Sunday May 4th, 2025 1:10PM

Gas leak follows N.D. train derailment

By
MINOT, N.D. - A train derailed west of this North Dakota city early Friday, sending a cloud of anhydrous ammonia gas over the area, killing one resident and sending dozens more to the hospital. <br> <br> ``It was like something just grabbed your lungs,&#39;&#39; said state Sen. Randy Schobinger, who lives about 500 feet from the tracks. <br> <br> Ten people were in the intensive care unit at Trinity Hospital Friday morning, and more than 35 others had gone to the hospital for treatment, Ward County Sheriff Vern Erck said. <br> <br> Some residents were forced to evacuate, and dozens were being given oxygen or having their eyes flushed with water at temporary public shelters. <br> <br> Authorities did not immediately identify the man who died. Erck said he was found outside his home, close to the wreck. <br> <br> The accident happened at about 1:40 a.m., when about 20 cars of a 112-car Canadian Pacific Railway train derailed, Gov. John Hoeven said. <br> <br> ``A couple of them have rolled away from the track, and there&#39;s just a small plume coming out of one of the cars,&#39;&#39; Hoeven said. He was not sure how many of the cars held anhydrous ammonia, a fertilizer that can burn the nose and throat. <br> <br> The cause of the derailment was not immediately known. Authorities were working to build a road to the crash site about a mile west of Minot, Hoeven said. <br> <br> Minot, population 36,000, is about 100 miles north of Bismarck. <br> <br> With temperatures hovering around 5 below zero, Paul Behm, who owns a truck stop near the derailment site, put a moist towel over his nose and mouth and went knocking on doors to make sure friends living nearby were not hurt. <br> <br> ``The cloud had started kind of enveloping the truck stop area,&#39;&#39; Behm said. ``It smells just like ammonia cleaner, only higher concentrate.&#39;&#39; <br> <br> State emergency manager Doug Friez said some people were evacuated, but did not say how many. The derailment also knocked out power to parts of Minot and neighboring Burlington, railway spokeswoman Laura Baenen said. <br> <br> Those who were not evacuated were being told to stay in their homes, shut off their furnaces and place damp cloths over entrances to their homes if necessary, Hoeven said. <br> <br> Authorities did not say how long the cloud of anhydrous ammonia might be over the city. <br> <br> ``It looks like things are starting to lighten up a little bit. That doesn&#39;t mean that things can&#39;t change,&#39;&#39; Minot Fire Chief Harold Haugstad said. <br> <br> Hoeven and the commander of the North Dakota National Guard, Maj. Gen. Mike Haugen, went to Minot Friday to inspect the situation. <br> <br> An elementary school was set up as one of the public shelters, and more than 60 people gathered there. <br> <br> ``People don&#39;t seem to be panicking, which is good,&#39;&#39; Police Chief Dan Draovitch said. ``We&#39;re just waiting for it to dissipate.&#39;&#39;
© Copyright 2025 AccessWDUN.com
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without permission.