From: Christian Science Monitor
Two Arkansas women sue ExxonMobil after its Pegasus pipeline ruptured, spewing oil onto lawns and roads. The $5 million class-action suit charges the pipeline spill has permanently diminished their property value.
MAYFLOWER, Ark.
Two women who live near an ExxonMobil pipeline that ruptured last week and spilled thousands of barrels of oil in central Arkansas filed a federal lawsuit against the company on Friday.
The class-action complaint from Kimla Greene and Kathryn Jane
Roachell Chunn comes a week after ExxonMobil Pipeline Co.'s Pegasus
pipeline ruptured in Mayflower, about 25 miles northwest of Little Rock. Crews are still working to clean up oil that spewed onto lawns and roadways and almost fouled nearby Lake Conway.
The
women are seeking money to make up for "a permanent diminishment in
property value," according to the complaint. Their complaint says the
women are bringing their lawsuit on their own behalf and for other
people who live near the pipeline in Arkansas.
RECOMMENDED:
Earth Day: Five ways we affect the planet
One of the women's lawyers, Phillip Duncan, wouldn't spell out
exactly how much money they're looking for, but their lawsuit says
they're seeking more than $5 million in damages for property owners.
The
lawsuit said the part of the pipeline that ruptured was "in an unsafe,
defective and deficient condition presenting an immediate environmental
harm" on March 29 — the day it ruptured.
"The Pegasus Pipeline
running throughout the state of Arkansas is most likely to be similarly
situated and maintained ..." Greene and Chunn's lawyers wrote in the
complaint.
An Exxon spokesman declined to comment on the lawsuit,
but a spokeswoman has previously said its inspections were up-to-date.
The part of the pipeline that ruptured was inspected in 2010 and again
in February, according to a corrective action order that federal
pipeline safety officials issued Tuesday.
The Pegasus pipeline, which runs from Patoka, Ill., to the Texas Gulf Coast,
was originally built in 1947 and 1948, according to federal pipeline
safety officials. It is currently out of service. For that to change,
ExxonMobil would need written approval from a federal pipeline safety
official, according to the order from the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.
No comments:
Post a Comment