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一次事故令上百工人患病,打官司近十年后依旧无果

美联社
2022-06-06

美国最严重的煤灰外泄事故发生后,已经有数十名认为因受雇于承包商而染病的工人去世。

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田纳西州纳什维尔—— 美国最严重的煤灰外泄事故发生后,曾雇佣大批工人进行清理。2013年,第一批200多名工人起诉承包商,他们认为自己患病是煤灰中的重金属和放射性颗粒物引起的,要求嘉科工程(Jacobs Engineering)负责。近十年后,没有一起案件在法院系统中得到解决。

随着案件拖延的时间越来越长,已经有数十名认为因受雇于承包商而染病的工人去世。

其中包括安索尔·克拉克。他在2008年12月22日外泄事故发生几小时后抵达田纳西河谷管理局的金斯顿化石燃料发电厂,开始投入工作。他每天在煤灰泥浆中长时间工作,连续几个月几乎没有休息,直到2013年因为病情严重无法工作。他在去年死于一种罕见的血癌,他认为自己患病的原因是接触了煤灰。

他的妻子珍妮·克拉克表示:“安索尔未能活着看到正义降临。根本没有希望。”两人已经结婚近50年。

多年来,嘉科工程一直试图让法院驳回诉讼。针对嘉科工程最近对工人的诉讼提出的质疑,田纳西最高法院计划在周三举行口头辩论。该公司以大多数原告未遵守《田纳西二氧化硅诉讼优先法案》(Tennessee Silica Claims Priorities Act)规定的程序为由,希望法官驳回原告的诉求。

该项法案规定,任何人因暴露于二氧化硅或粉尘混合物提起诉讼,必须提交医生报告,证明这种暴露是患者疾病的“主要诱因”。如果原告代表爱人提起非正常死亡诉讼,也必须证明死者曾至少五年暴露于粉尘。患上肺癌的工人也要达到五年暴露期限的条件,而且必须证明其肺癌是在首次暴露于粉尘至少10年后确诊。

在法庭文件中,嘉科工程表示,绝大多数原告既没有提交医生报告,或者提交的报告不充分,也没有达到时间限制。例如,嘉科工程认为,2015年,一名工人死于肺癌,距离煤灰外泄事故发生不到7年,因此没有资格提起诉讼。

工人的代理律师则认为,二氧化硅法律并不适用于这类案件。该法案特别提到了二氧化硅,而这只是煤灰中的一种成分。他们认为给工人造成损伤的成分包括砷、铅、镉、汞和镭,但不包括二氧化硅。这项法案还提到了与特定损伤有关的诉讼,即矽肺病和肺纤维化,但这些损伤均与本案无关。

此外,工人的律师还表示,被告提出这种质疑的时间太晚。庭审分两部分进行,2018年已经通过了第一部分庭审。当时田纳西州诺克斯维尔的陪审团裁定嘉科工程违反了对工人的照看义务。陪审员表示,嘉科工程的行为有可能让工人患病。至于这些行为是否确实导致工人患病,以及是否应该提供经济赔偿,需在后续一次或多次庭审中裁定。

嘉科工程的律师表示,公司尽最大努力管理清理过程,并且监管部门认为其管理方式是安全的。没有任何证据证明嘉科工程甚至煤灰是任何疾病的罪魁祸首,而且美国环境保护署(EPA)也将煤灰列为无害物质。

2018年的庭审之后,负责该案的联邦法官命令双方调解,暗示工人迫切需要医疗护理。但调解并不成功,而新的庭审日期也未确定,因为嘉科工程继续提出法律质疑。该公司两次向美国第六巡回上诉法院申请,裁定该公司应免于被起诉,因为其代表的是联邦机构田纳西河谷管理局。法院两次都驳回了嘉科工程的申请,最近一次是在这个月。

道格·布莱索并没有亲眼看到这次小小的胜利。2008年,一道六层楼高的土坝垮塌,释放了超过10亿加仑的煤灰泥浆,几天后,布莱索被安排到金斯顿工作。此次泄露威力巨大,将周围的房屋夷为平地。庭审中的证词显示,在长达数年的清理过程中,泥浆逐渐干燥变成了细粉尘,需要不断喷水,但在大风天依旧会遮天蔽日。

布莱索在现场驾驶水车,直到2014年。2018年,他被诊断出肺癌和脑癌,两年后去世,留下了与他结婚38年的妻子约翰尼·布莱索。她说道,他们在14岁开始约会,道格·布莱索是她“人生的全部”。

她说道:“我们每件事都一起完成。我们一起养牛。我们有一座农场。但这一切都不复存在。”

去年,约翰尼·布莱索和珍妮·克拉克收到了一面美国国旗,这面国旗曾经飞过国会大厦上空,向煤灰清理工人致敬。克拉克表示,这是他们承受悲惨遭遇后收到的唯一一次官方认可。

安索尔·克拉克去世之前,在金斯顿发电厂附近树立了一个木头十字架,作为对煤灰清理工人的纪念碑。珍妮·克拉克表示,她打算本周末到十字架前献花,她经常这样做。

她说道:“只要我还能爬上山,就会坚持这样做。我不希望这件事被遗忘。”(财富中文网)

翻译:刘进龙

审校:汪皓

田纳西州纳什维尔—— 美国最严重的煤灰外泄事故发生后,曾雇佣大批工人进行清理。2013年,第一批200多名工人起诉承包商,他们认为自己患病是煤灰中的重金属和放射性颗粒物引起的,要求嘉科工程(Jacobs Engineering)负责。近十年后,没有一起案件在法院系统中得到解决。

随着案件拖延的时间越来越长,已经有数十名认为因受雇于承包商而染病的工人去世。

其中包括安索尔·克拉克。他在2008年12月22日外泄事故发生几小时后抵达田纳西河谷管理局的金斯顿化石燃料发电厂,开始投入工作。他每天在煤灰泥浆中长时间工作,连续几个月几乎没有休息,直到2013年因为病情严重无法工作。他在去年死于一种罕见的血癌,他认为自己患病的原因是接触了煤灰。

他的妻子珍妮·克拉克表示:“安索尔未能活着看到正义降临。根本没有希望。”两人已经结婚近50年。

多年来,嘉科工程一直试图让法院驳回诉讼。针对嘉科工程最近对工人的诉讼提出的质疑,田纳西最高法院计划在周三举行口头辩论。该公司以大多数原告未遵守《田纳西二氧化硅诉讼优先法案》(Tennessee Silica Claims Priorities Act)规定的程序为由,希望法官驳回原告的诉求。

该项法案规定,任何人因暴露于二氧化硅或粉尘混合物提起诉讼,必须提交医生报告,证明这种暴露是患者疾病的“主要诱因”。如果原告代表爱人提起非正常死亡诉讼,也必须证明死者曾至少五年暴露于粉尘。患上肺癌的工人也要达到五年暴露期限的条件,而且必须证明其肺癌是在首次暴露于粉尘至少10年后确诊。

在法庭文件中,嘉科工程表示,绝大多数原告既没有提交医生报告,或者提交的报告不充分,也没有达到时间限制。例如,嘉科工程认为,2015年,一名工人死于肺癌,距离煤灰外泄事故发生不到7年,因此没有资格提起诉讼。

工人的代理律师则认为,二氧化硅法律并不适用于这类案件。该法案特别提到了二氧化硅,而这只是煤灰中的一种成分。他们认为给工人造成损伤的成分包括砷、铅、镉、汞和镭,但不包括二氧化硅。这项法案还提到了与特定损伤有关的诉讼,即矽肺病和肺纤维化,但这些损伤均与本案无关。

此外,工人的律师还表示,被告提出这种质疑的时间太晚。庭审分两部分进行,2018年已经通过了第一部分庭审。当时田纳西州诺克斯维尔的陪审团裁定嘉科工程违反了对工人的照看义务。陪审员表示,嘉科工程的行为有可能让工人患病。至于这些行为是否确实导致工人患病,以及是否应该提供经济赔偿,需在后续一次或多次庭审中裁定。

嘉科工程的律师表示,公司尽最大努力管理清理过程,并且监管部门认为其管理方式是安全的。没有任何证据证明嘉科工程甚至煤灰是任何疾病的罪魁祸首,而且美国环境保护署(EPA)也将煤灰列为无害物质。

2018年的庭审之后,负责该案的联邦法官命令双方调解,暗示工人迫切需要医疗护理。但调解并不成功,而新的庭审日期也未确定,因为嘉科工程继续提出法律质疑。该公司两次向美国第六巡回上诉法院申请,裁定该公司应免于被起诉,因为其代表的是联邦机构田纳西河谷管理局。法院两次都驳回了嘉科工程的申请,最近一次是在这个月。

道格·布莱索并没有亲眼看到这次小小的胜利。2008年,一道六层楼高的土坝垮塌,释放了超过10亿加仑的煤灰泥浆,几天后,布莱索被安排到金斯顿工作。此次泄露威力巨大,将周围的房屋夷为平地。庭审中的证词显示,在长达数年的清理过程中,泥浆逐渐干燥变成了细粉尘,需要不断喷水,但在大风天依旧会遮天蔽日。

布莱索在现场驾驶水车,直到2014年。2018年,他被诊断出肺癌和脑癌,两年后去世,留下了与他结婚38年的妻子约翰尼·布莱索。她说道,他们在14岁开始约会,道格·布莱索是她“人生的全部”。

她说道:“我们每件事都一起完成。我们一起养牛。我们有一座农场。但这一切都不复存在。”

去年,约翰尼·布莱索和珍妮·克拉克收到了一面美国国旗,这面国旗曾经飞过国会大厦上空,向煤灰清理工人致敬。克拉克表示,这是他们承受悲惨遭遇后收到的唯一一次官方认可。

安索尔·克拉克去世之前,在金斯顿发电厂附近树立了一个木头十字架,作为对煤灰清理工人的纪念碑。珍妮·克拉克表示,她打算本周末到十字架前献花,她经常这样做。

她说道:“只要我还能爬上山,就会坚持这样做。我不希望这件事被遗忘。”(财富中文网)

翻译:刘进龙

审校:汪皓

NASHVILLE, Tenn.—In 2013, the first of more than 200 workers who labored to clean up the nation's worst coal ash spill filed a suit against the contractor, blaming Jacobs Engineering for illnesses they believe were caused by exposure to heavy metals and radioactive particles in the ash. Nearly a decade later, not a single case has made it through the court system.

As the cases drag on, dozens who believed their work for the contractor made them sick have died.

They include people like Ansol Clark, who arrived at the Tennessee Valley Authority's Kingston Fossil Plant just hours after the Dec. 22, 2008, spill, and got to work. He labored long hours in the coal ash sludge with few or no days off for months at a time until he became too sick to work in 2013. He died last year from a rare blood cancer that he believed was caused by exposure to the ash.

“Ansol never lived to see any justice,” his wife of almost 50 years, Janie Clark, said. “He never did—on earth.”

Over the years, Jacobs has made repeated attempts to have the suits thrown out. The Tennessee Supreme Court is scheduled to hear oral arguments on Wednesday in Jacob's latest challenge to the workers' lawsuits. The company wants a judge to dismiss most of the plaintiffs for failing to follow a procedure outlined in the Tennessee Silica Claims Priorities Act.

The law requires anyone pursuing claims for exposure to silica or mixed dust to file a doctor's report concluding that the exposure is a “substantial contributing factor” to the patient's illness. For plaintiffs bringing wrongful death claims on behalf of a loved one, they must also show the worker was exposed to the dust for at least five years. Workers with lung cancer are subject to the five-year provision too and additionally must show that their cancer was diagnosed at least 10 years after their first exposure to the dust.

In court filings, Jacobs said the vast majority of plaintiffs either didn't file the doctor reports, filed inadequate reports, or didn't meet the time restrictions. For example, one worker died from lung cancer in 2015, less than seven years after the spill, so should not be allowed to sue, according to Jacobs.

Attorneys for the workers argue the silica law was never meant to apply to cases like theirs. The act specifically refers to silica, which is just one component of coal ash. The components they believe caused the worker injuries include arsenic, lead, cadmium, mercury and radium, but not silica. The law also refers to claims for very specific injuries — silicosis and pulmonary fibrosis — that are not at issue in this case.

In addition, the workers' attorneys say it is simply too late to bring this challenge. The case already went through the first part of a two-part trial in 2018, when a Knoxville, Tennessee, jury found that Jacobs breached its duty of care to the workers. The jurors said Jacobs’ actions were capable of making the workers sick. Whether those actions actually did make them sick, and thus eligible for monetary damages, was left for a subsequent trial or trials.

Jacobs’ attorneys have said the company did its best to manage the cleanup in a way regulators said was safe. It has not been proven that Jacobs — or even coal ash — is to blame for any illnesses, and the EPA classifies coal ash as nonhazardous.

After the 2018 trial, the federal judge in the case ordered mediation, alluding to workers’ urgent need for medical care. Mediation was unsuccessful, but a new trial date has not been set as Jacobs continues to pursue legal challenges. Twice, the company has asked the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to find that it is immune from being sued because it was acting on behalf of the Tennessee Valley Authority, a federal agency. The court has ruled against Jacobs both times, most recently this month.

Doug Bledsoe didn't live to see that small victory. Bledsoe was called to work at Kingston just days after the 2008 collapse of a six-story earthen dam released more than a billion gallons of coal ash sludge. The spill was so massive it knocked nearby homes off their foundations. As the sludge slowly dried over the yearslong course of the cleanup, it turned into a fine dust that had to be constantly watered down but still filled the air, especially on windy days, according to trial testimony.

Bledsoe drove a water truck there until 2014. In 2018, he was diagnosed with lung and brain cancer. He died two years later, leaving behind his wife of 38 years, Johnnie Bledsoe. The two began dating when she was 14 and Doug Bledsoe was her “whole world," she said.

“Everything we done, we done together,” Johnnie Bledsoe said. “We raised cattle together. We had a farm together. All that's stopped.”

Last year Johnnie Bledsoe and Janie Clark received an American flag that had flown over the U.S. Capitol to honor the coal ash cleanup workers. Clark said it is the only official acknowledgement they have received of the suffering they've endured.

Before he died Ansol Clark built a wooden cross that he placed near the Kingston plant as a memorial to the workers. Janie Clark said she plans to go there this weekend to change the flowers, as she does regularly.

“I'll be doing that as long as I can get up the hill,” Clark said. "I do not intend to let this be forgotten.”

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