WASHINGTON – New federal rules that aim to improve oil train safety may actually make it harder for Minnesotans to learn about the highly explosive Bakken crude rolling through their communities.
Federal and state legislators worry that changes in mandatory railroad reporting requirements will make it more difficult for the public to know about oil train routes, numbers and load sizes.
The new rules eliminate automatic notifications by railroads to statewide authorities of oil train shipments and replace them with company points of contact to answer questions.
Railroads have traditionally been reluctant to reveal oil train information to anyone other than emergency response personnel for what they say are security reasons. BNSF, Minnesota's major Bakken crude hauler, warns of "real potential for the criminal misuse of this data" if it is generally accessible to the public.
But many public officials see the railroads' secrecy as a threat to public safety in its own right.
"This is a giant step backwards," Minnesota state Rep. Frank Hornstein, DFL-Minneapolis, said of the new disclosure rules. "They say anyone can call the railroads and get information. I'm very concerned about disclosure because the railroads had themselves exempted from the federal Community Right to Know Act."
U.S. senators, including Minnesota Democrat Al Franken, have sent a letter to U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx expressing concern that ending automatic railroad reporting requirements could make it harder for members of the public to learn about their exposure to oil trains and other hazardous materials.
The new rules represent "a setback on disclosure requirements that could hamper our first responders and negatively impact the safety of our communities," the senators wrote to Foxx on Wednesday, in the wake of a fiery Bakken crude oil train derailment in North Dakota.