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Officials are monitoring the air and water in East Palestine, Ohio, since a train carrying chemicals derailed there. A local doctor tells us what he is seeing.
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Local officials say they're completely confident that Cincinnati's drinking water is safe despite low-levels of contamination upstream in the Ohio River.
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Under the legal order, Norfolk Southern is responsible for the costs and cleanup of soil and water contaminated by the release of hazardous chemicals from its derailed train earlier this month.
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The transportation secretary wants stricter regulations on freight trains hauling toxic or volatile chemicals, and is calling on Congress to "untie" the DOT's hands for implementing safety measures.
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Both Greater Cincinnati Water Works and the Northern Kentucky Water District say no unusual chemicals related to the train derailment in East Palestine are showing up in local stretches of the Ohio River.
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As air and water tests continue in East Palestine, EPA administrator asks residents to trust scienceResidents can call a local hotline to request a test of the air in their home or the water in their private wells.
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Residents remain concerned about their health and safety after a major train derailment and release of toxic chemicals earlier this month.
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Greater Cincinnati Water Works is testing the Ohio River regularly and hasn't detected any chemicals from a train derailment at East Palestine, Ohio.
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Water systems are being shut down and testing is taking place to make sure the water is safe. For now, residents of East Palestine are being advised to drink bottled water.
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Air monitoring continues in East Palestine after the crews released a number of toxic chemicals in what officials called a "controlled explosion" last week.