In a panel discussion with National Wildlife Federation Executive Vice President Mustafa Santiago Ali and NBC correspondent Ron Allen, Reid also noted, in the context of insufficient regulations, that “about 4.5 tons of toxic chemicals are shipped by rail every year. An average of 12,000 rail cars carrying hazardous material pass through cities and towns every single day.”
On broadcast news, corporate networks — ABC, CBS, and NBC — aired a combined 15 minutes of coverage of the derailment. NBC covered the derailment for 7 minutes, followed by CBS (6 minutes). ABC spent a mere 2 minutes reporting on the incident. None of the corporate broadcast coverage discussed lax safety regulations.
By failing to cover it at all, Sunday political shows — ABC’s This Week, CBS’ Face the Nation, Fox Broadcasting Co.’s Fox News Sunday, and NBC’s Meet the Press — abdicated their role in delving into the ramifications of a weakened regulatory state and the corporate practices that privilege cost-cutting over safety.
By reporting on the derailment as merely an accident, national news largely dismissed the reality that the rail industry or Norfolk Southern should be held accountable and forfeited an opportunity to fuel a national debate on the safe transportation of hazardous materials including crude oil, as “more than 25 million people live within a mile of a crude-by-rail route.” Media Matters has found that unfortunately this is the typical treatment of industrial accidents.
However, in October 2021, when an offshore oil pipe was breached near a popular beach in wealthy Orange County, California, Media Matters analysis showed that reporting was not only extensive, but it also quickly turned from reports on the immediate environmental degradation to coverage focused on the company responsible for the leak, Amplify Energy Co., specifically reporting on the company's long history of safety violations and financial instability as well as covering reports that Amplify Energy Co. reportedly failed to alert authorities of the breach for at least 12 hours from when it was first detected.
There should not be a disparity between which communities' stories are told and which bad actors are held to account. As the Ohio disaster and the resulting legal action continue to unfold, more national TV news programs should provide crucial context about Norfolk Southern and the weakened regulatory landscape the company helped create and operates within.