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Chemical leak sickens dozens after New Jersey rail accident

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(MCT) — PAULSBORO, N.J. — Residents near the site of a freight train derailment Friday that knocked out a recently rebuilt bridge in Paulsboro and spewed thousand of gallons of a hazardous chemical into the air are not quite out of danger.

While the immediate threat passed within three hours of the 7 a.m. EST accident, removing the remaining vinyl chloride from a tanker car that ruptured, and pulling three others carrying the toxic chemical from the Mantua Creek, will require what several officials called a delicate operation.

“This is not something we look forward to,” said Democratic Assemblyman John Burzichelli, a former mayor of Paulsboro.

“We’ll be proceeding with caution,” Deborah Hersman, chairwoman of the National Transportation Safety Board, said Friday afternoon as she arrived with 17 agency investigators who will look into the derailment’s cause and oversee the cleanup.

Local officials said work at the site would occur within days and only during daylight hours. They plan to use Gloucester County’s reverse-911 system to instruct residents about any actions they might need to take, including evacuating their homes if necessary.

The Red Cross will operate a temporary shelter at the Paulsboro Fire Department banquet hall during the procedure, Burzichelli said.

Eleven people, including workers near the bridge, were transported to Underwood-Memorial Hospital in Woodbury for treatment following the derailment and at least 60 others arrived on their own. As of Friday evening, all but three had been released.

Officials said the train, with two engines, 82 freight cars and a caboose, was southbound when seven cars near the front derailed while crossing the low, A-frame swing bridge on wood pilings, the scene of a less serious derailment in 2009.

The bridge was rebuilt after that accident, but questions about its condition emerged Friday after state Senate President Stephen Sweeney, whose district includes Paulsboro, and other officials said Conrail inspectors had been out to check it repeatedly after nearby residents reported hearing strange noises from the span, including a loud bang when no train was on it.

Hersman said investigators would look at inspection reports for the bridge before and after the 2009 derailment and the span’s rebuilding.

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