Current:Home > ContactCharles H. Sloan-Some Ohio residents can now get $25,000 for injuries in $600 million train derailment settlement -MoneyStream
Charles H. Sloan-Some Ohio residents can now get $25,000 for injuries in $600 million train derailment settlement
Benjamin Ashford View
Date:2025-04-10 18:45:52
People who live near East Palestine,Charles H. Sloan Ohio, can now get $25,000 apiece for any injuries they sustained after last year’s Norfolk Southern freight train derailment on top of whatever money they get for property damage as part of the $600 million class-action settlement.
The lawyers who negotiated the deal have increased the estimated injury payment from the original $10,000 because they now have more information about how many claims there will be. One of the plaintiffs’ attorneys, Adam Gomez, said the original estimate was conservative to ensure that no one will receive less than they were promised as part of the settlement.
“We are not looking to over promise and under deliver in any way shape or form to the class,” Gomez said.
The lawyers plan to hold a Zoom call for residents Thursday evening to explain why the health payment is increasing and why they believe it is the right amount.
That payment for health problems is on top of the up to $70,000 households can receive for property damage. But to get the injury payment, residents who live within ten miles of where the train derailed have to agree before the Aug. 22 deadline to give up the right to sue the railroad or anyone else involved down the road even if they develop cancer or other serious health conditions later.
The biggest property damage payments of $70,000 per household are limited to people who lived within two miles of the derailment. The payments get much smaller toward the outer edge of the 20-mile radius that’s covered in the settlement.
The personal injury payments are only available to people who lived within ten miles of the derailment.
For the folks in East Palestine who are worried about the possibility of developing cancer or another serious health condition down the road like Jami Wallace even $25,000 seems way too low. She thinks residents’ health claims are likely worth way more than that.
Gomez said that the settlement is primarily designed to address only the short-term health impacts that residents have seen since the derailment because the courts won’t allow them to try to cover future health problems.
But the lawyers hired their own toxicologists and testing experts to try and determine what kind of long-term risks the community faces from the cocktail of chemicals that spilled and burned after the train derailment along with the vinyl chloride that was intentionally released and burned three days after the crash.
Gomez said the evidence they gathered about the chemicals that spilled and how long people were exposed to them suggests there may not be a rash of terrible illnesses in the future.
“In fact, we do not think that there is, support in that data for any significant increase in the number of additional cancers or other illnesses in East Palestine or the surrounding communities,” Gomez said.
But Wallace and others in town may not be ready to believe that because of what she has heard from other chemical experts and the doctors who are studying the health problems residents have reported.
“I have letters written from multiple toxicologists that have credentials longer than your arm that’ll say there’s definitely a huge health risk in the future,” Wallace said.
But Gomez cautioned that anyone who opts out of the class action settlement now should consider the difficult road they would face in bringing their own lawsuit later. He said it will likely be difficult that something like cancer was caused by the derailment because the disease can be caused by other factors.
The National Transportation Safety Board said that the East Palestine derailment, which was the worst rail disaster in the past decade, was caused by an overheating bearing on one of the cars on the train that wasn’t detected soon enough by the network of detectors the railroad has alongside the tracks.
The head of the NTSB also said that the five tank cars filled with vinyl chloride didn’t need to be blown open to prevent an explosion because they were actually starting to cool off even though the fire continued to burn around them.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- How to Watch the 2024 Emmys and Live From E!
- Niners, Jordan Mason offer potentially conflicting accounts of when he knew he'd start
- Taylor Swift and Brittany Mahomes hugged. Then the backlash. Here's what it says about us.
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Bowl projections: College Football Playoff gets another shakeup after Week 2
- TikToker Caleb Graves, 35, Shared Haunting Video Before Dying at Disney Half-Marathon
- Get 2 Benefit Porefessional Primers for the Price of 1: Blur Pores and Create a Photo-Filter Effect
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Ex-CIA officer who spied for China faces prison time -- and a lifetime of polygraph tests
Ranking
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Allison Holker Is Dating Tech CEO Adam Edmunds Following Death of Husband Stephen tWitch Boss
- Kamala Harris gives abortion rights advocates the debate answer they’ve longed for in Philadelphia
- Wife of California inmate wins $5.6 million after 'sexual violation' during strip search
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- 'It just went from 0 to 60': Tyreek Hill discusses confrontation with Miami police
- Everything to Know About Allison Holker’s Boyfriend Adam Edmunds
- What is cortisol face? TikTok keeps talking about moon face, hormones.
Recommendation
Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
Madonna shocks at star-studded Luar NYFW show with Offset modeling, Ice Spice in front row
Ex-Michigan players, including Braylon Edwards, Denard Robinson, suing NCAA, Big Ten Network
Former Vikings star Adrian Peterson ordered to turn over assets to pay massive debt
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Joe Jonas and Sophie Turner Finalize Divorce One Year After Split
AP PHOTOS: As wildfires burn in California, firefighters work to squelch the flames
Ex-Michigan players, including Braylon Edwards, Denard Robinson, suing NCAA, Big Ten Network