Crews soak up oil that leaked along railroad tracks in SE Minnesota near Mississippi River

The Associated Press
March 14, 2014 at 5:01PM

MINNEISKA, Minn. — Crews have placed oil-absorbing booms and sandbags along railroad tracks in southeastern Minnesota to soak up oil that leaked out of a tanker car last month.

The car dribbled about 12,000 gallons between Red Wing and Winona Feb. 3. Officials say little oil collected in any one spot because the train was moving, but some pooled when the train stopped for 45 minutes near Minneiska (min-ee-ISS'-kah) for a crew change. The site is near Weaver Bottoms, a major backwater of the Mississippi River, and the oil became apparent with the warmer weather.

Canadian Pacific spokesman Ed Greenberg says the railroad has placed booms and sandbags along a short segment of track, and applied oil-eating microbes to the surface. He says there's no trace of the oil beyond the track area.

about the writer

about the writer

More from Minnesota Star Tribune

See More
In this photo taken Monday, March 6, 2017, in San Francisco, released confidential files by The University of California of a sexual misconduct case, like this one against UC Santa Cruz Latin Studies professor Hector Perla is shown. Perla was accused of raping a student during a wine-tasting outing in June 2015. Some of the files are so heavily redacted that on many pages no words are visible. Perla is one of 113 UC employees found to have violated the system's sexual misconduct policies in rece

We respect the desire of some tipsters to remain anonymous, and have put in place ways to contact reporters and editors to ensure the communication will be private and secure.

card image