A roundup of recent asbestos-related news and information that you should be aware of. An ongoing list of reported asbestos hot spots in the US from the Asbestos News Roundup archive appears on our asbestos map.
Many of the materials used in the construction industry contained, or in some cases still contain asbestos. In fact, by the mid-20th century asbestos was being used in fire retardant coatings, concrete, bricks, pipes and fireplace cement, heat, fire, and acid resistant gaskets, pipe insulation, ceiling insulation, fireproof drywall, flooring, roofing, lawn furniture, and drywall joint compound.
In the 1960-70s the general public was not aware of the dangers of asbestos, and so millions of men and women likely worked on or around construction asbestos without any protection.
It would not be uncommon for people to work with asbestos-containing products, either installing or removing them, which would send asbestos fibers into the air. People who become ill from asbestos are usually exposed to it on a regular basis, hence the hundreds of asbestos construction lawsuits we are seeing now.
Jefferson County, TX: On July 17, Julie Verret, daughter of the late John Verret, who died of lung cancer on July 27, 2011, filed an asbestos lawsuit against her father’s long-time employer, Texaco. The lawsuit claims the oil company negligently exposed Verret to asbestos which led to his cancer diagnosis.
Verret worked at a Texaco facility in Port Arthur as bricklayer and operator from 1968 to 1992, the lawsuit claims. It was during his employment that was allegedly exposed to asbestos dust and fibers. The lawsuit claims Texaco negligently exposed Verret to asbestos and as a result, he contracted asbestos-related lung cancer. The lawsuit includes a medical report stating that Verret was a smoker. Julie Verret is seeking wrongful death damages. (setexasrecord.com)
New Orleans, LA: Donald Thomas has filed an asbestos lawsuit against American Standard and 40 other defendants alleging they are responsible for his exposure to large amounts of asbestos through manufacturing, selling, designing, supplying, distributing, mining, milling, re-labeling, reselling, processing, applying and installing asbestos and asbestos containing materials.
In his lawsuit, Thomas claims his occupational exposure has resulted in his lung cancer and asbestosis. He asserts he did not know of the dangers of asbestos until one year before his diagnosis. The defendants are accused of creating hazardous and deadly conditions in which the plaintiff was exposed to large amounts of asbestos fibers. (louisianarecord.com)
Sunriver, OR: A lawsuit filed by Sunriver Owners Association (SROA) against the United States has been settled with the government’s payment of almost $500,000 to cover the cost of investigation and remediation of asbestos-containing material discovered in the soil near the association’s former amphitheater and sledding hill.
The July 2010 lawsuit filed by SROA alleged that asbestos contamination existed on six acres of a 22-acre parcel that, in the 1940s, was part of Camp Abbot, a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers training camp. According to SROA, beginning in 1944, the United States demolished most of the Camp Abbot buildings; many had floor tiles, siding, insulation and other construction materials that contained asbestos. These materials were abandoned on site when the United States left the property. The community of Sunriver was developed on the former Camp Abbot grounds beginning in 1968.
SROA first discovered the asbestos debris in 2002 and worked with the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) to investigate the extent of contamination and develop a remedy to prevent any contact with the contaminated soil. In 2010, SROA’s members approved construction of the Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center (SHARC) on the 22-acre site. The center functions as a cap over the contaminated soil. SHARC opened earlier this summer to great success. Had it not been constructed, SROA would have been required to spend an estimated $3.2 million to remove all of the asbestos-contaminated soil.
Attorneys David Blount and Jennifer Gates at Landye Bennett Blumstein LLP in Portland represented SROA in the lawsuit against the United States. According to Gates, “While it appeared from the beginning that the United States might be the source of the asbestos, with assistance from a military architectural historian, archaeologist and aerial photo expert, we were able to convince the United States that it bore most, if not all responsibility.”
SHARC received an Oregon Brownfields Award earlier this year. The awards recognize individuals and groups who worked together to transform contaminated sites into productive uses.
According to DEQ, a brownfield is “a real property where expansion or redevelopment is complicated by actual or perceived environmental contamination.” Hugh Palcic, SROA’s assistant general manager also won the 2012 Oregon Brownfields Unsung Hero Award for his work guiding the project from investigation to completion.
“We are pleased this dispute has been resolved fairly and that the United States accepted responsibility,” said SROA General Manager Bill Peck. “Our homeowners were able to recoup almost all of the costs of dealing with the asbestos contamination. Sunriver developed a beautiful new recreation facility, the environmental hazards of the site were remediated, and the cleanup cost was reduced by more than $2.5 million.” (businesswire.com)
Washington, DC: Hubert J. Bell, a project manager who was overseeing removal of asbestos from a former Chrysler factory in Detroit, has been charged by The U.S. attorney’s office with a felony for failing to remove the material safely.
Bell, worked at One Accord Environmental Services Inc. in Detroit, was charged in a criminal complaint with failing to properly remove asbestos, a hazardous material, from a shuttered plant in late 2010 that was part of the Chrysler’s American Motors Corp. subsidiary at 14250 Plymouth Road.
According to an affidavit filed by Environmental Protection Agency Special Agent Michael Pemberton, Bell directed employees to push potentially contaminated water down drains and didn’t use proper procedures to remove asbestos. A cooperating witness told the EPA that asbestos wasn’t being removed properly.
In early 2010, the property and three other properties in Michigan and New York were sold for $2.3 million. The price was a fraction of what Chrysler once sought for the Detroit property that produced helicopters in World War II and turned out millions of appliances. The properties were sold to Mount Clemens-based Manchester Plymouth LLC. (detnews.com)