the dirt and actually taking it away. you have to go down in to the dirt particularly at that side where the trains wrecked. so that work is martha: i hear you. it s a difficult situation. i m thinking about the woman that garrett tenney just interviewed. she said we see the dirt back over the air and the trains come back and they run. people don t care about us in this situation. i m wondering, you had a question yesterday about the plume, that enormous plume of smoke that went up in to the sky. it s not just in that mile radius. it s going over how many miles of radius? those all of the chemicals that are carried in that. martha, i understand the concern. first of all, i don t have a concern for the railroad. the only concern i have is for
southern train going through salem 20 miles west of palestine. this is 40 minutes before the train derailed. you can see what the ntsb is an overheated wheel bearing sparking on the tracks. why did the censors on board not detect that issue until it was too late? that s one of the questions that investigators are looking into now. martha? martha: a lot of questions, garrett. thank you. so chelsea simpson is a mother of four from east palestine who fears that it s not safe to return. chelsea, thanks very much for being here. tell me what your concerns are. we heard some strong voices in that report from garrett tenney. do you agree with those people? you feel that way as well? yes, i do feel that way. they re saying they tested our air in our homes and it s safe to go home. but did they test any like carpets, couches, anything like that? that stuff had to settle
getting sick and dying in the area. the epa told fox this just hours ago. we have been in over 460 homes testing the air quality. we re going to test 28 more homes today. the data shows that there s no elevated levels. martha: so east palestine resident chelsea simpson said her lips with polka-dotted and had red patches on her skin. governor dewine will respond and give answers in his home state. first, let s go to garrett tenney live in east palestine today with the latest. hi, garrett. hi, martha. every day we re hearing more stories like those while officials say based on all the data that they collected so far, the danger has passed. the air is safe to breathe and the soil is safe and the small amount of chemical that is being
supply. there s five separate wells. we now have results back from all the wells. all the wells indicate testing is negative. it s clear. that water certainly can be consumed by residents. i know people have been concerned about that. we advise people until we got the testing back, we advised them don t drink the water. you know, use bottled water. but the experts all along told us, look, the wells are so deep, we don t see how any kind of problem at all. martha: so you re assuring people the drinking water is safe. you got the tests back. you hear what they re saying. you hear the folks that garrett tenney interviewed. they don t believe it. they said we ve seen this show before in different situations. i think of 9-11. everyone was told, the air is safe, it s all been tested. come back down. then you see what happens five, ten, 20 years later, people end
the team announced he suffered a cardiac arrest. his heartbeat was restored on the field. bill: coaches and teammates looked on in horror. this went on for a while. 30 minutes. the medical staff loaded him into an ambulance and teammates were huddled on the field in prayer. dana: league officials were talking behind the scenes how or whether to move forward. they say the decision to postpone the game was an easy one. we saw the coaches and players and frankly they were all traumatized. myself personally, just thinking through what is actually happening and taking place realtime. an occurrence we haven t seen in our time. dana: clay travis is here with reaction. let s go to garrett tenney following the story from chicago.