The
inclusion of Yeager
Airport as a defendant is
the federal class action lawsuit in connection with this year’s chemical spill
and water emergency could prove costly for the state’s busiest airport.
The
lawsuit now alleges Yeager didn’t do a good job monitoring its runway extension
project that began above the Freedom site in Charleston in 2004 and runoff from the site
contributed to deterioration of Freedom’s chemical tanks that eventually lead
to the Jan. 9 incident.
Dozens
of cases have been filed and now combined in federal court against Freedom
Industries after the leak of the chemical crude MCHM into the Elk
River just above West Virginia American Water Company’s Kanawha
Valley Plant. The spill created a water emergency in parts of nine West Virginia counties
impacting 300,000 residents. The plaintiffs have named Freedom, the water
company and now Yeager
Airport and its
contractor.
The
state Division of Forestry did deal with logging companies removing trees as
part of the runway project over concern about runoff. The class action suit
alleges Yeager did a pre-blast study and knew Freedom’s tanks could be impacted
by the project.
Yeager
Airport Manager Rick Atkinson released a statement Tuesday saying Freedom
Industries never once filed a complaint with Yeager about the runway extension
project happening above it. He also says Yeager’s work was approved by the
state DEP and a DEP official overseeing the Freedom site saw no issues coming
from Yeager.