Kaul Sues Companies On Forever Chemicals
AG seeks monetary damages, cleanup by Johnson Controls, Tyco for PFAS pollution in Marinette.
The Wisconsin Attorney General’s Office is suing Johnson Controls and Tyco Fire Products for allegedly violating the state’s hazardous spills law by discharging PFAS chemicals into the area around its Marinette Fire Training Facility.
Tyco conducted testing and training with firefighting foam that contains PFAS, or perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances, at its 380-acre facility from the early 1960s through 2017.
In January 2021, residents in the Town of Peshtigo, near Marinette, won a settlement from Tyco after being exposed to the chemicals, which have contaminated private wells. In all, about 270 households were awarded $17.5 million.
The attorney general’s lawsuit, which also seeks a financial penalty from Johnson Controls and Tyco, alleges the companies didn’t provide timely notice of the contamination after its own sampling from 2013 to 2016 revealed PFAS in the surrounding area. The complaint also seeks to require the companies to complete an investigation and cleanup of the chemicals around the Marinette facility.
“That’s important both so that we can recover funds from the state — investigating these matters is expensive — but we also need those penalties to deter future pollution,” Kaul said. “I’m hopeful that others who are polluting and are violating the laws see this, and they realize the Wisconsin Department of Justice is very serious about seeing that our laws are enforced.”
In an emailed statement, Tyco highlighted steps it said it has taken to address the impacts of PFAS in Marinette and the surrounding communities.
Tyco said it offers bottled water and in-home filtration systems to Peshtigo households, and has nearly finished construction on a groundwater extraction and treatment center that it claims will treat 95 percent of the PFAS in the area when it opens by this summer. State environmental regulators have warned the system will reduce, but not eliminate, the so-called forever chemicals in groundwater and surface water over the next 30 years.
Tyco said it is also completing the removal of soils with aggregated PFAS from the fire technology center in the coming months.
Tyco has so far declined to conduct further sampling in an expanded area around its fire training facility in Marinette, claiming data doesn’t indicate PFAS detections are related to the company’s facility.
The chemicals have affected every aspect of life in Peshtigo as residents continue to rely on bottled water. Town chair Cindy Boyle said she was “elated” to hear about the state’s lawsuit.
Boyle said she hopes the lawsuit will bring more scrutiny to PFAS contamination and the companies responsible, even beyond the area around the Marinette facility.
“Unless you know where you’re being exposed to danger, you can’t do anything to protect your family against it,” she said. “Knowledge is power, and it’s really time that this stay in the public consciousness so that people can make sure they are drinking safe water.”
As awareness has grown, state regulators have identified 96 sites statewide that are contaminated with PFAS. Those include industrial areas and waterways in Superior, Madison, Milwaukee and La Crosse.
The state Department of Natural Resources referred Johnson Controls and Tyco to the DOJ in 2019 for failing to report any release of PFAS when they were first discovered in 2013. Company officials have said they believed contamination had been confined to the site of its facility. In December 2020, the DOJ notified Tyco and Johnson Controls it may pursue civil enforcement action against them.
The DNR also said last fall the companies failed to fully investigate PFAS pollution near fields that had received biosolids, or treated sewage sludge, from the city of Marinette’s wastewater treatment plant.
Tyco previously discharged firefighting foam that contained PFAS to the city’s sewer system, and data from 2017 and 2018 showed the sewage sludge contained significant levels of PFAS.
Listen to the WPR report here.
State of Wisconsin is suing Johnson Controls, Tyco over PFAS contamination in Marinette was originally published by Wisconsin Public Radio
More about the PFAS Problem
- More than 30 groups call on State Legislature to take action on safe drinking water for Safe Drinking Water Act 50th anniversary - Wisconsin Conservation Voters - Dec 5th, 2024
- EPA Launches New Initiative to Tackle PFAS, Identify Emerging Contaminants in Water - U.S. Environmental Protection Agency - Nov 20th, 2024
- Environmental & Public Health Groups Urge Wisconsin Supreme Court to Reject Attempt by WMC to Undermine State’s Spills Law - Midwest Environmental Advocates - Nov 18th, 2024
- Baldwin Announces $86 Million for Clean and Safe Drinking Water in Wisconsin Through Bipartisan Infrastructure Law - U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin - Oct 23rd, 2024
- EPA Issues Test Order for PFAS Used in Manufacturing Under National Testing Strategy - U.S. Environmental Protection Agency - Oct 9th, 2024
- DNR Asks Hunters Near Town Of Stella To Donate Deer Tissue Samples For PFAS Testing - Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources - Oct 3rd, 2024
- Gov. Evers, DNR Announce Nearly $460,000 In Grants Awarded To Small Public Water Systems With PFAS And Manganese Contamination - Gov. Tony Evers - Sep 24th, 2024
- State Supreme Court Agrees to Take WMC Toxic Pollution Case - Midwest Environmental Advocates - Sep 11th, 2024
- 2017 Law Resulting in Long List of Outdated DNR Water Standards - Danielle Kaeding - Sep 5th, 2024
- Murphy’s Law: Is Milorganite Making People Sick? - Bruce Murphy - Sep 4th, 2024
Read more about PFAS Problem here