National Park, NJ Residents File Class Action Against Solvay, Arkema

water contamination in National Park, NJ

The owners of four homes in the Borough of National Park have filed a class action lawsuit charging companies associated with a West Deptford chemical facility with polluting the municipal wells that supply them their drinking water. The complaint, Severa, et al. v. Solvay Specialty Polymers, USA, LLC, et al alleges that between 1988 and 2010, the operators of the plant at 10 Leonard Lane in West Deptford improperly released hundreds of metric tons of the toxic compound perfluorononanoic acid, known as PFNA into the surrounding soil, air and groundwater. PFNA is one of a family of “forever chemicals” that have recently come to the forefront of public and regulatory attention. Arkema, Inc. owned the facility until 2000, when it sold it to a corporate predecessor of Solvay, which currently operates it.

PFNA was used at the West Deptford site in the manufacture of specialized, heat and abrasion-resistant plastics with many industrial applications. At one time, the plant was the second highest user of PFNA In the world.

PFNA does not degrade regularly in the environment and has been associated with several toxic and immunological effects in humans. The State of New Jersey has established a “maximum contaminant level” of 13 parts per trillion in drinking water for the chemical. The state’s Department of Environmental Protection has issued a directive requiring Solvay to address widespread contamination of PFNA and related chemicals throughout the region. Since the second quarter of 2019, PFNA has been detected in National Park’s municipal water in excess of the MCL. The Borough has notified residents of the findings, and recommended the purchase of filtration systems to remove the contaminant.

The class action complaint demands damages for residents’ loss of property value, their loss of the “quiet enjoyment” of their properties, and the costs of remediation, including filters. It also seeks to compel defendants to remediate the contamination, and to fund a biomonitoring program to assess the levels and effects of PFNA in their bodies.

Plaintiffs are represented by the Haddonfield law firm, Williams Cedar, LLC. David Cedar, a partner in the firm said: “The more we learn about PFNA and its chemical cousins, the more concerned we should be about their irresponsible handling by large corporations and the not coincidental, lax federal oversight that went on for decades. This lawsuit is intended to take another step in holding responsible parties accountable for the misuse of these dangerous materials.”

Catholic Church Spent $10.6M Lobbying Against Clergy Abuse Bills

A new report reveals how the Roman Catholic Church spent millions of dollars from 2011 to 2018 to stop reforms aimed at making it easier for survivors of clergy abuse to sue for damages.

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The report, entitled Church Influencing State: How the Catholic Church Spent Millions Against Survivors of Clergy Abuse, was commissioned by the law firms of Williams Cedar, Seeger Weiss LLP, Abraham Watkins, and the Simpson Tuegel Law Firm. Collectively, these law firms represent more than 300 survivors of clergy sex abuse nationwide.

According to the report, lobbying efforts by the Catholic Church reached across eight northeastern states. In Pennsylvania, more than $5.3 million was spent in an effort to keep the rules that limit the amount of time survivors can pursue legal claims in place. In New York, the Church spent nearly $3 million in a failed attempt to block the passage of the Child Victim’s Act, which broadened the timeframe for survivors of child sex abuse to file claims against their abusers. More than $633,000 was spent by the Church in New Jersey, where the statute of limitations was expanded just last month.

According to an NBC news report, the Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro said that the extensive lobbying by the Catholic Church in Pennsylvania against the reforms recommended by the Pennsylvania Grand Jury proves the Church cannot be trusted to police itself. View the press release here.

The attorneys at Williams Cedar are dedicated to giving voice to survivors of clergy abuse and holding accountable all persons and institutions responsible for inflicting suffering and pain. Contact us online or call 856-470-9777 or 215-557-0099 today to arrange a free and confidential consultation with an experienced and dedicated New Jersey clergy abuse lawyer.

From our offices in Philadelphia and Haddonfield, New Jersey, we represent clients throughout the surrounding areas, including those in Camden, Cherry Hill, Metuchen and Trenton, New Jersey as well as those in Allentown, Scranton, Pittsburgh, Harrisburg, Greensburg, Johnstown, Eerie, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.