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UPDATED: Haz-Mat Working in New Jersey Train Derailment

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Dangerous Gas Release After Bridge Collapse

Updated:  Hazard eased.  More information posted – scroll down.

A DANGEROUS TRAIN DERAILMENT IN SOUTHERN NEW JERSEY this morning is releasing vinyl chloride fumes and has triggered an evacuation in Paulsboro, Gloucester County. 

(South Jersey Times / Stevenson)

From the early reports that are just coming in we have learned:

  • A railroad bridge over Mantua Creek collapsed under a train around 7:15 am.
  • Several cars have derailed and four of them landed in the creek.
  • An unknown number of tank cars are leaking vinyl chloride, a highly-flammable and toxic gas.
  • Almost immediately, several people began having breathing difficulties and about 20 have been transported.
  • An evacuation zone of ½-mile radius initially was set up.
  • The Coast Guard has closed off the creek and airspace restrictions are in place.
  • Conrail CSX is the railroad involved.

The South Jersey Times is also reporting that this is the same bridge that collapsed in August 2009 as a 50-car coal train passed over it, spilling 16 cars into the water.

The Philadelphia Fox News station has posted some raw video taken from their helicopter:

 Philadelphia News, Weather and Sports from WTXF FOX 29

The South Jersey Times is on the scene and should be updating regularly HERE.

Update, 4:30 pm:
The immediate threat has eased and rail officials are trying to determine what caused the derailment.  Whether the bridge collapse causded the derailment, of the derailing rail cars caused the bridge to fail will take some time to determine.

The train – now identified as a CSX Railroad train operating on Conrail trackage - had 84 cars in its consist.  Of the seven or eight that went off the tracks, four of them were tankers carrying vinyl chloride in liquid form.  Only one of the tankers was leaking and it appears to have ceased, so the main hazard is over.  USA Today reports:

"There are cars that are in precarious position," Larry Hajna, a New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection spokesman said at a briefing. "When they have to start moving these cars, you want to make sure they're protected."

The vinyl chloride leak from that car appears to have stopped, Hajna said. "It doesn't appear to be any immense threat" now, he said.

CBS News, in a more recent posting, reported:

The train with two locomotives, 82 freight cars and a caboose was making its way from Camden to the industrial town of Paulsboro, just across the Delaware River from Philadelphia International Airport. Cars went off the rails on a swing-style bridge, owned by Conrail, over Mantua Creek. One tanker containing 25,000 gallons of vinyl chloride was sliced open in the accident and some of the gas spewed into the air, while the rest turned into a solid and settled into the bottom of the tanker.

People who live nearby said the air was smoky and had a sweet chemical smell for part of the morning. More than 40 people were hospitalized, most complaining of breathing problems after the accident. Eleven people were transported to Underwood-Memorial Hospital, and 31 more arrived on their own, according to spokeswoman Karen Urbaniak.

By late morning, state Department of Environmental Protection spokesman Larry Hajna said that sensors were not measuring any amounts of the chemical at the site.By late morning, state Department of Environmental Protection spokesman Larry Hajna said that sensors were not measuring any amounts of the chemical at the site.

AP

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Jersey Teen Arrested on Arson, Attempted Murder Charges

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Girl Set House Afire in Attempt to Kill Her Family

A 15-YR.-OLD GLOUCESTER COUNTY, New Jersey, girl was arrested just a few hours after she set her family's house on fire Saturday morning.  The family of seven was awakened at 2 am by the smoke detectors sounding in their Clayton home and were just able to escape in time, although all but one were injured from the fire.

Investigators say that the girl set the fire on the 2nd-floor of the home by pouring gasoline on the floor and then igniting it.  She has been charged with two counts of aggravated arson and six counts of attempted murder.  She is currently being held in the county juvenile detention center and is scheduled for a preliminary hearing Monday morning.

The Gloucester County Times reports:

Six members of the girl’s family were injured, herself included, and two were transported from Cooper Medical Center in Camden to the Crozer Burn Center in Upland Pa., with internal burns. A juvenile girl sustained a hip injury when she jumped from the second floor of the home to escape the fire, which investigators believe was ignited with gasoline on the second floor. A six-year-old in the home was not injured.

The mother of the children in the house and her brother were principally responsible for rescue of the others, and they were the most severely injured. The woman's husband and a 9-year-olId child are being treated for foot and leg burns at Cooper (Hospital).

The firefighters were able to knock the fire down quickly and prevented any further extension.

WPVI-TV Ch. 6 Philadelphia provided this video report:

 

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Fiery Truck Crash Kills 1 in New Jersey

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Car Rips Tractor's Fuel Tank - Ka-Boom Follows

A SPECTACULAR CRASH IN GLOUCESTER COUNTY, New Jersey, Wednesday night led to a fire that burned for about an hour and killed one person.  According to police, around 8:30 pm an SUV drove through a red flashing light and collided with a tractor trailer in the cross street.  The car ripped open one of the saddle tanks releasing the load of fuel and immediately creating an explosive ignition of the fuel and causing the truck to jacknife into an electric pole.

WPVI-TV

The hot wires dropped down onto the rig and the transformer exploded when it hit the pavement.  Altogether, it created enough of a hazard that the firefighters were unable to properly attack the fire until the electric company was able to kill the power.

The driver of the SUV perished in the fire.  The truck driver is ok.

WPVI-TV

WPVI-TV filed this video report from the scene:

 

Hat tip:  Ron Y.

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Burned VFD Struggles to Rebuild

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Treasury Plundered Prior to Firehouse Fire

IT WAS TWO YEARS AGO, IN DECEMBER 2008 that a suspicious fire ripped through the New Sharon, New Jersey, fire station in Gloucester County.  The blaze destroyed their only two firetrucks, a pumper and a brush truck, and consumed almost everything else inside, including running gear, tools, and fire equipment.  But that was just the beginning of their woes.

Firefighters drag what equipment they could salvage out of the
New Sharon firehouse on the night of the costly fire in 2008.
(Philadelphia Inquirer photo)

It was the fire that exposed the fact that one of their long-time members had been plundering the bank account of the 99-yr.-old VFD.  The Philadelphia Inquirer tells us:

An FBI investigation revealed that the company’s treasurer, Charles Mancini, 45, of Wenonah, had robbed the company for years. First he took out an unauthorized $90,000 bank loan in the company’s name. Then, after the fire, he stole $448,990 in insurance money.

To conceal his thievery, Mancini, who also was the company’s president, gave members bogus bank statements, authorities said.

In September, Mancini pleaded guilty to fraud and embezzlement in federal court in Camden. He will be sentenced in March and faces 10 years in prison, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.

The cause of the fire, which the Gloucester County fire marshal said had begun in an electrical closet, is listed as “undetermined.”

The investigation is continuing, however, and “the fire is still considered suspicious,” said Detective George Johnson, a Deptford police spokesman.

Since that time the 19 volunteers have been struggling to raise the $300,000 needed to repair the firehouse plus the funds needed to purchase a fire engine and equipment.  They are unable to acquire a bank loan because Mancini had used the firehouse property as collateral for his loan and the lien continues to rest on the property.
The members are planning a fund-raiser at a local Applebee’s the day of Mancini’s sentencing. The firefighters will have an opportunity to address Mancini in court.

“A lot of people have bad words for him and will talk about what they would like to do him if it were legal,” Frank Ellis, the company’s secretary, told the Inquirer.  Read the full STORY HERE.