Electronics Firm to Pay $1.1 Million to Clean Up Lead Contamination

A federal judge has approved an agreement for an electronics manufacturer to pay $1.1 million to clean up lead contamination in Omaha. The deal ends a chapter in a long-running legal battle over massive pollution in the city from two smelters.

Gould Electronics, a unit of Japan’s JX Holdings Inc., admitted no wrongdoing in its consent decree with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. It operated one of two smelters in downtown Omaha that, the EPA said, for years emitted lead and other heavy metals into the air, contaminating 27 square miles of land in the eastern part of the Nebraska city.

Lead refining at the site, which dated back to the 1870s, ceased in the late 1990s.

Two other companies, Asarco and Union Pacific, reached previous agreements with the EPA, which had designated the contaminated area a federal “Superfund” site. The 2009 Asarco agreement, which was called the nation’s largest environmental bankruptcy settlement,  provided $1.79 billion to settle claims for hazardous waste pollution across 19 states. That included $219 million for cleaning up contaminated water and soil in Omaha.

The EPA pursued the case after local health department found elevated levels of lead in the blood of children who lived downwind from the smelters.

 

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One comment to “Electronics Firm to Pay $1.1 Million to Clean Up Lead Contamination”

  1. Garth Prooksie

    Interesting. Gould was american though. Don’t paint the Japanese with this.

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