A tractor-trailer hauling 40,000 pounds of contaminated soil from the cleanup site of the East Palestine, Ohio, train derailment overturned on a highway on Monday afternoon, officials said.

The truck was traveling north on State Route 165 in Columbiana County when it “went off of the right side of the roadway, struck a ditch and utility pole, and ultimately overturned,” according to a statement from Ohio State Highway Patrol. The driver had minor injuries.

About half the toxic soil it was carrying spilled onto the roadway and the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency said the spill was “contained and not a threat to nearby waterways.”

The highway patrol said the truck was a commercial tractor with an open-top trailer. The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency said Tuesday that crews completed removing the spilled soil and another layer of soil underneath out of an abundance of caution.

‘I DON’T WANT TO LEAVE THEM BEHIND’:Families weigh future after toxic train derailment

According to Ohio State Highway Patrol, the driver, 74-year-old Phillip Falck of Pennsylvania, was cited for “operating a vehicle without reasonable control.”

The crash comes more than two months after a Norfolk Southern-operated train carrying cancer-causing toxic chemicals derailed and caught fire, leading to evacuations of a rural Ohio town near the Pennsylvania border and environmental and health concerns. 

The train derailed on Feb. 3 after crew members became aware of an overheated wheel bearing and tried to stop, the National Transportation Safety Board said. The railroad vented and burned vinyl chloride that was being carried in five of the train’s cars to prevent an explosion. 

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT SUES:Department of Justice sues Norfolk Southern over February train derailment in rural Ohio