Railroad says Superfund town's health clinic submitted false medical claims
FILE - The town of Libby Mont., is shown Feb. 17, 2010. A major U.S. railroad found partially liable for asbestos contamination that’s killed hundreds of people in a Montana town is trying to convince a federal jury a local clinic submitted hundreds of asbestos claims for people who weren’t sick. MISSOULA, Mont. — — A major U.S.
BNSF Railway — controlled by billionaire Warren Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway conglomerate — has alleged during a trial taking place in Missoula that more than half the certifications were based on false medical submissions from CARD. The railway shipped asbestos-tainted vermiculite through Libby.CARD and its attorneys deny the claims, arguing the clinic made its diagnoses in line with requirements of the 2009 Affordable Care Act, which included special provisions for the Libby victims.
However, Judge Dana Christensen barred Baucus's statements from being introduced, saying it was the court's role to decide whether the law had been followed. At least 400 people have been killed by asbestos-related disease in the Libby area, according to health officials. Because of the long latency period for those diseases, symptoms can take decades to develop.. It polluted the Libby area over decades, including at a BNSF railway yard in the heart of the town of about 3,000 people.
A 2020 Montana Supreme Court ruling said BNSF should be held liable for its role in the contamination, but didn't specify how.
Brasil Últimas Notícias, Brasil Manchetes
Similar News:Você também pode ler notícias semelhantes a esta que coletamos de outras fontes de notícias.
Construction begins on railroad barrier wall at San Clemente landslidePassenger train service remains suspended between San Diego and Orange counties as stabilization project proceeds
Consulte Mais informação »
Railroad crossing closure Tuesday in Green Cove Springs for CSX maintenanceGreen Cove Springs PD wants to remind residents that the railroad crossing at Center Street will be closed Tuesday.
Consulte Mais informação »
Letter: Assertion about incompatible rails in Ogden’s railroad past is curiousOK, I’m confused about a recent article in The Tribune, “Ogden’s 25th Street: Notorious past colors a walkable present.” In that article, Weber State University’s Sarah Langston was quoted as saying that, “the [Ogden] station was, for decades, the jumping-off point for wayward travelers … [because] the station is where the Union Pacific’s trains from the east and the Central Pacific’s trains from the west met. The two railroads didn’t use the same gauge for their rails, so people had to transfer from one to the other for the journey cross-country.”
Consulte Mais informação »
Work begins to clean up train derailment in Montana's Yellowstone RiverWork is underway to clean up rail cars carrying hazardous materials that fell into the Yellowstone River in southern Montana after a bridge collapsed over the weekend
Consulte Mais informação »
Work begins to clean up train derailment in Montana's Yellowstone RiverWork is underway to clean up rail cars carrying hazardous materials that fell into the Yellowstone River in southern Montana after a bridge collapsed over the weekend
Consulte Mais informação »
Work begins to clean up train derailment in Montana's Yellowstone RiverWork is underway to clean up rail cars carrying hazardous materials that fell into the Yellowstone River in southern Montana after a bridge collapsed over the weekend, officials said Monday.
Consulte Mais informação »