Miami Herald

Florida sues makers of foam used to fight fires, alleging risks to health, environmen­t

- BY ZACHARY T. SAMPSON

Florida is suing the makers of certain firefighti­ng foams, accusing them of polluting the environmen­t and potentiall­y sickening people with chemicals.

Attorney General Ashley Moody’s office filed suit in mid-April in Hillsborou­gh circuit court. The state’s lawyers accuse several businesses — including DuPont de Nemours Inc.; The Chemours Company FC, LLC; Tyco Fire Products; and Chemguard Inc. — of using materials that could put people at risk of cancer and other illnesses. The substances are commonly called “forever chemicals.”

The companies, the Attorney General’s Office said, did not warn customers or the public about the danger.

Florida’s case follows similar lawsuits from other states and agencies, including Tampa Bay Water, which oversees much of the region’s drinking water, and the

Hillsborou­gh County Aviation Authority, which oversees Tampa Internatio­nal Airport.

Attorney General’s Office spokespers­on Kylie Mason declined to comment, saying the “case is active and ongoing.”

Asked why the attorney general, who is from Plant City, filed it in Hillsborou­gh, she said: “There are multiple locations within the state where there have been contaminat­ions, and Hillsborou­gh is one of those affected areas.”

Moody’s complaint lists several places around Florida where firefighti­ng foams were used, including the Miami Dade College Fire Academy.

Some other spots: the Florida State Fire College in Ocala, the Pensacola

Fire Department and Hillsborou­gh Community College Fire Academy. The foams have been used for decades to knock down fires that burn through liquid fuel at military bases, airports and industrial properties, the lawsuit says.

Moody’s office accuses manufactur­ers of multiple offenses, including negligence and creating a public nuisance. The state’s lawyers wrote that the dangerous chemicals may have seeped into the ground and tainted drinking water.

The foams contain perand polyfluoro­alkyl substances, according to the complaint. Shorthande­d as PFAS or “forever chemicals,” these substances take an extremely long time to break down in the environmen­t. They were also used in products like Teflon and Stainmaste­r carpets, the state’s lawsuit says.

Exposure to forever chemicals may be connected to problems such as

thyroid disease, kidney and testicular cancer and high cholestero­l, according to the lawsuit. Moody’s office says manufactur­ers knew or should have known that firefighti­ng foams would endanger people and the environmen­t.

The complaint does not specify how much Florida seeks in compensati­on or other sanctions, but it says the state has already incurred costs to investigat­e contaminat­ion and anticipate­s more expenses for environmen­tal cleanup and helping sick residents.

In a statement, a DuPont de Nemours spokespers­on said it “is a new multiindus­trial specialty products company” that did not itself sell firefighti­ng foam. The spokespers­on said the “complaint is without merit.”

Moody’s filing accuses DuPont of “a scheme to transfer” assets to shirk responsibi­lity and make it harder for states to recoup money. The lawyers say DuPont violated Florida’s Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act.

A Tyco spokespers­on said the company “does not comment about ongoing litigation.” Representa­tives of Chemours did not return multiple emails seeking comment. A spokespers­on for Chemguard did not return multiple voicemails.

THE STATE CONTENDS THAT THE USE OF ‘FOREVER CHEMICALS’ COULD PUT PEOPLE AT RISK OF CANCER AND OTHER ILLNESSES.

 ?? MARICE COHN BAND Miami Herald file photo ?? A lawsuit by the state of Florida says dangerous firefighti­ng foams have been used at several locations, including the Miami Dade College Fire Academy, where a student at a class in the past prepares to enter a burn room.
MARICE COHN BAND Miami Herald file photo A lawsuit by the state of Florida says dangerous firefighti­ng foams have been used at several locations, including the Miami Dade College Fire Academy, where a student at a class in the past prepares to enter a burn room.

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