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REPORTING. East Palestine Park, where a contaminated river flows, is among the most exposed places. But the population, with limited incomes, cannot move.
From our special correspondent in East Palestine, Claire Meynial
Published on
D’first, tarpaulins appeared, in front of the house. “After an hour or two, they brought a blue container, then regarding sixty. Then we saw two, four, fifty trucks transporting waste from the creek,” describes Pamela Kline. It was February 4 in the morning, in the park of East Palestine (Ohio). The night before, a few minutes from here, a freight train had derailed, spilling toxic substances into the air, land and water. A neighbor said the trucks were also bringing in debris from the crash. Pamela isn’t sure. What she sees is that the workers “work 24 hours a day, especially at night, with big semi-trailers”.
Through the living room window, we can see them, in orange vests, busying themselves on the bank. THE…