Trending...
- Registered Nurse Launches Healthcare Wealth Strategy Practice for Healthcare Professionals - 191
- Greater Englewood Chamber Welcomes Latest Solar Training Cohort, Advancing Clean Energy Careers
- J&J Exterminating Reminds Residents to prepare for Termite Swarm Season
CHICAGO – Mayor Brandon Johnson and Corporation Counsel Mary B. Richardson-Lowry announced today that the City of Chicago has filed a lawsuit against Monsanto Co., three of its corporate successors, and a local distributor, for releasing polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) into the City's air, water, and soil. The City alleges that Monsanto and its co-defendants released these chemicals and misled the public despite knowing that PCBs are dangerous contaminants that have been found to cause significant harm to humans and the environment. The complaint, filed in Cook County Circuit Court, seeks damages for the City's expenses associated with the cleanup and remediation of PCB contamination in the City and its waterways.
"Monsanto knew for decades that its commercial PCB formulations were highly toxic and would inevitably produce precisely the contamination and human health risks that have occurred, perpetuating the environmental abuse and stark inequities so many of Chicago's neighborhoods have long suffered from," said Mayor Brandon Johnson. "This action reflects the City's commitment to protecting our current and future residents, as well as our natural resources, from the harm caused by Monsanto, and creating a more sustainable environment for us all."
More on illi News
"Records show that Monsanto intentionally misled the public despite knowing the dangers PCBs posed to the environment," said Corporation Counsel Richardson-Lowry. "We bring this lawsuit to ensure that the polluters are held accountable for their actions and bear the financial burden of the response efforts required to address the PCB contamination."
"Environmental justice is a fundamental right for all residents in our City. We must use all available tools, including litigation, to stand up against those who put profit before people," said Angela Tovar, Chief Sustainability Officer.
PCBs are synthetic chemical compounds that were widely used for a variety of industrial and household applications such as paint and varnishes, electrical equipment, caulk, insecticides, coolants, and sealants. As a result of the sales of PCB products in and around Chicago, there is significant contamination within the City. This contamination is in Lake Michigan, in the banks and sediment of the Chicago River, and at sites throughout the City.
While PCBs were banned by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in the late 1970s, the chemicals are still present in the environment today. PCBs have entered the air, water, sediments, and soil through manufacturing, PCB spills and leaks, and the disposal and discharge of PCB wastes into sewers and landfills. PCBs can also enter water bodies through stormwater runoff containing contaminated soil. Fish become contaminated with PCBs by living near contaminated sediment or by consuming contaminated prey.
More on illi News
Humans, in turn, are exposed to PCBs primarily from eating contaminated food, breathing contaminated air, and drinking or swimming in contaminated water. PCB exposure has been shown to cause adverse health effects, including alterations to the liver, thyroid, immune and reproductive systems, and reduced birth weight. PCBs have also been linked to cancer.
To address PCB contamination, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency places limits on daily discharges of PCBs from Chicago waterways into the portion of Lake Michigan that abuts Chicago. New rules require Chicago to reduce its PCB discharges by an estimated 99.6%. The City seeks to recover the significant costs the City will incur to comply with these daily limits, to monitor and address contamination already in its waterways, and to obtain cleanup and remediation costs for contaminated sites throughout the City as they become known.
"Monsanto knew for decades that its commercial PCB formulations were highly toxic and would inevitably produce precisely the contamination and human health risks that have occurred, perpetuating the environmental abuse and stark inequities so many of Chicago's neighborhoods have long suffered from," said Mayor Brandon Johnson. "This action reflects the City's commitment to protecting our current and future residents, as well as our natural resources, from the harm caused by Monsanto, and creating a more sustainable environment for us all."
More on illi News
- MAG Magna Corp Targets Trillion-Dollar Opportunity by Tokenizing Rare Earth Assets Critical to AI, EVs, & Defense: MAG Magna Corp.: Stock Symbol: MGNC
- SnapTax Launches AI-Powered Tax Planning Platform for Freelancers and 1099 Workers — Now Free for 90 Days
- Congressional Roundtable Exposes Mental Health Crisis: More Spending and Treatment, Worse Results – CCHR Demands Accountability
- Attorney Joseph C. Kreps Files Lawsuit to Stop Alabama State Board of Pharmacy's Unlawful "Revenue-First" Rulemaking
- NAIDOC Week Australia 2026 | 50 Years Deadly - Celebrates Culture, Resilience, and Global Connection
"Records show that Monsanto intentionally misled the public despite knowing the dangers PCBs posed to the environment," said Corporation Counsel Richardson-Lowry. "We bring this lawsuit to ensure that the polluters are held accountable for their actions and bear the financial burden of the response efforts required to address the PCB contamination."
"Environmental justice is a fundamental right for all residents in our City. We must use all available tools, including litigation, to stand up against those who put profit before people," said Angela Tovar, Chief Sustainability Officer.
PCBs are synthetic chemical compounds that were widely used for a variety of industrial and household applications such as paint and varnishes, electrical equipment, caulk, insecticides, coolants, and sealants. As a result of the sales of PCB products in and around Chicago, there is significant contamination within the City. This contamination is in Lake Michigan, in the banks and sediment of the Chicago River, and at sites throughout the City.
While PCBs were banned by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in the late 1970s, the chemicals are still present in the environment today. PCBs have entered the air, water, sediments, and soil through manufacturing, PCB spills and leaks, and the disposal and discharge of PCB wastes into sewers and landfills. PCBs can also enter water bodies through stormwater runoff containing contaminated soil. Fish become contaminated with PCBs by living near contaminated sediment or by consuming contaminated prey.
More on illi News
- PlanetAI Nature Space (PNS), certificadora Europea, lanza su plataforma EUDR-PNS Ready basada en IA, satélites y trazabilidad blockchain
- "Relic: The Element" Now Available on Audiobook Platforms
- Rhealize Strategic Talent Advisory Co-Founder Dona Baker to Speak at DisruptHR YEG 15.0 in Edmonton on Hiring Innovation
- Instant IP Teams: Bringing Enterprise-Grade Collaboration to IP Protection at the Speed of Thought
- Greater Englewood Chamber Welcomes Latest Solar Training Cohort, Advancing Clean Energy Careers
Humans, in turn, are exposed to PCBs primarily from eating contaminated food, breathing contaminated air, and drinking or swimming in contaminated water. PCB exposure has been shown to cause adverse health effects, including alterations to the liver, thyroid, immune and reproductive systems, and reduced birth weight. PCBs have also been linked to cancer.
To address PCB contamination, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency places limits on daily discharges of PCBs from Chicago waterways into the portion of Lake Michigan that abuts Chicago. New rules require Chicago to reduce its PCB discharges by an estimated 99.6%. The City seeks to recover the significant costs the City will incur to comply with these daily limits, to monitor and address contamination already in its waterways, and to obtain cleanup and remediation costs for contaminated sites throughout the City as they become known.
0 Comments
Latest on illi News
- Quality Water Treatment Unveils SoftPro Elite HE Water Softener for City Water, Setting a New Standard in Residential Water Treatment
- Chicago: Mayor Brandon Johnson, Mayor's Office of Reentry Kick Off Second Chance Month
- UK Financial Ltd Chooses PUMP.FUN App to Launch Maya Meme's Minor-League Meme Coins and Announces Lifetime Airdrop Program
- Chicago: Mayor Brandon Johnson, Ald. Bennett Lawson Celebrate Launch of ADU Expansion Ordinance
- Boston Industrial Solutions Expands Its Industry-Leading UV Ink Portfolio with the Launch of a Matte Ink - Natron® UVPZ
- Chicago: Mayor Brandon Johnson, Department of Housing Announce $300 Million Investment in Affordable Housing
- Mesa West Capital Funds $81 Million Loan to Refinance 313-Unit Multifamily Community in Houston
- Indies United is pleased to present our April 2026 book releases
- Century Fasteners Corp. Exhibiting at 2026 MRO Americas Show – April 21-23, 2026 – Booth #2257
- Digi 995 Launches Robot Head Corduroy Cap in Premium Vintage Style
- Blue Sparrow Coffee named Best Matcha in Westword's Best of Denver 2026
- Ocean County College Introduces Pathways to Simplify the Student Journey and Strengthen Career Connections
- Kiko Nation Expands to Apple App Store, Achieving Full Mobile Deployment for Livestock Digital Registry Platform
- The Lawyers' Marketer Launches Claude AI Implementation Service for Law Firms
- Certified Trading Card Association and Collectors MD Launch Healthy Hobby Initiative
- Not a Moment, a Movement Fueled by Consistency and Driven by Purpose:
- Chicago: Mayor Brandon Johnson, Mayor's Office of Homelessness Release City's Five-Year Blueprint on Homelessness
- L2 Aviation Earns FAA STC for Thales AVIATOR 200S for Boeing 777
- FinIQ Edu Launches High-Impact Workshop Vertical to Close the Workplace Benefits Gap—Drives 82% Surge in 401(k) Participation Intent
- HousingWire launches Mortgage Rankings, bringing a data-driven benchmark to originator performance