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More Settlements For PFAs Makers On the Way

3m logo In: More Settlements For PFAs Makers On the Way | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River

3m logo In: More Settlements For PFAs Makers On the Way | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River

While still awaiting specifics on regulating PFAs from state and federal agencies, the slow process of the courts are doing their part by holding some of the polluters accountable.  Florida’s own Chemours has not escaped this trend.

Typically of big polluters, Chemours defends the manufacturing, use, and import of  PFAS, saying  restriction would have a devastating impact on jobs, supply chains and the economy.

No mention of human health risks, just a loss of money and jobs. 

What does that say about Chemours?  Money at all costs.

Sounds like Florida.

Read the complete article here in the Spokane Spokesman-Review.

Comments by OSFR historian Jim Tatum.
jim.tatum@oursantaferiver.org
– A river is like a life: once taken,
it cannot be brought back © Jim Tatum


‘Forever chemical’ trial delayed, 3M settlement appears near

June 5, 2023 Updated Mon., June 5, 2023 at 11 a.m.

By Mike Hughlett (Minneapolis) Star Tribune

3M is nearing a settlement with scores of cities and water agencies over firefighting foam made with PFAS, the “forever chemicals” that have tainted groundwater across the country.

3M and plaintiffs’ lawyers Sunday asked that a big trial scheduled to start Monday in Charleston, South Carolina. be delayed while mediation continues. U.S. District Court Judge Richard Gergel Monday granted a motion for the trial’s continuance.

“Counsel for the plaintiff and counsel for 3M Company have been in serious settlement discussions to reach a global resolution of the claims of the water district plaintiffs pending against 3M,” Gergel wrote in an order Monday.

“The parties informed the court last evening that they have reached a stage in those discussions where they believe a final binding agreement is achievable in the near future.”

Both 3M and plaintiffs’ lawyers told the court Sunday “that they believe their time could be more effectively spent finalizing the agreement and obtaining the necessary approvals rather than commencing the trial of this case.”

Last week, DuPont de Nemours Inc., Chemours Co. and DuPont spinoff Corteva Inc. agreed to $1.2 billion settlement before the trial, which pits over 3,000 plaintiffs – including cities, towns and public water agencies – against several firefighting foam manufacturers.

3M was the largest of those foam makers, and any settlement is expected to be several times higher than the DuPont agreement. Bloomberg News, citing unnamed sources, Friday reported a 3M settlement could be at least $10 billion.

3M faces a flood of lawsuits – and potentially tens of billions of dollars in liabilities – over myriad consumer and industrial products that contained PFAS. But no single case is more significant in terms of size, combined with possible damages, than the firefighting foam litigation in South Carolina.

A series of “bellwether” trials were expected to kick off Monday with the city of Stuart, Fla., as the plaintiff. Bellwether trials are common in multi-district litigation (MDL) cases like the firefighting foam litigation.

Such trials are aimed at encouraging settlements in MDLs, which are used in the federal court system for complex product liability matters with many separate claims.

The firefighting foam case against 3M is akin to a tidal wave PFAS lawsuits filed in the past few years. Plaintiffs’ claims that 3M knew of the chemicals’ risks for years yet did not fully disclose them to government regulators.

In the 1960s, 3M and the U.S. Navy developed a new firefighting foam that was particularly good at quenching oil-related fires. The U.S. Air Force adopted the foam after the Navy – and so did fire departments of all stripes nationwide.

But what made the firefighting foam so effective were PFAS chemicals, which don’t biodegrade, tainting the environment. They have been linked to cancer, liver damage, decreased fertility and other maladies.

3M stopped making firefighting foam around 2000 because of potential environmental risks. The company stands by its handling of PFAS, arguing that the chemicals are safe to humans in the levels that exist in the environment.

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