Toxic Substances and Encinitas Resident Safety

the-climate-reality-project-zr3bLNw1Ccs-unsplash-copy-300x200Nobody wants to think about toxic substances that may exist in the drinking water in Encinitas or elsewhere in Southern California. However, companies have disposed of toxic and otherwise harmful substances in ways that result in serious and fatal harms to consumers in California and throughout the country, giving rise to a category of personal injury lawsuits known as toxic tort claims. Toxic tort injuries in a small town in Southern California made national news back in 1996, yet as a recent article in Grist highlights, those toxic substances continue to have relevance. 

Toxic Torts Legislation in Hinkley, California

Anyone who has seen the film Erin Brockovich (2000) probably remembers the name Hinkley, a town in Southern California made famous in 1996 when, as the article explains, “a group of residents famously won a massive direct-action arbitration against Pacific Gas and Electric.” The case involved allegations against Pacific Gas and Electric, which ultimately was found responsible for “dumping hexavalent chromium (aka chromium-6), a carcinogen used to suppress rust formation at the Hinkley gas compressor station, into an unlined pond in the ‘50s and ‘60s.” By the 1990s, the chromium-6 had seeped into the groundwater in Hinkley, and many people suffered serious injuries.

Yet the dumping of toxic waste continues to impact residents. While many people moved away from Hinkley, some people stayed. The groundwater remains contaminated, and experts have suggested that a complete cleanup could take as long as 50 years. Property owners cannot find insurers, and residents of the town remain at risk of toxins in the groundwater. While those who decided to remain in Hinkley have taken important steps to hold Pacific Gas and Electric accountable and to ensure that remediation does occur, there is no clarity as to when (and whether) the full cleanup will be completed.

Public Utilities Engage in Dangerous Behaviors Beyond Toxic Torts

Utility companies and other energy companies can be responsible for severe toxic tort injuries that result from harmful substances being dumped into the water and ground in California. At the same time, it is important to remember that utility companies can also engage in other dangerous behaviors beyond those associated with toxic tort claims that can put California residents at risk of serious personal injury.

For example, according to a recent article in the Los Angeles Times, the Southern California Gas Co. recently was fined for failing to test a section of its pipeline that was damaged in an explosion that occurred in January 2017. Southern California Gas Co. is the largest natural-gas operator in the state of California (and indeed in the country). As such, it supplies natural gas to thousands of Californians. However, California state regulators also allege that the company has been “putting its financial bottom line ahead of public safety by refusing to fully investigate [the] 2017 explosion.” The California Public Utilities Commission fined the utility company $3.3 million, citing its practices as “irresponsible to the public safety and unacceptable.”

Contact an Encinitas Toxic Torts Lawyer

If you have questions about toxic torts or filing a toxic torts claim in Southern California, you should speak with an Encinitas toxic torts attorney about your case. Contact the Walton Law Firm for more information about how we assist clients in personal injury cases.

 

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