More related stories here.50 people still missing in Lac-Mégantic
By Janet Bagnall, The Gazette July 10, 2013 8:32 PM
Remains of buildings and houses with melted siding at the scene of the train explosion in the town of Lac-Mégantic, 100 kilometres east of Sherbrooke on Wednesday, July 10, 2013. A portion of a train carrying crude oil separated, derailed and exploded in the town of Lac-Mégantic releasing oil into the river and Mégantic lake on Saturday, July 6.
Photograph by: Dario Ayala , The Gazette
This photo provided July 8, 2013 by Sûreté du Québec, shows wrecked oil tankers and debris from a runaway train that derailed and exploded in Lac-Mégantic, Quebec, Canada. The death toll in Lac-Mégantic rose to 13 on Monday, two days after the runaway oil tanker train derailed and exploded, flattening part of the small Quebec town, the coroner said. Police also told reporters that the number of people reported missing has climbed to about 50, while environmental officials warned that 100,000 litres of oil spilled in the disaster was headed for the Saint Lawrence River.
Photograph by: HO, AFP/Getty Images
LAC-MÉGANTIC/MONTREAL — The Sûreté du Québec has raised the confirmed death toll of Saturday's rail disaster in Lac-Mégantic to 20 people, and lowered the total number of people missing is down to 50 from an earlier estimate of 60.
Also Wednesday, the coroner's office announced it has identified a first victim. Spokesperson Geneviève Guilbault refused to make the victim's name public, saying the family had just been informed. Guilbault said this first identification, coming within a few days of the July 6 disaster, shows that work is progressing well at the site.
The remains of 20 people have been found at the site, she said during a joint news conference with the SQ.
SQ spokesperson Michel Forget said police were able to determine the exact number of victims through interviews and investigative work that put people missing, and now presumed among the dead, at the site of Saturday's train derailment and explosion. Forget said police met Wednesday with the families of the 50 people now considered "in all likelihood" dead. "It was a very emotional moment," he said. Also at the meeting were representatives from the coroner's office, chamber of notaries and social service agencies, he said.
Police may take the families of the 50 presumed dead into what they are calling the Red Zone, the area hardest hit by the explosion and fire, Forget confirmed.
He would not comment on Montreal Maine & Atlantic Railway chairman Ed Burkhardt's visit to Lac-Mégantic Wednesday, other than to confirm that police had met with the head of the railway whose 72-car, crude-oil-laden train derailed and exploded at the heart of the picturesque Eastern Townships town. Asked what police had asked Burkhardt, Forget said he would not comment. In response to questions from media, Forget denied that Burkhardt had received any police protection. "Not a single agent," he said.
Forget also refused to comment on what kind of crime police were investigating at what he called the "crime scene."
Guilbault said the coroner's office has four forensic specialists working at the site. She would not discuss their work in any detail, suggesting that the pulverized, incinerated site was enough of a clue to the kind of work being done. She said families have helped with identification by bringing items with DNA and dental records to help in identifying victims.
Victims' remains are being taken to the Laboratoire de sciences judiciaires et de médecine légale in Montreal, where a team of pathologists and dentists are trying to match DNA and dental records to those reported missing.
Earlier Monday, Forget had told the media that the estimated number of missing hovered around 60. He asked for caution in naming publicly anyone as a likely victim, "out of respect for the families."
Unofficial lists containing names and in many cases photos of people believed to have perished have been circulating, on social media and elsewhere.
The provincial prosecutors' office is being kept advised as the investigation continues, Forget said. He specified that any decision regarding possible charges — including criminal negligence — would be made by prosecutors, not the police.
On Tuesday 1,200 people were allowed back into the homes they had to evacuate shortly after the fire early Saturday.
Lac-Mégantic Mayor Colette Roy-Laroche said Wednesday that the reintegration of those residents went well, and reiterated the town's precautionary measure of asking people to boil their drinking water at least a minute before using.
Thanks to donors who have flooded the Red Cross with money, a coupon program has been established whereby evacuees can get vouchers every day for food and other supplies.
A public security spokesperson said the Red Cross is setting up a more structured program.
Adam Kovac, Jan Ravensbergen and Anne Sutherland contributed to this report
As a comparison, 15 people were confirmed to be killed in the ammonium nitrate explosion in West, Texas from this past April.
Story about the railroad's chairman:
Is it really common practice to leave trains like this unattended?Lac-Mégantic: Man from Chicago remains combative
MMA chairman Ed Burkhardt: ‘We think he applied some hand brakes. The question is did he apply enough of them,’
By PEGGY CURRAN, THE GAZETTE July 10, 2013 11:26 PM
LAC-MÉGANTIC — The chairman of the Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway isn’t talking sabotage anymore.
Ed Burkhardt sounded combative, but at least sporadically contrite Wednesday as he paid his first visit since the derailment and inferno early Saturday that claimed as many as 50 lives and razed the downtown of this lakeside municipality 216 kilometres east of Montreal.
As angry residents shouted insults and threats and journalists bombarded him with questions, the man from Chicago still insisted “a series of events” contributed to the deadly accident.
But after days of contradictory stories that appear to cast blame on local firefighters and mysterious vandals, Burkhardt appeared to settle on a culprit closer to home, saying unfolding evidence suggests engineer Tom Harding failed to apply hand brakes on enough rail cars to stop the runaway train.
Burkhardt said the engineer, whom he did not identify by name, is under police investigation and had been suspended without pay
“He has been our employee for many years. He’s a guy who had a completely clear safety record — up until Saturday,” Burkhardt said.
“We think he applied some hand brakes. The question is did he apply enough of them. He’s told us that he applied 11 hand brakes. Our general feeling now is that that’s not true. Initially, we took him at his word.”
He said it is the engineer’s responsibility to apply hand brakes on both the locomotives and the rail cars.
“We don’t summarily fire people, and we have to go through a process with the union. He is not being paid. I don’t think he will be back working for us again. That is my personal opinion.”
Burkhardt said he is not a legal expert and “can’t draw the line between carelessness and criminal negligence.”
But should a thorough police investigation uncover enough evidence to justify a criminal case, “let the chips fall where they may.”
Burkhardt, who said he has been receiving death threats since the accident, insisted he’s prepared to meet with residents who have lost loved ones, homes and livelihoods — provided the mayor gives the go-ahead.
“I am absolutely with them in their tragedy. I understand their tragedy. I feel personally absolutely rotten about it. But what can you do at this point?”
Yet there were no sign the MMA boss had taken the initiative of showing up at the shelter or gone for a stroll in neighbourhoods where 1,200 residents were allowed to return to their homes Tuesday.
“I find my movements around town to be pretty constricted,” he said, saying his entourage had so far been denied permission to visit the accident zone.
Burkhardt said the firm is ready “to stand up to its corporate responsibilities” to help the community rebuild, regardless of cost.
In retrospect, the decision to leave a train hauling dozens of tanks of crude oil unattended may not have been wise. But he said the railway was following what has long been common practice by railways across the continent.
“You could make the point, especially in the aftermath of this, that that was wrong. But you can go into any province in Canada or any state in the U.S. and you can find trains parked with no crew on them.”
Burkhardt made a vow that the MMA will no longer leave any of its trains unattended.
“For the future, we, and I think the rest of the industry, aren’t going to be leaving these trains unmanned. We’ll take the lead with that. I think the rest of the industry is going to follow.”
Asked to speculate on the potential fallout from the accident — and the costs of compensation and rebuilding the tracks — Burkhardt conceded “it’s not going to be good.” But he said the MMA is committed to finding a way to rebuild the track serving key clients in Lac-Mégantic.
“We have a number of shippers that depend on rail service. These guys have to have rail service or ultimately they will have to lay people off. “ But he said once the track is back up, MMA crews will no longer use Lac-Mégantic for layovers or shift chances.
At times, Burkhardt sounded almost glib, joking with photographers dogging him that “walking backward was very dangerous” and berating reports who shouted questions at the same time.
He dismissed suggestions that he and the company have appeared insensitive to the tragedy and its terrible toll on the community.
“I understand the extreme anger,” he said.
“I hope you have heard my apology about a dozen times. We are making an abject apology to the people in this town.
“Am I compassionate person? I feel absolutely awful about this. I have never been involved in anything remotely approaching this In in my whole life. The devastation here is absolutely awful.”
Burkhardt also rejected claims the company has a dismal safety record, saying it has never before been involved in a main line derailment.
“We’ve actually had quite a reasonable safety record up until Saturday, when we blew it all.”