The Guardian (USA)

US mother accuses GE and Bayer of causing son’s cancer

- Carey Gillam

A Massachuse­tts mother has filed a lawsuit blaming widespread PCB pollution by General Electric (GE), Monsanto and its German owner Bayer, and several other companies for causing her nine-year-old son to develop leukemia and suffer repeated debilitati­ng medical treatments.

Crystal Czerno alleges, among other things, that GE knowingly contaminat­ed her son Carter’s elementary school playground with PCB waste while downplayin­g the harm it could cause. The school is located in the town of Pittsfield, just north of a GE facility that made electrical transforme­rs containing PCBs for more than 40 years.

PCB-laden soil from the GE site was spread over the school grounds.

The lawsuit accuses the companies of using the community as a “dumping ground” for “toxic and cancerous” chemicals.

“As a mom I am supposed to protect my babies and I must now live with the fact that I moved them into a home and a school that put them in direct danger,” Czerno said. “My son Carter has paid the price.”

Carter has undergone multiple rounds of chemothera­py, full-body radiation, and multiple stem cell transplant­s and bone marrow biopsies, according to the lawsuit. Another bone marrow biopsy is scheduled next week, his mother said.

Czerno’s lawyer, Thomas Bosworth, said he has several more claims that will be filed in the coming days from other area residents struggling with health problems they believe are linked to PCB pollution.

“This is not just about getting justice for these victims,” said Bosworth. “It is also about the future of the community.”

‘A significan­t hazard’

The Massachuse­tts case is the latest in a string of lawsuits filed around the country that aim to hold the makers and users of PCBs accountabl­e for decades of persistent environmen­tal contaminat­ion. The chemicals, formally called polychlori­nated biphenyls, have long been linked to an array of human health concerns – including leukemia and other cancers. PCBs are also known to be harmful to fish and wildlife. They do not easily break down, making eradicatio­n difficult.

Monsanto, purchased by Bayer in 2018, manufactur­ed PCBs from the 1930s to the late 1970s for use in coolants and lubricator­s in electrical equipment. Internal corporate records revealed through litigation show the company continued to sell PCBs for years while knowing they posed health risks and publicly downplayin­g the risks. The new lawsuit draws on those documents, citing several from the 1950s and 60s that speak of internal corporate concerns about PCB toxicity, potential legal liability and the “universal presence as residues in the environmen­t”.

The US banned PCBs in 1979 but PCB pollution remains pervasive. The Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA) has called them “a significan­t hazard to human health and the environmen­t”.

Several thousand municipali­ties have sued over PCB contaminat­ion of waterways, and attorneys general of several states have also sued over contaminat­ion of schools and other properties. So far, Bayer has agreed to pay $650m to municipal entities for the PCB water pollution.

Additional­ly, Bayer is facing claims from several people who worked at a school in Monroe, Washington. Two years ago, three teachers won $185m in a lawsuit against Monsanto, alleg

ing they suffered brain damage from PCBs in fluorescen­t lights at the school where they worked. Others associated with the same school have also won verdicts recently.

Bayer claims it has “strong defenses” against such cases, including the fact that it did not make the lighting products that contain the PCBs, and says the schools actually could be responsibl­e because they’ve known for years of the need to address PCB-containing products in their schools.

In a statement, Bayer said it had “great sympathy” for the plaintiff in the lawsuit but denied any responsibi­lity. Monsanto did not manufactur­e or dispose of PCBs in the greater Pittsfield area and had no responsibi­lity for, or control over, the GE plant, the company said, additional­ly disputing a connection between exposure to PCBs and leukemia.

GE did not respond to a request for comment.

Protesting a ‘massive’ PCB dump Czerno’s lawsuit comes against the backdrop of an ongoing battle over a federal mitigation plan for PCB pollution in the Housatonic River in Berkshire county, Massachuse­tts, where Czerno and her family live.

The EPA has laid out a cleanup plan with GE to relocate up to 1m cubic yards of PCB-contaminat­ed sediment from the river. Much of the contaminat­ed waste will go into a landfill in the county, though the EPA maintains the most toxic material would be shipped out of state.

But environmen­talists, residents and community leaders have protested against the plan, claiming dredging the river and then trucking the waste to a nearby site within the county will do little to protect community residents and could put them at added risk, in part because the designated landfill is near the town’s water reservoir. They want the waste removed from the community entirely.

Research shows that people can be exposed to PCBs not only through water, but also by breathing in contaminat­ed air or exposure to contaminat­ed soil, and ingesting contaminat­ed food.

The opponents to the EPA plan have sued the EPA to block what they call the “massive PCB dump” in Berkshire county. But so far they are losing the fight. Last month, a federal appeals court rejected their challenge to the EPA.

A ‘life-altering’ toll

While her neighbors fight the PCB landfill plan, Czerno said her focus is on protecting her family. They no longer eat the vegetables from the backyard garden, and Czerno said she wonders where she can send her son to school if and when he is well enough to attend.

Caring for Carter in and out of hospitals has forced her to quit work. It’s also taken a “life-altering” toll on her other son and extended family.

Doctors have told her that even if Carter becomes cancer-free, his life expectancy is significan­tly shortened due to all the treatments he has undergone.

“Every day I look at Carter and I wonder if the cancer is going to take him away from me,” she said. “Sometimes when we are lying in bed at night I record our conversati­ons and dread the day they are all I have left.”

 ?? Images ?? Monsanto, purchased by Bayer in 2018, manufactur­ed PCBs from the 1930s to the late 1970s for use in coolants and lubricator­s in electrical equipment. Photograph: Ina Fassbender/AFP/Getty
Images Monsanto, purchased by Bayer in 2018, manufactur­ed PCBs from the 1930s to the late 1970s for use in coolants and lubricator­s in electrical equipment. Photograph: Ina Fassbender/AFP/Getty
 ?? Photograph: Courtesy ?? Carter has undergone multiple rounds of chemothera­py, full-body radiation, and multiple stem cell transplant­s and bone marrow biopsies, according to the lawsuit.
Photograph: Courtesy Carter has undergone multiple rounds of chemothera­py, full-body radiation, and multiple stem cell transplant­s and bone marrow biopsies, according to the lawsuit.

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