5 Hazmat Rail Training, Grant-Eligible Options

5 Hazmat Rail Training, Grant-Eligible Options

By Niki Toussaint, Senior AVP of Marketing and Education, Security and Emergency Response Training Center. Reprinted with permission from SERTC and the National League of Cities. You can read the original story here.

Cities and towns with railroad tracks may want to look to Federal Emergency Management Agency grants to prepare first responders for hazardous materials incidents.

While Federal Railroad Administration data shows hazmat accident rates per carload are down 80 percent since 2005 and that more than 99.9 percent of hazmat shipments by rail arrive without incident, training like SERTC’s is critical if something goes wrong. The Security and Emergency Response Training Center (SERTC), a division of the world’s leading rail research, testing and consulting center at MxV Rail in Pueblo, Colorado, offers a proven path forward — and FEMA grant funding can make this life-saving training accessible to cities of all sizes.

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Here are five ways that FEMA grants can help your local first responders train for rail hazmat incidents:

1. FEMA Grants Remove Financial Barriers

Through FEMA’s Homeland Security National Training Program, cities can send eligible first responders to SERTC with costs for tuition, travel, lodging and meals fully covered. This means your city can access top-tier training without straining local budgets — a practical solution for communities facing tight resources.

2. AFFIRM Training Addresses Emerging Hazmat Threats

SERTC’s AFFIRM course — Alternative Fuels & Flammable Incident Response & Management — is designed to prepare responders for the unique challenges posed by new energy sources and evolving transportation risks. As cities and towns see more alternative fuel vehicles and infrastructure, AFFIRM equips teams to handle incidents involving ethanol, biodiesel and other flammable materials safely and effectively. Also covered by FEMA funding, AFFIRM is free to attend for first responders who apply to the program.

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3. Remote Training Brings SERTC to Your Community

Not every city or town can send large groups of responders to Pueblo. That’s why SERTC offers remote course delivery, bringing expert instructors and hands-on learning directly to your community. This flexible approach ensures that even smaller or rural departments can benefit from world-class training — without the need for travel.

4. Training That Makes a Difference

Localities across the country have seen the impact of SERTC training, with graduates successfully containing hazardous spills in local waterways and preventing injuries in real-world incidents. Pasco County Fire Rescue in Florida credited SERTC training with helping them confidently contain a hazardous materials incident last year — an event they thought would never happen. Similarly, Rankin County Emergency Operations in Mississippi applied multiple techniques from SERTC’s Hazardous Emergency Response Scenario course during a complex rollover involving a grain trailer and a propane bobtail, both spilling products.

5. Flexible, Future-Focused Curriculum

Hazardous materials transportation is evolving, and so are the risks cities face. SERTC continually updates its curriculum — including AFFIRM and other specialist courses — to address new threats, technologies and lessons learned from recent incidents. Whether your city is preparing for rail, highway or intermodal hazmat challenges, SERTC can tailor training to your needs.

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