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New Plan Could Help Safeguard US Rail Travel
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?r=279&c=749657&l=1009&ctl=155A0B8:A6F02AD83191E160DD240C16CFE13DC69574F7DCC14957C0 Focus of security
measures to prevent terrorists from exploding rail cars carrying
dangerous chemicals like chlorine Homeland security officials
announced new steps Friday to protect the U.S. rail system from
terrorist attack.  VOA National correspondent Jim Malone reports from
Washington.







A maintenance worker walks past the company logo on the side of a
locomotive in the Union Pacific Railroad fueling yard in north
DenverThe focus of the new security measures is on preventing
terrorists from exploding rail cars carrying dangerous chemicals like
chlorine.

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff announced the plan at a
Washington news conference.

"The biggest danger I think we are concerned about is the possibility
of a terrorist blowing up a [rail] car, which causes dangerous
chemicals to be emitted into the air that will affect people's
respiratory system, where people are going to be breathing chlorine,
or breathing anhydrous ammonia," he said.

The security measures include inspections of rail cars and keeping
them in a secure area when not in use.  Each railroad will designate a
security coordinator, who will receive terrorist threat information
from the government.  The government will also have the ability to
track individual rail cars carrying hazardous materials.

Secretary Chertoff says rail systems are being asked to minimize the
time when rail cars carrying dangerous chemicals are standing still.

"We want to reduce and drive down that standstill time, because the
vulnerability of the system is greatest when the [rail] car is sitting
still, and there is the least vulnerability and risk when the car is
moving rapidly," he added.

Some Democrats in Congress are already complaining about the new
regulations, saying the plan is late in coming and does not do enough
to tighten rail security.

On another issue, Secretary Chertoff defended his department's
decision to abandon for now a program to check the identities of
visitors leaving the United States by land.  Exit checks for those
traveling by air will go forward.

A government report said it would take five years to10 years to
develop the technology that would create a departure system for
foreign visitors who are leaving the country by land, a system that
would not result in major delays at border check points.

Secretary Chertoff said the government remains committed to the
program, but it may take years to implement.

"Not only the cost of finding technology, but the unbelievably long
lines that you would see at the border crossings, if we required all
the people leaving the country by land going into Canada to stop to
give a biometric print," he said.  "You would see lines that are 10 or
15 miles long."

Chertoff says the entry portion of the program is working well, and
includes digital scans of fingerprints to identify foreign visitors.

The program, known as U.S. Visit, was implemented following the 2001
terrorist attacks to better screen for suspected terrorists entering
the United States.