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LOCAL
PRESSURE:
Rooster
Cogburn is fighting a plan for Union
Pacific rail company to build a six-mile
rail yard across the interstate from his
ostrich farm in Picacho, Ariz.
ROBERT
HARBISON/SPECIAL TO THE CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE MONITOR |
Railroad boom hits environmental,
'not in my backyard' snags
As US railroads try to meet demand and reduce reliance on trucks,
landowners and environmentalists worry about pollution.
By
Ron Scherer | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
PICACHO, ARIZ.
From his ostrich ranch, Rooster Cogburn looks out over a
broad mesa covered with cactuses, pecan groves, and alfalfa. In
the distance, the granite summit of Picacho Peak towers over the
Sonoran desert.
"It's beautiful. It's tranquil. No one lives out there," he
says.
But, the view could be changing.
Across the interstate from his ranch, the Union Pacific (UP)
railroad wants to build a six-mile switching yard, part of an
effort to improve its national freight service. And, this month,
local officials rezoned some 10,000 acres from development
sensitive to heavy industrial. They envision businesses
springing up around the new yard.
Burgeoning business is pushing railroads into the middle of
sticky environmental disputes. On one side are environmental
groups, ranchers, and landowners concerned about potential
chemical spills and air pollution. On the other side are rail
companies stretched to the limit - barely able to provide
communities with goods. Their strategy - with national
implications for reducing oil usage - is to carry more of the
containers now moved by long haul truckers. But, to do this they
need to build more rail yards in places such as Picacho.
Urban areas are also becoming wary about freight traffic
moving through their communities. Nine major US cities are
considering legislation that would require railroads to reroute
hazardous chemicals - a move that would probably require
building more trackage in suburban and rural areas. Last week,
both the US Department of Transportation and the Department of
Homeland Security introduced legislation regarding shipping
hazardous materials. And rail security experts anticipate that
the Democratic-led Congress will look more closely at the issue.
With large open spaces in shorter supply and business
booming, railroads are locked into disputes over land use - even
in what used to be the wide-open West.
The strategy of rail companies - with implications for
reducing oil usage - is to carry more of the containers moved by
long haul truckers. But, to do this they need to build more rail
yards.
"We are all an advocate of increased rail transportation in
this country because in part it keeps a significant number of
trucks off the interstate highway system," says Cecil Steward,
dean emeritus at the University of Nebraska College of
Architecture in Lincoln and an expert on sustainability.
"However, that does not give the railroads carte blanche to
screw up the environment in a similar way the highway system
screws it up."
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LOCALS RESIST:
Arizona
activists are fighting a plan for Union
Pacific to build a rail yard near
Picacho Peak State Park (in the
back-ground).
ROBERT
HARBISON/SPECIAL TO THE CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE MONITOR |
The scrutiny comes at a time when railroads across the nation
are building new rail yards - with local citizens concerned
about pollution and additional truck traffic. That's the case in
Gardner, Kan., where Burlington Northern Santa Fe railway is
planning a $1 billion train terminal and warehouse center, in
Los Angeles where there are proposals by BNSF and UP to build
new yards, and in suburban Atlanta where recently local
residents unsuccessfully fought the development of a 450-acre
Norfolk Southern rail yard.
The growth of the yards is actually part of a change taking
place in the rail industry. It is displacing the long-haul truck
industry in moving containers. "We move the long haul, then a
trucking company does the short haul," says Pat Hiatte, a
spokesman for BNSF in Ft. Worth, Texas.
But the railroads then need large yards to either unload or
rearrange. Often the rail facilities are combined with
warehouses for easy unloading and storage before goods are
loaded onto trucks headed to storage or other trains headed to
other states. That's the plan in Picacho.
Many residents - including Cogburn and members of a local
group called Save the Peak! - are not opposed to the Union
Pacific building a switch yard, as long as it's somewhere else.
"I'm not against growth," Cogburn says. "But there is so much
horrible, miserable land, you don't need to set it down right
over there."
"Right over there" is state-owned land currently leased by
Herb Kai, who grows cotton, grains, and pecans on it.
Mr. Kai, who also supports a rail yard somewhere else, says
"the railroad would have to prove 100 percent that Picacho Peak
is the only place this could go."
The Union Pacific, headquartered in Omaha, Neb., agrees that
Kai's piece of property is unique, in large part because it is
remote. The railroad tried to avoid locations too close to
hospitals, schools, residential developments, and water
resources.
And a key reason for choosing Picacho: It's flat. Level land
means it's easier and safer to move trains around, says Mark
Davis, a UP spokesman.
In Casa Grande, about 20 miles north of the peak, the local
economic development group sees the proposed rail yard as a way
to get new warehousing jobs for companies that would use the
railroad to bring products into the region.
"This should be built to bring in hundreds of super-deluxe
jobs and provide the transportation infrastructure necessary to
enhance and maintain Arizona's economy," says Paul Ringer,
interim director of the Casa Grande Valley Economic Development
Foundation.
But the proposed rail yard will also sit on top of an aquifer
that could be important for the future expansion of nearby
Tucson. "We're storing that water for future generations," says
Kai. "People are concerned that any pollution will contaminate
it."
That's a valid concern, says Fred Millar, an expert on rail
security and safety issues.
"Has anyone inquired of the Union Pacific what hazardous
cargos they bring or plan to bring into this area?" he asks. "As
an informed citizen, we know that anytime rail yards are
redeveloped, you have to do toxic cleanup."
Davis says Union Pacific is "well aware" of the aquifer. And,
to cut down on noise the railroad plans to install new hydraulic
brakes that will eliminate the high-pitched squeal that often
emanates from rail yards.
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A SIGN OF OPPOSITION:
A billboard
from a local group protests the
proposal.
ROBERT HARBISON/SPECIAL
TO THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
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Environmentalists are also concerned about a population of
bats that reside in caves in the nearby mountains. According Tim
Smith of the state Game and Fish Department in Tucson, there are
historical records of a colony of long-nosed bats, a federally
endangered species. "As with any wildlife, there would be
concerns about loss of habitat and disturbance of the roost
site," he says. "You want to minimize any impact that you can."
Davis of Union Pacific says he is not aware of the bats. But
"we will definitely look into it."
But, Cogburn's daughter, Dana Barrett, says UP was told about
the bats in a hearing. "We can't seem to get anyone interested
in protecting these bats," she says.