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2002 Train derailment: A
look back
Source: Minot Daily News
Published: January 18th 2009
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The effects on the railroad industry of catastrophic rail accidents
such as the Minot derailment of 2002 still reverberate.
The Minot derailment played a major role in the National Rail Safety
Action Plan, which was launched in May 2005 in response to that and
several other additional major accidents. That plan proved to be an
indication that the Federal Railroad Administration was addressing
critical issues in an aggressive manner in an attempt to mitigate
effects of subsequent derailments or other rail accidents.
Ironically, according to the NRSAP, 2002 was the only year over a
six-year period that saw a decline in accidents from the previous year.
Between 1998-2004, accidents increased an average of 5.3 percent per
year except for 2002, when the number actually fell 9.4 percent. Train
accidents occurred an average of 3.8 times per million train miles in
2002. The number did not fall that low again until 2006, after the
enactment of the NRSAP.
Among the focuses of that plan were the enhancement of hazardous
materials safety and emergency preparedness, better focusing of the
FRA's inspection and enforcement actions on the gravest areas of safety
concern, and improving track safety.
The derailment occurred when a Canadian Pacific Railway freight train
traveling east at 41 mph on the Portal Subdivision derailed 31 of its
112 cars about one-half mile west of Minot, near the Tierracita Vallejo
area. Fifteen tank cars carrying anhydrous ammonia, a pungent gas used
most often as a fertilizer, derailed. Five of the cars ruptured
catastrophically, releasing 146,700 gallons of anhydrous
instantaneously. Another 74,000 gallons leaked from six additional cars
over the course of the next five days.
The accident occurred at 1:37 a.m. The temperature at that time was
around minus 5 degrees, and a temperature inversion was occurring, which
acted to keep the cooler air closer to the ground and keeping the
anhydrous from dissipating quickly. There was also only slight wind that
night, coming from the southwest, which allowed the plume of poisonous
gas, which rose to an estimated height of 300 feet, to blow straight
toward downtown Minot and work its way slowly through the area.
One man, John Grabinger, 38, died after being overcome by the fumes
while trying to flee his home. Hundreds more were injured, some
seriously, including the train crew members and many emergency
responders.
One of the derailed tankers ruptured so violently that a piece flew
1,200 feet and struck a house. Two people were sleeping in the room
where the piece struck. Thirty of the cars were completely destroyed and
the 31st damaged, with a loss of nearly $2.5 million to the railroad.
About 475 feet of track was also destroyed.
The cause of the derailment was determined to be a broken rail joint.
The accident occurred at or near a 36-foot "plug" that had been inserted
between the continuous welded rail. The plug was held in place by
36-inch joint bars, which were secured with bolts to the rails on the
inside and outside on either end of the plug.
CP Rail personnel had inspected that section of the track the day
before and found no track deficiencies. Common practice used by CP Rail
during cold weather was to inspect track from inside a Hy-Rail vehicle.
Inspectors would check the track visually and by listening for telltale
sounds that would indicate loose or defective joints. FRA regulations at
that time required the inspections to take place at least twice per
week, with at least one calendar day between the inspections. Records
indicated that CP Rail inspected the track four to five times per week.
The FRA reconstructed the rail from the accident site and found that
the joint bars showed vertical cracks from fatigue that would have been
visible during an on-the-ground inspection. When the joint bars
fractured, the rail also fractured, causing the fourth car behind the
locomotives to derail. It was determined that the rail fracture had
occurred either while the train before or as the accident train passed
the fracture.
The FRA inspected the track between Minot and Portal after it
reopened, finding seven more cracked joint bars that were not found by
CP Rail inspections performed immediately post-accident. An unscientific
"drop test" consisting of the dropping of a joint bar across a railhead
from a height of five feet found that bars with as little as a
one-eighth inch crack would fracture similarly to the joint bar at the
site of the derailment. The FRA issued a "special notice of repair"
action against CP Rail, temporarily reducing the speed on the Portal and
two other subdivisions to 25 mph for failure to comply with proper
procedures.
The ineffective inspection and maintenance program's failure to
identify and replace those cracked joint bars was labeled the primary
cause of the accident. However, FRA's oversight of CP Rail's inspection
procedures was also determined to be ineffective. CP Rail had submitted
its inspection program as required to the FRA, but three years later,
that program had not been compared to the federal standards when the
accident occurred.
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