From Dime-Co.Com
California Environmental and Toxic Tort Law
By Gibson Sebastian
Nov 27, 2007 - 10:14:03 AM
Environmental
and Toxic Tort Law cases in California are often one and the same.
In an age when the carelessness of large corporations seems endless and
the public has awoken to environmental dangers such as global warming
and pollution of groundwater, such cases can not only provide a measure
of redress to injured plaintiffs but also assist in the fight against
what some entities would do to our planet in the name of profit.
Individuals in their homes, at work, in school and during leisure or
recreational activities are exposed to toxic chemicals, drugs, and
mercury from the places they live, work, or elsewhere spend time and
what they eat and drink and the cosmetics they use.
They can be damaged by exposure to asbestos, lead, mercury, zinc,
chromium, TCE, PCBs, arsenic, benzene, beryllium, pesticides, silica,
manganese, formaldehyde and other toxins from places and things they
would never have expected. Examples include lead-paint covered toys,
toxic chemicals not only in the groundwater and the tap water used by
companies to fill bottled water. But pollution can come from the air,
from the water, from the soil, and from other sources one often doesn’t
consider.
Pollution also comes from electro-magnetic fields, cigarette smoke, and
mold in the home or at work. Air pollution includes unhealthy levels in
the air quality index, acid rain, indoor air quality, and particulate
pollution from construction. Smog and haze aren’t just depressing, they
can also be deadly when filled with types of pollution that is of
particular risk to the elderly. Carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide,
nitrogen oxides and chlorofluorocarbons are just some of the chemicals
one faces in every day life. Too much of any of these can cause severe
problems including cancer and even death to most anyone, not to mention
other damage to the ecosystem.
Water pollution can come from wastewater, surface runoff, sewage,
waterborne diseases, water quality, oil spills, ship pollution, and
ocean acidification, just to name a few sources.
Soil pollution can come from herbicides, pesticides and even from
invasive species. Among those soil contaminants people should be most
concerned with, are MTBE, heavy metals, hydrocarbons, and chlorinated
hydrocarbons.
Because it happened thirty years ago, many today are unfamiliar with or
have forgotten the groundwater pollution case known as Love Canal. In
the late 1970s, residents in the Love Canal area of New York were
suffering from high rates of cancer and birth defects. The cause was
traced to chemicals that had infiltrated into the groundwater and water
supply from an industrial landfill. Hundreds of families were
reimbursed for their damages but had to move from the area.
Radioactive contamination is becoming more and more of a problem. There
is already plutonium in the environment, radium in the environment,
uranium in the environment and other environmental radioactivity.
Soon we will be hearing more about alpha emitters and actinides.
Recently there has been much publicity about the increase in bed bugs
in hotels, schools and homes. When one goes on vacation, one must also
worry about lice, ticks and other bugs that can be carried home. When
one goes to the hospital or to the doctor, one can return with a more
dangerous infection or virus than the problem the patient was
originally concerned about.
While not a health risk, there is also visual pollution such as that
caused from billboards, to the recent addition of advertising at the
gas pump, in elevators and in public restrooms, as well as light
pollution.
In the health field, pollution can come in the form of contamination of
blood, from the environment of the hospital, the medications,
thimerosal (a preservative used to prevent spoiling in vaccines)
surgical implants, the beds or from other patients.
If you think a toxic material has caused or contributed to your injury
call your toxic tort
lawyer today
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