Saturday, 19 of May of 2012

Tag » disease

BNSF Forced to Back Off Demand for Rail Workers’ Private Medical Records

Employers cannot compel employees to disclose any information about illnesses, injuries, health conditions, doctor visits or ongoing therapies when those situations are not related to workers' job performance.

By Rick Shapiro, Railroad Injury Attorney

Federal laws ranging from the Americans With Disabilities Act to the Pregnancy Discrimination Act make it illegal for any business in any industry to use may kinds of information in workers’ private medical files to make hiring, promotion and firing decisions. As corollaries to those rules, employers cannot compel employees to disclose any information about illnesses, injuries, health conditions, doctor visits or ongoing therapies when those situations are not related to workers’ job performance.

Freight railroad giant BNSF Railway intentionally violated all its employees’ federal medical privacy protections when, starting January 1, 2012, the railroad required engineers, conductors, trackmen, rail yard workers and office personnel to share every piece of health information with immediate supervisors. In a discrimination complaint filed with the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen noted that BNSF’s policy on medical disclosure extended to ”medical conditions and/or events that occur or are diagnosed while they are away from work … even if there is no reasonable basis for believing the condition or event has any impact on the employee’s ability to perform his/her job, and even when the employee’s own doctor has placed no limitations on the employee’s job activities.”

The United Transportation Union, along with eight other groups representing rail workers across the United States, also petitioned the EEOC to compel BNSF to rescind the medical reporting policy. The organizations argued that requiring employees to “share doctor’s notes, diagnostic test results and hospital discharge summaries” could serve no other purpose than providing the rail corporation non-job-related health information it could use to make employment decisions.

BNSF announced that it was rescinding the policy — officially listed a Rule 26.3.1 in its employee handbook – in early April. A company spokeswoman told the Lincoln (NE) Journal Star that BNSF wanted only to protect other workers and the public from employees whose health problems might make them unsafe. In that same article, though, a different railroad representative was quoted as confirming to Progressive Railroading that BNSF wanted the private medical records for “expeditious, confidential handling of fitness-for-duty reviews.”

Again: Numerous federal laws explicitly prohibit the use of large categories of medical information for making employment decisions. BNSF was definitely violating workers’ privacy when issuing and enforcing Rule 26.3.1. It attempted to justify the illegal and discriminatory policy by claiming employees had in the past put other people at risk for injury or death because they had health problems they had not disclosed to the company. Such a claim asserted without specific evidence cannot be taken on faith; at the same time, the company’s defense for flouting health privacy laws absolutely convinces everyone that the company’s executives do not trust employees to be honest or value others’ safety.

As a personal injury attorney who regularly helps railroad workers who develop occupational illnesses and get injured on the job. I also strongly suspect that BNSF wanted access to employees’ complete medical records so it could use the information to claim that any work-related injury or disease was caused by a “preexisting condition.” I already know railroads will use just about any defense to avoid liability, so having all of a hurt or sick worker’s medical records would almost certainly be a temptation BNSF could not resist.

I am equally convinced that if BNSF’s Rule 26.3.1 had withstood union objections and EEOC review, Amtrak, CSX, Norfolk Southern and every other rail corporation would soon require their workers to share every piece of health information. That won’t happen for now, but the railroads must be watched closely for their next effort to violate employees’ health privacy rights.

EJL

About the Editors: The Virginia- and Carolina-based attorneys at Shapiro, 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 donate to the Fallen Brother Fund.


CSX Ordered to Pay $1.25M to Former Employee Who Developed Arthritis on the Job

The railroad's defense that FELA claims for repetitive stress injuries due to unsafe and poorly maintained grave ballast were barred under provisions of the Federal Railroad Safety Act were not accepted by a circuit court jury or a panel of appeals court judges.

By Randy Appleton, Railroad Repetitive Stress Injury Attorney

A civil jury award of just less than $1.25 million to a retired CSX Transportation brakeman and engineer who developed debilitating osteoarthritis in both knees has been upheld by a Maryland (MD) appeals court. In ordering the railroad corporation to compensate the man for past and future medical expenses related to the degenerative disease, as well as pain and suffering, judges in Baltimore County noted that “”the Federal Employers’ Liability Act imposes on the defendant railroad a duty to [its] employees and to all of [its] employees including [this plaintiff] to exercise reasonable care to provide the employee with a reasonably safe place in which to work, reasonably safe conditions to work and reasonably safe tools and equipment.”

CSX argued during both the circuit and appeals court cases that provisions of the Federal Railroad Safety Act, or FRSA, spelling out requirements for placing and maintaining gravel on rail beds prohibited rail workers from filing FELA claims for compensation for injuries or health problems blamed on unsafe ballast. As a personal injury attorney in Virginia (VA) whose law firm has helped rail workers win cases involving poorly groomed and graded ballast, I know CSX’s defense was bogus. The jurors and appellate judges in Maryland saw through the railroad’s legal smoke and mirrors, too.

The plaintiff in the case ultimately decided as CSX Transportation v. Pitts began his rail career as a trackman in 1971 and spent the next 32 years as a fireman, conductor and engineer. Each job required him to walk as much as 2 miles each day on gravel beds. The uneven and shifting surface strained his knees to the point that he eventually began suffering muscle and cartilage tears, the grinding of bone on bone and constant pain. Arthritis is one of the most common results of repetitive stress injuries for railroad employees.

 

 

There is no question that repetitive stresses and occupational illnesses — whether respiratory, such as mesothelioma, or degenerative, such as spinal disc damage — are grounds for FELA lawsuits. Despite this, rail companies will often try to avoid liability for not protecting employees’ lives and health. I am pleased to see that CSX was held accountable this time.

EJL

About the Editors: The Virginia- and Carolina-based attorneys at Shapiro, 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 donate to the Fallen Brother Fund.


Lawsuit Against UP, BNSF Seeks Federal Regulation of Diesel Fume Particulates as Solid Waste

Three environmental groups point to increased cancer and lung disease risks for rail employees and people living and working as far as 8 miles from 17 rail yards in California.

By Rick Shapiro, Railroad Worker Illness and FELA Attorney

Burlington Northern Santa Fe and Union Pacific, the two largest freight railroads providing service to ports in California (CA), have been sued by a coalition of environmental groups who claim that the diesel fumes emitted by the trucks, heavy equipment and locomotives at the companies’ rail yards pose an unacceptable cancer and lung disease risk to railroad employees and people living and working in communities around the yards.

According to the Natural Resources Defense Council, which is the lead plaintiff in the lawsuit,

Millions of Californians are exposed to toxic levels of pollution from BNSF and UP’s operations. The California Air Resources Board has found that communities even 8 miles away from some of BNSF and UP’s rail yards suffer from increased cancer risk. … Almost every week, the scientific community releases new studies showing the toxicity of diesel exhaust, which is associated with premature death, cancer, cardiovascular and respiratory disease, and even obesity and diabetes. Some researchers have even found a correlation between diesel exhaust and premature birth and lower IQ in children.

The East Yard Communities for Environmental Justice and the Center for Community Action and Environmental Justice are also suing the railroads on behalf of people’s who have reported health problems as a result of their exposure to diesel fumes.

In a blog post about the federal suit, the NRDC cites studies that indicate recent efforts by BNSF and UP to clean up operation at their California yards have still left some nearby residents at risks for cancers and other illnesses that are 50 times higher than state standards. A key goal of the legal action is to have particulates in diesel exhaust declared a solid waste that is subject to the same federal regulations as hazardous solid waste, just as unburned diesel fuel itself is. Should that happen, all railroads — including Amtrak, CSX and Norfolk Southern — would be affected.

The lawsuit is timely. I wrote earlier in 2011 that researchers have begun tracking diesel emissions from a Los Angeles-area BNSF rail yard while at the same time recording health problems for people living in the neighborhood bordering the yard. Shortly after I posted that blog, one of my Virginia-based FELA attorneys reported that formaldehyde in diesel exhaust had been definitively categorized as a carcinogen by federal health and workplace safety officials.

Rail employees have some of the heaviest daily exposures to diesel exhaust.While the negative health effects of long-term exposure to diesel fumes have long been recognized by doctors, regulators and lawyers, most railroad workers have remained completely unaware that numerous carcinogens are contained in diesel exhaust. Awareness of “diesel asthma” has also been growing, and I have helped a conductor who developed asthma and became unable to work after spending years breathing exhaust from diesel-powered locomotives receive a substantial FELA settlement from the rail company that had employed him.

It’s too soon to know how the environmental groups’ lawsuit against BNSF and Union Pacific will turn out, or even whether the plaintiffs will have their day in court. However, any effort that calls attention to the health risks from diesel fume exposure has the welcome potential to make railroad work for conductors, engineers, carmen trackmen and others safer, as well as living and working near rail yards less dangerous.

EJL

About the Editors: Shapiro, Cooper, Lewis & Appleton is an injury law firm whose attorneys have long histories of representing railroad workers in FELA and other railroad injury cases. Attorneys will our firm have served as chairmen of the Railroad section of the American Association for Justice. One of our attorneys wrote a major attorney’s encyclopedia section on railroad safety litigation. Check out our railroad injury case results to see for yourself. Our offices are in Virginia Beach and Hampton, Virginia (VA), and Elizabeth City, North Carolina (NC). Our lawyers also hold licenses to practice in South Carolina (SC), West Virginia (WV), Kentucky (KY), Florida (FL) and Washington, DC, and have handled hundreds of railroad injury and FELA cases throughout the eastern United States. Rick Shapiro and James Lewis were included in the 2011 issue of Best Lawyers in America. They, along with fellow attorney John M. Cooper, were also named 2011 Virginia Super Lawyers for Personal Injury Law, an honor which fewer than 5 percent of outstanding lawyers receive. We would like to send you one of our FREE reports about railroad injury and FELA cases, such as Dos and Don’ts When Injured at a Railroad — Yours FELA Rights and What Railroad Claim Agents Won’t Tell You (But You Must Know). We provide free initial confidential injury case consultations, so call us toll free at (800) 752-0042 before giving any statement or talking to a railroad claims agent. Our injury attorneys also host an extensive injury law video library on Youtube. Further, our lawyers proudly moderate the Yardlimits Railroad Community Forum and donate to the Fallen Brother Fund.


Railroad Asked to Foot Environmental Costs of Ethanol Spill, Fire in Illinois

Not all the ethanol was destroyed in the fire -- to say nothing of any spilled oil, diesel fuel or chemicals used by firefighters to suppress the flames.

By Rick Shapiro, Railroad Accident Attorney in Virginia

The intense fire and evacuation of the small town of Tiskilwa, Illinois (IL), after an Iowa Interstate Railroad freight train hauling ethanol for Archer Daniels Midlands derailed made national news in early October 2011. While attention-grabbing video of the conflagration faded from television and computer screens within 24 hours, the environmental impacts of the accident are likely to persist for years.

Not all the ethanol was destroyed in the fire — to say nothing of any spilled oil, diesel fuel or chemicals used by firefighters to suppress the flames. As a result, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency is asking Iowa Interstate to fund the installation of wells and testing equipment to ensure that the quality of water in nearby creeks has not been compromised. The state’s EPA has also asked the Illinois attorney general to order the railroad to pay for cleaning up the soil around the area of the wreck.

Of particular concern are two chemical components of ethanol fuel, ethyl acetate and 1,1-diethoxyethane. Both of the substances can cause irritation to people’s skin and lungs, and large exposures to 1,1-diethoxyethane fumes can cause suffocation. The effects of the chemicals on fish, birds and other wildlife are similar but most likely to be heightened because of the animals’ small size and constant exposure to the chemicals in the places where they live.

News reports of the ethanol train derailment all repeat some version of the statement “No deaths or injuries occurred as a result of the incident.” What that sentence means is that no residents of  Tiskilwa got hurt. I’ve yet to see any mention of whether the engineer, conductor or other member of the train crew suffered injuries, which is a likely occurrence any time a locomotive or string of rail cars derails.

As a FELA plaintiff’s attorney based in Virginia (VA), I devote much of my practice to helping railroad workers or their surviving family members receive compensation from rail companies whose negligence caused the employees to develop diseases due to exposure to harmful chemicals. The short- and long-term health risks from a derailment and fire like the one in Illinois are almost incalculable. I hope Iowa Interstate Railroad will meet its responsibility to pay for the needed environmental cleanup and monitoring, Doing so will help prevent greater problems in the future.

EJL

About the Editors: Shapiro, Cooper, Lewis & Appleton is an injury law firm whose attorneys have long histories of representing railroad workers in FELA and other railroad injury cases.  Attorneys will our firm have served as chairmen of the Railroad section of the American Association for Justice. One of our attorneys wrote a major attorney’s encyclopedia section on railroad safety litigation. Check out our railroad injury case results to see for yourself. Our offices are in Virginia Beach and Hampton, Virginia (VA), and Elizabeth City, North Carolina (NC). Our lawyers also hold licenses to practice in South Carolina (SC), West Virginia (WV), Kentucky (KY), Florida (FL) and Washington, DC, and have handled hundreds of railroad injury and FELA cases throughout the eastern United States. Rick Shapiro and James Lewis were included in the 2011 issue of Best Lawyers in America. They, along with fellow attorney John M. Cooper, were also named 2011 Virginia Super Lawyers for Personal Injury Law, an honor which fewer than 5 percent of outstanding lawyers receive. We would like to send you one of our FREE reports about railroad injury and FELA cases, such as Dos and Don’ts When Injured at a Railroad — Yours FELA Rights and What Railroad Claim Agents Won’t Tell You (But You Must Know). We provide free initial confidential injury case consultations, so call us toll free at (800) 752-0042 before giving any statement or talking to a railroad claims agent. Our injury attorneys also host an extensive injury law video library on Youtube. Further, our lawyers proudly moderate the Yardlimits Railroad Community Forum and donate to the Fallen Brother Fund.


Family Shares Their Struggle Battling Railroad Company Over Mesothelioma Cancer Claim

A father who worked for a railroad for nearly four decades lost his life to mesothelioma cancer.

By Randy Appleton, Virginia FELA Attorney

A father who worked for a railroad for nearly four decades lost his life to mesothelioma cancer. His family believed asbestos contributed to their father’s death. They consulted with firm FELA lawyer Rick Shapiro and were able to obtain some semblance of justice in court. To learn more, take a look at “Family Discusses Dealing With Mesothelioma That Took the Life of Their Rail Engineer Father.”

PA

About the Editors: Shapiro, Cooper, Lewis & Appleton is an injury law firm whose attorneys have long histories of representing railroad workers in FELA and other railroad injury cases.  Attorneys will our firm have served as chairmen of the Railroad section of the American Association for Justice. One of our attorneys wrote a major attorney’s encyclopedia section on railroad safety litigation. Check out our railroad injury case results to see for yourself. Our offices are in Virginia Beach and Hampton, Virginia (VA), and Elizabeth City, North Carolina (NC). Our lawyers also hold licenses to practice in South Carolina (SC), West Virginia (WV), Kentucky (KY), Florida (FL) and Washington, DC, and have handled hundreds of railroad injury and FELA cases throughout the eastern United States. Rick Shapiro and James Lewis were included in the 2011 issue of Best Lawyers in America. They, along with fellow attorney John M. Cooper, were also named 2011 Virginia Super Lawyers for Personal Injury Law, an honor which fewer than 5 percent of outstanding lawyers receive. We would like to send you one of our FREE reports about railroad injury and FELA cases, such as Dos and Don’ts When Injured at a Railroad — Yours FELA Rights and What Railroad Claim Agents Won’t Tell You (But You Must Know). We provide free initial confidential injury case consultations, so call us toll free at (800) 752-0042 before giving any statement or talking to a railroad claims agent. Our injury attorneys also host an extensive injury law video library on Youtube. Further, our lawyers proudly moderate the Yardlimits Railroad Community Forum and donate to the Fallen Brother Fund.


Mesothelioma Victim Receives $41M From Jury That Found Companies Failed to Warn About Asbestos’ Dangers

The greatest risks for asbestos-related occupational disease rest with retired rail employees. Damage done by asbestos can takes as long as 30 or 40 years to become apparent and can run the gamut from asthma to cancer to respiratory failure.

By Rick Shapiro, Rail Worker Cancer Lawsuit Attorney in Virginia

A retired plumber who was diagnosed with mesothelioma almost a decade after he stopped working with asbestos-infused wallboards and joint compounds is set to receive just more than $41 million in negligence awards and punitive damages from the companies that produced and supplied the dangerous products. John Casey, who worked as plumber in California for 40 years, won jury verdicts in two separate civil trials brought against Kaiser Gypsum Company and construction contractor FDCC California.

Jurors in San Francisco, CA, determined that both the manufacturer and the contractor had failed to provide adequate warnings about the adverse health effects of breathing in asbestos particles. Exposure to asbestos is practically the only cause of the fatal cancer mesothelioma.

Casey’s attorney’s, Michael A. Vasquez, Esq. and Robert J. Bugatto, Esq. of Vasquez, Estrada & Conway, LLP, “presented evidence showing that the knowledge of hazards of exposure to asbestos dates prior to the 1920s … [and]  knowledge of its dangers had progressed to the point of knowing it caused cancer by at least as early as the 1950s.” Showing juries what companies that failed to protect their employees against on-the-job asbestos exposures knew and when they knew it is often key to securing verdicts favorable to workers who developed cancer or another disease.

I have used this legal strategy myself when representing former rail employees such as brakemen, conductors, engineers and trackmen in occupational disease and wrongful death lawsuits brought against railroads under the provisions of the Federal Employers’ Liability Act in Virginia (VA). FELA place a high and nondelegable duty on rail companies to protect their workers against toxic substance exposures. This duty includes an obligation to inspect rail yards, train cars and locomotives for potential sources of asbestos, diesel fumes and radiation, as well as a duty to warn employees about the presence of health risks. Any dereliction of those statutory duties makes railroads such as Amtrak, CSX or Norfolk Southern potentially liable for claims of negligence and for making monetary damage awards to workers who become sick.

While asbestos has all but disappeared from newer equipment used in the railroad industry, the material still exists in insulation in older buildings, pipe sleeves in some locomotives and in fire resistant materials such as brake pads on decades-old undercarriages. The greatest risks for asbestos-related occupational disease, however, rest with retired rail employees. Damage done by asbestos can takes as long as 30 or 40 years to become apparent and can run the gamut from asthma to cancer to respiratory failure.

EJL

About the Editors: Shapiro, Cooper Lewis & Appleton is an injury law firm whose attorneys have long histories of representing railroad workers in FELA and other railroad injury cases.  Attorneys will our firm have served as chairmen of the Railroad section of the American Association for Justice. One of our attorneys wrote a major attorney’s encyclopedia section on railroad safety litigation. Check out our railroad injury case results to see for yourself. Our offices are in Virginia Beach and Hampton, Virginia (VA), and Elizabeth City, North Carolina (NC). Our lawyers also hold licenses to practice in South Carolina (SC), West Virginia (WV), Kentucky (KY), Florida (FL) and Washington, DC, and have handled hundreds of railroad injury and FELA cases throughout the eastern United States. Rick Shapiro and James Lewis were included in the 2011 issue of Best Lawyers in America. They, along with fellow attorney John M. Cooper, were also named 2011 Virginia Super Lawyers for Personal Injury Law, an honor which fewer than 5 percent of outstanding lawyers receive. We would like to send you one of our FREE reports about railroad injury and FELA cases, such as Dos and Don’ts When Injured at a Railroad — Yours FELA Rights and What Railroad Claim Agents Won’t Tell You (But You Must Know). We provide free initial confidential injury case consultations, so call us toll free at (800) 752-0042 before giving any statement or talking to a railroad claims agent. Our injury attorneys also host an extensive injury law video library on Youtube. Further, our lawyers proudly moderate the Yardlimits Railroad Community Forum and donate to the Fallen Brother Fund.


FELA Lawyer Talks About Health Risks From Diesel Exhaust Fumes

Exposures to the constituents of diesel fumes can cause railroad workers to be stricken with serious, life-threatening illnesses like cancer, leukemia, ashtma and COPD.

By John Cooper, Virginia Railroad Worker Injury Lawyer

Exposure to diesel exhaust fumes can cause railroad workers to be stricken with serious, life-threatening illnesses such as lung cancer, asthma, leukemia and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, which is most often called COPD. My colleague Rick Shapiro recently published an article that focuses on which potentially harmful chemicals diesel exhaust fumes contain and why a rail worker who was exposed to those toxic fumes and is now sick should speak with a VA railroad injury/FELA injury lawyer right away.

PA

About the Editors: Shapiro, Cooper Lewis & Appleton is an injury law firm whose attorneys have long histories of representing railroad workers in FELA and other railroad injury cases.  Attorneys will our firm have served as chairmen of the Railroad section of the American Association for Justice. One of our attorneys wrote a major attorney’s encyclopedia section on railroad safety litigation. Check out our railroad injury case results to see for yourself. Our offices are in Virginia Beach and Hampton, Virginia (VA), and Elizabeth City, North Carolina (NC). Our lawyers also hold licenses to practice in South Carolina (SC), West Virginia (WV), Kentucky (KY), Florida (FL) and Washington, DC, and have handled hundreds of railroad injury and FELA cases throughout the eastern United States. Rick Shapiro and James Lewis were included in the 2011 issue of Best Lawyers in America. They, along with fellow attorney John M. Cooper, were also named 2011 Virginia Super Lawyers for Personal Injury Law, an honor which fewer than 5 percent of outstanding lawyers receive. We would like to send you one of our FREE reports about railroad injury and FELA cases, such as Dos and Don’ts When Injured at a Railroad — Yours FELA Rights and What Railroad Claim Agents Won’t Tell You (But You Must Know). We provide free initial confidential injury case consultations, so call us toll free at (800) 752-0042 before giving any statement or talking to a railroad claims agent. Our injury attorneys also host an extensive injury law video library on Youtube. Further, our lawyers proudly moderate the Yardlimits Railroad Community Forum and donate to the Fallen Brother Fund.


Rail Yard Diesel Fumes Draw Closer Scrutiny for Causing Lung, Heart Diseases and Deaths

Living near a busy rail yard full of running diesel locomotives and served by a constant stream of tractor-trailers and semis with diesel engines almost surely causes avoidable illnesses and deaths. This would be true for any yard operated by Amtrak, BNSF, CSX, Norfolk Southern, Union Pacific or another railroad company.

By Richard N. Shapiro, Virginia Railroad Injury Attorney

Diesel locomotives for freight trains and passenger trains, like diesel engines for large commercial trucks, generate fumes that can cause cancer and respiratory illnesses such as asthma among railroad employees. Doctors, companies, workers and judges and juries have long recognized this. In fact, over my nearly 30 years as a Virginia-based personal injury attorney representing rail employees in FELA cases brought by victims of lung diseases caused by exposure to diesel fumes, has convinced me that breathing in locomotive and truck engine exhaust day after day can be a s dangerous to people’s health and lives can be as dangerous as working around radioactivity and asbestos.

Press-Enterprise (Riverside, CA)

This BNSF rail yard in San Barnardino, CA, has been identified as one of the most polluted and toxic train depots in the United States.

Similar conclusions now seem to be dawning on public health officials and researchers, along with the realization that living close to busy rail yards can be as potentially deadly as working on and around trains. Diesel fumes and other cancer-causing and toxic chemicals do not respect boundaries such as chain  link fences separating trunk lines and roundhouses from neighborhoods filled with houses and families with children.

What got me thinking along these lines was an announcement by researchers at Loma Linda University in California that they were launching a two-year investigation into the health of residents living within feet of one of the largest rail yard on the West Coast. Working in coordination with the South Coast Air Quality Management District, the environmental and medical scientists will assess whether cancer, stroke, asthma and death rates that are as much as 250 times higher than in other areas of California can be linked to operations at the BNSF yard in a neighborhood in the northwest corner of San Bernardino, CA.

I’m no scientist, but I suspect the findings will show that living near a busy rail yard full of running diesel locomotives and served by a constant stream of tractor-trailers and semis with diesel engines causes avoidable illnesses and deaths. As a Business Week article on the planned study notes,

Diesel exhaust contains tiny particles that can penetrate deep into the lungs, carrying with it a variety of toxins that have been linked to acute bronchitis, lung disease, heart attacks and other ailments. Exposure to this smog is especially dangerous for children whose lungs are still developing and the elderly, whose immune systems may be compromised.

Those risks exists — and the findings from the San Bernardino study will be as applicable — for any rail yard operated by Amtrak, BNSF, CSX, Norfolk Southern, Union Pacific and all other railroad companies. Any risk of occupational illness faced by a conductor, engineer, brakeman, switchman or trainman is faced equally by an adult or child who has a similar levels of exposure to diesel fumes and other toxic substances involved in railroad work.

Whatever rail operators can do to make working in rail yards safer, the companies also need to do to make living, playing and going to school near a yard safer.

EJL

About the Editors: Shapiro, Cooper Lewis & Appleton is an injury law firm whose attorneys have long histories of representing railroad workers in FELA and other railroad injury cases.  Attorneys will our firm have served as chairmen of the Railroad section of the American Association for Justice. One of our attorneys wrote a major attorney’s encyclopedia section on railroad safety litigation. Check out our railroad injury case results to see for yourself. Our offices are in Virginia Beach and Hampton, Virginia (VA), and Elizabeth City, North Carolina (NC). Our lawyers also hold licenses to practice in South Carolina (SC), West Virginia (WV), Kentucky (KY), Florida (FL) and Washington, DC, and have handled hundreds of railroad injury and FELA cases throughout the eastern United States. Rick Shapiro and James Lewis were included in the 2011 issue of Best Lawyers in America. They, along with fellow attorney John M. Cooper, were also named 2011 Virginia Super Lawyers for Personal Injury Law, an honor which fewer than 5 percent of outstanding lawyers receive. We would like to send you one of our FREE reports about railroad injury and FELA cases, such as Dos and Don’ts When Injured at a Railroad — Yours FELA Rights and What Railroad Claim Agents Won’t Tell You (But You Must Know). We provide free initial confidential injury case consultations, so call us toll free at (800) 752-0042 before giving any statement or talking to a railroad claims agent. Our injury attorneys also host an extensive injury law video library on Youtube. Further, our lawyers proudly moderate the Yardlimits Railroad Community Forum and donate to the Fallen Brother Fund.


Norfolk Southern Forced to Pay for Deadly South Carolina Chlorine Spill

By John Cooper, Railroad Injury Attorney

Six years after a Norfolk Southern chemical tanker train car derailed and released a deadly cloud of chlorine gas in Graniteville, South Carolina (SC), the railroad has been ordered to reimburse its insurer for $58 million paid out to the survivors of the nine town residents who lost their lives and to the more than 250 rail employees and others injured by the spill. NS had fought against paying that bill because it claimed it had already incurred hundreds of millions of dollars in expenses for compensating victims of the toxic chemical accident.

Norfolk Southern chlorine gas

This derailed Norfolk Southern train released chlorine gas that killed nine and injured more than 250 in Graniteville, South Carolina.

From a strictly business perspective, it makes sense that NS would not want to continue paying for its mistake, even though the rail operator has been consistently reporting strong to record quarterly profits over the past few years. I’ve written more than once about the railroad’s preference for profits over people’s safety.

What bears particular mention in regards to the South Carolina chemical spill is the risks rail workers and people living and working close to train tracks face from poisonous and harmful fumes. Some of this risk is inherent in transporting ingredients required for everything from fertilizing farm fields and treating drinking water to producing plastics and other consumer goods. Because of that, however, rail operators must take every precaution against accidentally spilling or releasing chemicals. The companies should be even more protective of their employees who often cannot avoid exposure to chemicals that can damage their lungs, eyes and skin.

Norfolk Southern continues to learn an expensive lesson in how failing to haul chemicals safely can impact the bottom line. Too many people in South Carolina learned the more important lesson about the human cost of chemical spills. In a better world, NS would convert its dollars into sense, willingly pay fair compensation to the families they harmed, and spend whatever time and money it needed to in order to prevent future tragedies.

EJL

About the Editors: Shapiro, Cooper Lewis & Appleton is an injury law firm with a long history of representing railroad workers in FELA and other railroad injury cases. Check out our railroad injury case results to see for yourself. Our offices are in Virginia Beach, Virginia (VA), and Elizabeth City, North Carolina (NC). Our lawyers hold licenses in VA, NC, SC, WV, KY and DC and have handled hundreds of railroad injury and FELA cases throughout the eastern United States. We would like to send you one of our FREE reports about railroad injury and FELA cases, including Dos and Don’ts When Injured at a Railroad — Yours FELA Rights and What Railroad Claim Agents Won’t Tell You (But You Must Know). We provide free initial confidential injury case consultations, so call us toll free at (800) 752-0042 before giving any statement or talking to a railroad claims agent. Our injury attorneys also host an extensive injury law video library on Youtube. Furthermore, our lawyers proudly moderate the Yardlimits Railroad Community Forum and donate to the Fallen Brother Fund.

Title: Teen Injured in Chesapeake School Bus Crash Receives Settlement

Tags:

Accidents

Attorney

Bus

Chesapeake

Crash

Injuries

medical treatment

teen

Virginia traffic accident

Wreck

Children

School

settlement

Duffan

Excerpt: Every time a person boards a bus, and especially when parents send their kids off on school buses, they need to trust that they will arrive at their destination safely. Any time that does not happen is a cause for concern and a reason to hold the people who injured or killed passengers responsible.

By Kevin Duffan, Chesapeake Traffic Accident Injury Attorney

One of nineteen children injured when a school bus headed to Deep Creek High School on July 17, 2010, has received a $16,000 settlement from the Chesapeake, Virginia (VA) School Board. The money will cover medical bills related to the treatment of neck and back injuries the girl suffered when the bus ran off the road and into a ditch near the intersection of Jarvis Road and Gruen Street.

The injured teen was sharing the bus with two siblings when it rolled over onto its side. The Virginian-Pilot is reporting that minor injuries to those children resulted in separate smaller settlements between the school board and the family.

School bus wrecks — as well as fatal tour bus crashes — have been much in the news the pat two weeks. Such accidents are relatively rare, but they deservedly make headlines because passengers literally trust their lives and health to bus drivers and the companies and school systems that operate the vehicles.

Every time a person boards a bus, and especially when parents send their kids off on school buses, they need to trust that they will arrive at their destination safely. Any time that does not happen is a cause for concern and a reason to hold the people who injured or killed passengers responsible for the harm caused.

EJL

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HSinjury Teaser Author: Randy Appleton

HSinjury Teaser Title: School Bus Accident Victim Receives Settlement in Chesapeake, VA

In his latest post to our firm’s Chesapeake, VA Car & Truck accident Injury Lawyers blog, [URL to come] my colleague Kevin Duffan reports that a teen who suffered neck and back injuries when the school bus in which she was riding ran off the road and rolled over has received a settlement from the Chesapeake School Board to cover her medical treatments. Kevin notes that bus accidents deservedly make headlines because it is newsworthy when passengers are put at risk for injury or death.

EJL


Best Part of Being an Injury Lawyer – Leveling the Playing Field in Pursuit of Justice

These stories summarize why I love being an injury attorney. I work for months and years on worthy causes helping to level the playing field in favor of a client or family against big companies who try to shirk responsibility and deny legitimate compensation.

By Richard Shapiro, FELA Lawyer in VA

I was in a mediation the other day on a personal injury case for my clients, representing nice parents whose eight-year-old son was seriously injured in a car accident due to the fault of a truck driver. At typical mediations, there is a lot of waiting time as the mediator, who is usually a semi-retired judge, is shuttling back and forth between conference rooms trying to get the parties to a fair settlement. The mother of the injured child asked me what the best part of being an attorney was and what I enjoyed the most. Before I answered, she said “Do you really use a lot of your skills or only once in a while?”  It made me think….

It’s true that we don’t use the skills that we learn in law school or the skills that we use in the courtroom every day. However, when you represent a client for years through the litigation process and are able to achieve a successful verdict or settlement, it is the best part of being an injury attorney by far. Here are some of my most memorable examples:

1. Lung cancer caused by exposure to asbestos, radiation, and diesel fume exposure, not history of smoking

I fought for four years on a case in which my client developed lung cancer and did not believe it was from cigarette smoking (he quit 17 years before his diagnosis) but rather was from exposure to carcinogens (asbestos, radiation, diesel exhaust fumes) during his 40‑year career while working for CSX Railroad. 

My client explained that he knew he had been exposed to radioactive contamination because the railroad moved thousands of tons of metals in open-top train cars for years.  He also told me that he believed there was asbestos on the diesel engines for decades.  Finally, he was exposed to diesel fumes which remain a health issue for those riding on diesel engines that are not air‑conditioned since the fumes blow back into the crew cab. 

I liked my client and wanted to believe him, but I knew that I had nothing without starting to develop medical evidence that could show that carcinogens beside cigarette smoke contributed to his lung cancer.  The case required that I get the evidence to prove the key issues and I issued Freedom of Information Act requests to the federal government, and Open Records Act request to the State of Tennessee. I had to deal with experts in fields that I was fairly unfamiliar with, including nuclear health physicists.  The particular railroad would not offer even half of the medical expenses of the family even though this took into account none of the five years of cancer treatment which eventually caused the death of my client.  So, with much advance work involving experts, pretrial motions and briefs, the case went before a jury in November 2010. 

When the jury returned its verdict after ten days of trial, I still wasn’t sure whether they would find totally in favor of the railroad and give no money damages to the estate of my client, who passed away during the litigation process.  When the jury returned an $8.6 million verdict, it was one of the greatest moments of my legal career and I hugged his widow for what seemed like an eternity as the jury left the courtroom.  That is a great moment as an injury attorney.

2. Represented mesothelioma asbestos cancer victim against Conrail   

A railroad engineer retired to Florida after 35 years with Pennsylvania Railroad, which became Conrail.  While enjoying his retirement and playing golf three or four times a week, he noticed that he was short of breath a few times while he played so he scheduled an appointment with his doctor. One test led to another and then this otherwise healthy man received the horrible diagnosis of mesothelioma cancer, which is known to only be caused by asbestos. Given that his entire adult-life career was with the railroads, he knew that  he had been on engines with asbestos and with asbestos on steam generators that supplied heat to passenger cars—as well as asbestos on diesel engines. 

When I took his case, my client was doing very well, but mesothelioma is a terminal cancer with an average life expectancy of somewhere between several months and 12 to 18 months maximum. It is a cruel disease that is not subject to any surgical cure.  We promptly filed suit and when the railroad sought his testimony. I worked for a couple of weeks to prepare for my client’s videotaped deposition because in these types of cases you realize the horrible truth that your client may or may not be alive if several months go by before a trial occurs.

Many months later, after other depositions before trial, we agreed to a mediation session in Philadelphia with the railroad. I traveled with my client and we were able to settle his case for a very substantial sum of money.  However, the cold hard truth is that money is not going to make my client’s terminal cancer go away.

For this reason, my client spent much time stressing over how he would provide for his daughter and for his wife and it was very important to him to be able to settle the case while he was not hospitalized and able to make financial decisions for his loved ones. We might have been able to push this case to a jury trial and obtain a larger sum of money, but my client knew that we couldn’t guarantee it, and his doctors couldn’t guarantee that he would be able to do so. How a person diagnosed with mesothelioma pushes through every day knowing what they face is one of those mysteries of life that makes you contemplate and treasure every day you walk this earth in good health.

3. Justice attained through appeal – Mesothelioma case thrown out based on written release buried in resignation 17 years earlier

I represented an engineer who had been employed for 45 years for N&W/Norfolk Southern. He began work in 1947 on steam locomotives which were covered with asbestos insulation in virtually every part of the engines. 

Many processes going on inside these engines caused asbestos fibers, which are completely invisible to the naked eye, to flow in the crew cab every day. Unfortunately, the railroad knew, since the 1930s, that asbestos could cause permanent asbestos lung diseases but simply did not protect workers by warning them about the dangers of asbestos.

My client retired in 1986 and the railroad did what is called a “buy‑out” where the railroad paid some money in order to convince a worker to retire early and give up their union seniority. It is a common method for companies to reduce their total workers and offer a little carrot to a worker involving a sum of money and possible other benefits.  In this case, the railroad offered about $50,000 and the worker needed to release claims relating to their employment and seniority. This vague release in the buy‑out agreement never talked about a railroad worker’s potential future injury or disease claims, and never stated that under what is called the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA) that this or any other potential future unknown claim was going to be released. 

We felt this was totally unfair and illegal when the railroad raised the release during the course of his mesothelioma cancer injury lawsuit. In other words, the railroad said that it should not be sued because the buy‑out included a general release of all claims.  The trial judge in West Virginia (WV) bought this argument lock stock and barrel and threw the entire case out just weeks before trial. Shocking, but true. 

I told my client’s family that I would appeal this case to the West Virginia Supreme Court and argue that a release such as this could not wipe out or serve as a legal bar to a completely unknown, future arising claim under the FELA, which is the exclusive remedy for railroad workers or their families for on-the-job injuries caused by the neglect of a railroad, as well as for the violation of a safety statute or regulation by a railroad. 

The case took nearly two years to get to the WV Supreme Court including all the briefs and other papers. Eventually, in a unanimous decision, the WV Supreme Court ruled that a general release could not release unknown, future arising, claims against a railroad including, but not limited to, a mesothelioma cancer case like ours. This precedent extended well beyond just mesothelioma claims, but to any unknown claims when a standard retirement resignation is signed, for example. 

The WV Supreme Court remanded the case back to the trial court judge for a jury trial as we had originally been planning.  The railroad then agreed to voluntary mediation on this case. Eventually, it was settled at voluntary mediation satisfactorily to the family of my deceased railroad engineer, who was still survived by his widow and his sons.

4. Justice attained through appeal – Amtrak Engineer injured in derailment; case initially dismissed at trial against Amtrak/CSX

I was retained by the engineer who was operating an Amtrak passenger train that derailed when traveling at a fairly high rate of speed through Lake City, South Carolina (SC).  Numerous passengers were hurt in the derailment, which could have been far worse but for fairly heroic efforts by the Amtrak engineer who was my client for his own personal injuries.  However, his employer, Amtrak, and CSX, which owned the railroad tracks, did not see it this way and defended the action rather than pay compensation for his personal injuries. Essentially both his employer Amtrak and CSX claimed that they were completely free of any neglect and should not  be sued, blaming a private street sweeper company driver who had run a stop sign and traveled up onto the railroad right of way and smashed into the CSX owned railroad tracks. 

Yes, the street sweeper operator was clearly negligent but our post-accident investigation showed that the reason the street sweeper operator’s truck bumper smashed the railroad track was because CSX did not have anything approaching a normal amount of ballast rock surrounding the railroad track at that area.  Federal regulations were enacted that require a railroad to follow its own written rules with regard to continuous welded rail which is the common mainline railroad track in many areas and CSX had neglected proper maintenance and allowed the level of necessary structural ballast rock to erode and wash away for numerous years.

We proceeded to trial against the sweeper company, as well as CSX and Amtrak.  The railroad attorneys, on the morning of trial, moved to have the judge throw the case out against them arguing that they had no negligence. The judge agreed. This left us with a case only against the street sweeper company and the big problem was that there were other passenger claims and there was almost no insurance left for our engineer’s serious permanent injuries, and he was out of work as an engineer due to his personal injuries.

We obtained our verdict against the street sweeper company for over $800,000 but, again, almost all of it was uncollectible because there was no insurance left.  Accordingly, we appealed the case to the South Carolina Supreme Court arguing that both railroads were responsible also.

I wrote the drafts of our briefs, and recited what our accident reconstruction engineer had testified to in a videotape deposition – the lack of appropriate ballast rock maintenance by CSX was a concurring cause of the derailment.  In other words, even though the street sweeper operator was definitely negligent, had the proper ballast rock section been lining the tracks in that area, our accident reconstruction engineer did various engineering analyses that proved that the track would not have been knocked out of alignment but for the failure to have the proper ballast rock at the railroad track area. 

We had an additional big problem: another crew member’s case had been thrown out by a different judge in South Carolina—a case I was not involved in. The South Carolina Supreme Court agreed with the trial judge and properly dismissed the other crew member’s case against Amtrak and CSX.  Big problem!

We dealt with this head on by telling the South Carolina Supreme Court in our briefs that our case was completely different than the other crew member’s case because we proved through accident reconstruction that CSX failed to maintain the track and this directly contributed to the derailment. Also, Amtrak, as the operator of its passenger trains, has a duty that it cannot delegate out of under the FELA which requires that Amtrak also must inspect and assure that the railroad track is safe. We argued the trial judge made a mistake when he dismissed these railroads in our case. 

In a unanimous opinion, the Supreme Court reversed the trial judge who had dismissed the case against both railroads and reinstated our case for a new trial.  Fortunately, very soon before the new trial date, we were able to settle the case against both of the railroads satisfactorily to our engineer client.

These stories summarize why I love being an injury attorney. I work for months and years on worthy causes helping to level the playing field in favor of a client or family against big companies who try to shirk responsibility and deny legitimate compensation. 

About the EditorsShapiro, Cooper Lewis & Appleton is an injury law firm with a long history of representing hundreds of railroad workers in FELA/ railroad injury cases. Check out our railroad injury case results to see for yourself. Our offices are in Virginia Beach, Virginia (VA) and Elizabeth City, North Carolina (NC). Our lawyers hold licenses in VA, NC, SC, WV, KY, FL and DC and have handled railroad injury and FELA cases throughout the eastern U.S.  We would like to send you one of our FREE reports about railroad injury and FELA cases, including Do’s and Don’ts When Injured at a Railroad – The Railroad Worker’s FELA Rights and What Railroad Claim Agents Won’t Tell You (But You Must Know). We are ready to talk to you by phone right now—we provide free initial confidential injury case consultations, so call us toll free at 1-800-752-0042 before giving any statement or talking to a railroad claims agent. Our injury attorneys also host an extensive injury law video library on Youtube . Furthermore, our lawyers proudly moderate the Yardlimits Railroad Community Forum and donate to the Fallen Brother Fund.  PA