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Friday, Mar 24 2023

Full Issue

Contaminated Water Lawsuits Stack Up For Marine Corps Camp Lejeune

A report in Roll Call explains how claims and lawsuits are piling up against the government over contaminated drinking water at the Camp, including a "growing percentage" of wrongful death suits. Separately, the UN warns over the impacts of a lack of drinking water around the world.

As claims and lawsuits pile up against the government related to contaminated drinking water at Camp Lejeune, the number of grievous health outcomes tied to exposure to those toxic chemicals at the Marine Corps base in North Carolina is also rising. A growing percentage of cases are becoming wrongful death suits rather than damage claims for illnesses as more Marines and their family members who were sickened by the tainted water, often many years after the exposure, lose their lives, according to several people involved in the litigation. (Magner, 3/23)

In other environmental health news 鈥

A lack of drinking water and healthy sanitation infrastructure is dire around the world and getting worse, United Nations experts warned in a report issued Thursday. The report finds that many millions of the world鈥檚 7.78 billion people don鈥檛 have enough clean water or sanitation infrastructure that helps keep humans healthy by taking waste away from their homes. (Weissenstein, 3/23)

Water containing a radioactive material has leaked for a second time from a nuclear plant near Minneapolis and the plant will be shut down, but there is no danger to the public, the plant鈥檚 owner said Thursday. A leak of what was believed to be hundreds of gallons of water containing tritium was discovered this week from a temporary fix at the Monticello Nuclear Generating Plant, where 400,000 gallons (1.5 million liters) of water with tritium leaked in November, Xcel Energy said in a statement Thursday. (3/24)

A Missouri grade school that was shut down last year amid concerns of possible radioactive contamination will not reopen, the school district said Thursday. Jana Elementary School, in the St. Louis County town of Florissant, closed in October after a private study indicated the presence of contamination in classrooms, the playground and elsewhere. The study was funded by lawyers whose clients were suing over radioactive waste in Coldwater Creek, which runs near the school. (Salter, 3/23)

Residents of an area of Louisiana that has become known as 鈥渃ancer alley鈥 due to the prominence of pollution coming from industry there are alleging that they are the victims of environmental racism in a new lawsuit.聽They specifically point to a 2014 land use plan issued by their parish, the Louisiana equivalent of a county, which designated majority-black areas as places where industry could develop, according to the lawsuit.聽(Frazin, 3/21)

First it was the eerie images of barrels leaking on the seafloor not far from Catalina Island. Then the shocking realization that the nation鈥檚 largest manufacturer of DDT had once used the ocean as a huge dumping ground 鈥 and that as many as half a million barrels of its acid waste had been poured straight into the water. (Xia, 3/23)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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