The City of Baltimore will receive a portion of the $537.5 million settlement reached with chemical maker Monsanto and two associated companies as the result of a nationwide class action lawsuit over PCB (polychlorinated biphenyls) contamination in municipal water systems.
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PCBs are industrial chemicals that were used in electrical equipment and a wide range of other products from the 1930s until the 1970s, when they were banned by federal law.
The City filed its own lawsuit against Monsanto in 2019, alleging that PCBs have impacted municipal stormwater systems and other water systems.
The City obtained a ruling rejecting Monsanto's attempt to dismiss the case in 2020. Cases filed against Monsanto, Solutia Inc., and Pharmacia LLC by municipalities nationwide were later condensed into a single class action lawsuit, with the City serving as one of thirteen class representatives.
Judge Fernando Olguin of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, who signed off on the settlement, said, "the Court finds that the Settlement Agreement is fair, adequate and reasonable, appears to be the product of arm's-length and informed negotiations, and treats all members of the class fairly."
The settlement creates four separate funds to compensate the plaintiff municipalities for monitoring, cleaning up, and restoring the affected water systems. Over 2,500 municipal class members will participate in the settlement.
In addition to the City of Baltimore, the class was represented by Baltimore County, Md.; Los Angeles County, Calif.; the Cities of San Diego, San Jose, Oakland, Berkeley, and Chula Vista, Calif.; Spokane and Tacoma, Wash.; and the City and Port of Portland, Ore. ■
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