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Within the mid-Nineties the Massachusetts Lawyer Common, Scott Harshbarger, made nationwide information by suing tobacco producers for, amongst different issues, the monumental well being care prices borne by the Commonwealth ensuing from tobacco-related sicknesses. In the end Massachusetts and most different states of the union entered right into a landmark settlement resolving the Commonwealth’s claims.
Now Lawyer Common Maura Healey is becoming a member of different Attorneys Common in working the identical play in opposition to producers of PFAS the eternally (and almost all over the place) chemical substances which have dominated a lot of the general public’s and regulators’ consideration over the previous a number of years.
Lawyer Common Healey has filed swimsuit within the Federal Court docket in South Carolina dealing with what could finally be hundreds of PFAS contamination circumstances from across the nation.
Like tobacco, it’s nonetheless completely authorized to fabricate PFAS and put them in commerce. And, although it’s on the best way to doing so, the federal authorities nonetheless hasn’t recognized them as a hazardous substance coated by the federal regulation referring to the identification and clear up of contaminated properties.
However Massachusetts has recognized a number of PFAS as hazardous, the necessities of the Massachusetts clear up program have utilized to PFAS for a number of years and, as David Abel studies in The Boston Globe, the federal, state and native governments have already spent tens of millions of {dollars} cleansing up PFAS within the Bay State.
The Lawyer Common’s lawsuit faces some challenges. First, proving one thing was carried out “knowingly” isn’t as simple as one would possibly suppose. Second, as a result of PFAS have solely lately ended up on federal and state regulatory radar screens, it is not as clear as one would possibly suppose that a few of the legal guidelines referenced by the Lawyer Common truly apply. Third, as a result of there are already a whole lot of circumstances within the South Carolina courtroom, litigating the case might take years. Fourth, as a result of federal and state {dollars} have been used to cope with PFAS, presenting and recovering damages will probably be a chore.
And, in fact, there may be the truth that lawsuits like this one are an existential menace to those that have put PFAS in commerce so they are going to spare no expense on protection.
However none of that implies that the lawsuit wasn’t value bringing. We’ll see whether or not there are different parallels to the tobacco litigation of the Nineties.
“For many years, these producers knew in regards to the severe dangers … but they did nothing about it,” Healey stated in an announcement. “Because of this deception, our municipalities are spending tens of millions of {dollars} to offer protected consuming water to their residents. I’m suing at present to carry these producers accountable, require them to pay the rising prices these communities are shouldering, and restore our state’s treasured pure sources which have been broken by these unlawful actions.”
©1994-2022 Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C. All Rights Reserved.Nationwide Regulation Overview, Quantity XII, Quantity 145
Travel
If you attended The Big E or the Topsfield Fair this past fall, you were in good company.
Both Massachusetts fairs ranked among the top 50 fairs in the U.S. and Canada in 2024, according to Carnival Warehouse. The list was ranked by attendance.
“2024 contained very positive indicators that North Americans have rekindled their romance for midways, outdoor shows, agricultural programming and food-on-a-stick,” wrote Carnival Warehouse on its website. “Most fairs saw increases over last year’s attendance, only 12 top-50 fairs saw decreases, most of which were nominal and all of which were due to weather.”
The Big E (the Eastern States Exposition) in Springfield ranked No. 4 with an all-time total attendance record of more than 1.6 million visitors. Seven other daily attendance records were also set this year at The Big E, including an all-time single day attendance record of 178,608 visitors on Sept. 21. The Topsfield Fair, at No. 40, saw 418,170 visitors.
Running since 1916, The Big E is New England’s biggest fair. The fair brought live musical acts, carnival rides, agricultural competitions, and food vendors this past September. All six New England states are famously represented on its grounds.
The Topsfield Fair, America’s oldest agricultural fair (running for more than 200 years), featured carnival rides, food, live music, rodeos, art shows, exhibits, and nearly 300 vendors this past October.
For those looking to help boost attendance in 2025, this year’s fair dates are Sept. 12-28 for The Big E and Oct. 3-13 for the Topsfield Fair.
North America’s No. 1 fair in 2024 is the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo, which saw 2.5 million visitors.
Check out the top 50 fairs in the U.S. and Canada in 2024.
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As wildfires continue to spread through Los Angeles County, some from Massachusetts now living in California are faced with the likelihood of evacuations.
“Our bags are packed and we’re ready to go somewhere else if we have to,” said Justin Bitensky.
The native of Hopkinton, Massachusetts, now lives in Calabasas, a city impacted by the wildfires.
“As a dad and a husband, it definitely hits a little different,” he said.
According to Bitensky, 70mph winds whipped through his neighborhood Tuesday night.
Since then, his family has been without power.
“At this point, everyone kind of knows someone who has been evacuated, or their home has burned down, or both,” he explained. “There’s almost no one who hasn’t been affected.”
The mortgage broker added that his family is waiting to see which roads remain open if evacuations do come to fruition.
“Lives are on the line, homes are on the line, people’s businesses are on the line,” Bitensky said. “I don’t think it can be understated how serious it is.”
At Boston’s Logan Airport Wednesday, passengers who flew in from LA described the inferno from the sky.
“You could look out the window and see the flames burning,” explained Amy Aldrich of western Massachusetts. “You could see the black smoke. We could smell it. My daughter and I smelled it and said, ‘That smells like wildfire smoke.’”
“A lot of people got on planes to start heading kind of west and all,” said Cam Mahseni of Boston. “A buddy of mine, Chris, is in Pasadena, and he had to kind of evacuate, and a power line went down, too, outside his house.”
“From the highway, we saw the fire and the big smoke,” another passenger added. “It’s like a movie.”
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