Canadian transportation officials say there will be no more one-man crews for trains with dangerous goods after an oil train derailment in Quebec that killed nearly 50 people.
Two residents of a Quebec town devastated after an oil train derailment killed 50 people have registered a motion to file a class-action lawsuit against the U.S. rail company and some of its employees.
It's been a week since a train carrying shale oil derailed, resulting in a crash and explosions that devastated the small Canadian town of Lac-Megantic in Quebec.
The president and CEO of the railway's parent company says an employee failed to properly set the brakes of the train that crashed into a town in Quebec, killing at least 15 people.
The lead Transportation Safety Board investigator says the rail tankers involved in a derailment and explosions that wiped out the heart of a small town in Quebec have a history of puncturing during accidents.