Saturday, 19 of May of 2012

Virginia (VA) Uranium Mines May Expose Railroad Employees to More Cancer Causing Agents

Rail workers can be exposed to cancer-causing agents through exposure to rail cars that contain contaminated uranium scrap metal.

By John Cooper, Virginia Railroad Injury and FELA Attorney

It doesn’t take a uranium mine to expose railroad workers to uranium. Workers can be exposed to cancer-causing agents through exposure to rail cars that contain contaminated uranium scrap metal and wastes. A FELA attorney with our Virginia (VA) law firm weighs the consequences of a uranium mines against any potential gains.

CT

About the Editors: The Virginia- and Carolina-based attorneys at Shapiro, Cooper, Lewis & Appleton have long histories of representing railroad workers in FELA and other railroad injury cases and of helping victims of rail crossing accidents. Lawyers at our firm have served as chairmen of the railroad section of the American Association for Justice, the largest national victim’s injury attorney organization, and one of our attorneys wrote a major legal encyclopedia section on railroad safety litigation. Check out our railroad injury case results to see for yourself. Be sure to get your free reports about railroad injury, disease and wrongful death FELA cases: The Do’s and Don’ts When Injured at a Railroad — Yours FELA Rights and What Railroad Claim Agents Won’t Tell You (But You Must Know). Also, our railroad injury lawyers proudly moderate the Yardlimits Railroad Community Forum and donate to the Fallen Brother Fund.


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