The Closing Of Military Bases Exposed Toxic Burn Pits And Forever Chemicals in Firefighting Foam

Water Contamination Lawsuit News

Toxic firefighting foam was being used once per month to extinguish burn pit fires consisting of solvents, paints, metals, and other material

Wednesday, March 23, 2022 - Lawsuits in the coming months and years are sure to focus on the role of the US government in the emerging Camp Lejeune water contamination scandal. The military is accused of failing to protect soldiers and their families from deadly forever PFAS chemicals found in firefighting foam. Military families, notorious for raising their new families on or near the military bases where they are stationed, were unaware that the water they were drinking, bathing, and playing in contained carcinogenic chemicals thousands of times the acceptable water contamination limits. It took over 30 years for the military to begin to accept responsibility for the PFAS cancer and deaths of military family members including the impairment of the physical and neurological development of their unborn, infants, and young children. Camp Lejeune, North Carolina is not the only military base to acknowledged PFAS firefighting foam contamination. The Pentagon has acknowledged more than 400 incidences of contamination which could sicken and kill the local population.

According to the New York Post, a military base in California noted for its beautiful year-round weather and panoramic views of the pristine Pacific Ocean coast, had been permanently and irreparably contaminated with PFAS forever chemicals from the firefighting foam that was used to extinguish burn pits. According to The Post " In 1990, four years before it began the process of closing as an active military training base, Fort Ord was added to the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) list of the most polluted places in the nation. Included in that pollution were dozens of chemicals, some now known to cause cancer, found in the base's drinking water and soil." The Pentagon no longer denies that the training operations of hundreds of military bases all over the US caused toxic forever chemicals to contaminate local water supplies. Cancer clusters of hundreds of military veterans and their families are turning up years after they had moved away from the base. The delay in cancer diagnosis is due to the disease's latency period. Blood cancers like those that doomed soldiers at For Ord and other places take 5-15 years to cause symptoms leading to a cancer diagnosis. "Veterans, in general, have higher blood cancer rates than the general population, according to VA cancer data. And in the region that includes Fort Ord, veterans have a 35 percent higher rate of multiple myeloma diagnosis than the general U.S. population," The Post discovered. The Post article explains to readers that higher mortality rates from "many cancers, including multiple myeloma and leukemia" among military veterans and their family members. "Men developed breast cancer, and pregnant women tended to have children with higher rates of birth defects and low birth weight." Military veterans and their family members who have developed cancer after serving on any of the hundreds of bases around the nation are urged to speak with a PFAS water attorney to assess if they can sue the Federal government and the manufacturers of firefighting foam for lump-sum monetary compensation.

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