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The State of Rhode Island; counties in California, New Jersey, and Texas;
and municipalities including San Francisco, Oakland, Milwaukee, and St.
Louis; school districts in California, Mississippi, and Texas; and the
New York City Housing Authority have filed or joined suits against the
lead pigment manufacturers. Lead-poisoned children have also sued the
lead industry in a number of other locales. For the status of the government
lawsuits against the industry, click
here.
In July 2005, DuPont Corporation agreed to pay nearly $12 million to
settle its case in Rhode Island’s landmark lawsuit against the manufacturers
of lead-based paints. This is a significant acknowledgment by a lead paint
manufacturer of its responsibility to address the problem it partly caused.
In February 2006, the State of Rhode Island prevailed in its suit against
three former lead pigment manufacturers, an important and precedent-setting
decision that could have ripple effects to other jurisdictions where suits
are already under way.
To date, the lead industry never has been held accountable
for producing and profiting from a product it knew was harmful.
Governmental bodies (and therefore taxpayers), on the other
hand, have incurred significant costs stemming from the presence
of lead-based paint in public and private buildings, including
housing. Because states have a quasi-sovereign interest in
protecting the health and well-being of their residents, they
can sue to protect that interest. Governments also own buildings
that have been painted with lead-based paint. They have and
will continue to incur abatement costs to control and prevent
lead hazards in those buildings.
Most of the lawsuits seek to recover public expenditures
to detect and abate lead hazards, perform medical screening
and treatment, and educate the public about the dangers of
lead-based paint. In addition, the plaintiffs have requested
punitive damages, on grounds that the defendants maliciously
and intentionally concealed the hazards of lead-based paint.
The State of Rhode Island has requested that the defendants
be ordered to detect and abate lead in all public and private
buildings in the state that are accessible to children, and
to fund screening and prevention programs, including a “corrective”
public education campaign on the dangers of lead. Each of
the governmental plaintiffs has requested that financial responsibility
for past and future lead poisoning prevention programs be
shifted to the defendants. By specifically requesting that
defendants fund prevention programs, the plaintiffs will help
to ensure that proceeds of the lawsuits are targeted for prevention,
and do not end up in general state coffers, as was the case
with the funds from the tobacco settlements. The suits do
not specify a dollar amount of damages sought.
Some of the plaintiffs have requested additional unique types of relief.
For example, the California counties have requested that the defendants
be required to disgorge the ill-gotten gains they made as a result of
their unfair and fraudulent business practices, and that they be prohibited
from continuing to downplay the hazards of lead-based paint. For example,
through the Lead Industries Association (LIA), the industry produced a
self-serving video in 1999 featuring Sesame Street’s “Susan.”
If these lawsuits succeed in forcing the lead industry to contribute
significant resources to lead poisoning prevention, children and families
will be the primary beneficiaries, as lead hazards will be permanently
eliminated from housing before children are poisoned. Taxpayers also will
benefit, since they no longer will be required to pay for detecting and
abating lead hazards, lead poisoning screening and treatment, special
education programs for lead-poisoned children, etc. To the extent that
this type of lawsuit encourages more responsible corporate behavior in
the future, the public at large will benefit as well.
Not really. It is possible but improbable that the defendants
could try to argue that the claims brought by plaintiffs are
totally lacking in merit and frivolous, which could subject
the plaintiffs to court sanctions if proven. However, no such
claims by defendants have been raised, and most legal experts
agree that these claims would be very unlikely to succeed
if brought.
There have been successful suits brought on behalf of lead-poisoned children,
primarily against rental property owners (but not the lead industry).
Those suits typically seek to compensate children who already have been
poisoned on a case-by-case basis. These suits occasionally afford relief
to small numbers of lead-poisoned children (if successful, and if the
defendant has the resources to pay the damages). They do not create an
opportunity for prevention beyond the case at hand, and do not direct
resources to the core of the problem—lead-based paint hazards that
are poisoning children in their homes. If the lead industry is not held
financially responsible for the damage caused by lead-based paint, there
is little hope that taxpayer funds will be sufficient for broad-scale,
primary prevention in at-risk communities.
No, taxpayers are not paying large fees to support these lawsuits. The
lawyers working with the governmental plaintiffs have taken these cases
on a contingency fee basis, meaning that they will be paid only if they
succeed either at trial or in settlement. The potential attorney fees
for these cases are sizeable; however, the attorneys assume all the risk
of a loss in a contingency fee case, including their expenses for research
and investigation.
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