CN contractors have excavated about 750 tons of contaminated soil from the derailment location under E.P.A. and Illinois E.P.A. oversight. The material was sent to local landfills. Runoff water from the location is being controlled to minimize further impacts. Preliminary sampling of a drinking water supply near the derailment location was conducted by E.P.A. with no impacts found. Illinois E.P.A. will follow up with additional sampling and monitoring. Work at the cleanup location including air monitoring is expected to continue for several weeks. CN will distribute an update on its cleanup efforts and ongoing environmental monitoring efforts to residents near the spill location this weekend.

Beginning June 20, a substantial fish kill was reported across a 50-mile swath of the Rock River, from 2 miles above Grand Detour to the Prophetstown, Ill. area. Thus far, a relationship has not been established between the 2 incidents. From June 21 to 25, once the fire-fighting activities at the derailment location ended, dozens of surface water samples from the Rock and Kishwaukee rivers and the affected creek were collected by Illinois EPA. All of these samples have failed to confirm the presence of ethanol or its constituent chemicals. The sampling effort has not ruled out the possibility that a now-diluted plume of ethanol was present prior to June 21.

E.P.A. and its public health and natural resource agency partners are continuing to evaluate a range of factors that may have contributed to the fish kill. Water analysis since the derailment shows that dissolved oxygen levels are within expected normal ranges. Low oxygen levels are a common contributor to fish kills.

Illinois Department of Public Health does not recommend restrictions on the consumption of fish in relation to the CN derailment, beyond the health advisories previously established for the Rock and Kishwaukee rivers. For more information: http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/fishadv09/rockriver.htm . IDPH does warn the public of the risk of increased bacteria levels in river waters from decomposing fish lying in and along the river banks. IDPH urges the public to avoid water contact activities, including skiing, tubing and wading, until the decomposition process is complete and both rivers have had time to flush the decaying matter.

Next Steps: Soil cleanup near the derailment location will continue through the weekend. Residential properties in the immediate cleanup area will also be sampled for contamination by CN contractors.

An information repository with location documents has been established at Cherry Valley Public Library, 755 E. State St., Cherry Valley.

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