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New Orleans residents whose homes were on top of a toxic landfill score $75 million
Posted on 3/18/22 at 7:47 am
Posted on 3/18/22 at 7:47 am
quote:
$75 million for New Orleans residents whose homes were built on landfill
WWL
A group of New Orleans residents whose homes were built on a toxic landfill decades ago have won a $75.3 million court judgement against the city, its housing authority and the local school board.
State district Judge Nicole Sheppard's ruling said 5,000 residents are entitled to that total amount for emotional distress and property damage involving the former Agriculture Street landfill, according to The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate.
Sheppard's Monday ruling says the housing authority and the parish school board were liable for building two residential communities — Gordon Plaza and Press Park — and Moton Elementary School atop the landfill, which was later named a federal Superfund site.
Homes in the area were built in the 1970s and 1980s and marketed to Black, low- and middle-income residents who weren't told that the site was a one-time landfill. As awareness grew and environmentalists raised concerns, the area was named a federal Superfund cleanup site in 1994. Amid reports that the soil was contaminated with lead and carcinogens, including arsenic, residents began a decades-long effort to be relocated at government expense.
“This is a big deal for the residents of Agriculture Street,” said Suzette Bagneris, a lead attorney representing residents.
Or did they?
quote:
Another concern for residents is the city's reputation for failing to pay legal judgments in a variety of types of lawsuits, including wrongful deaths and and disputes over city contracts. As of late November, the city had more than 560 outstanding judgments and settlements in state and federal courts with some dating back 25 years, according to a Times-Picayune ' New Orleans Advocate analysis of city law department records.
This post was edited on 3/18/22 at 7:48 am
Posted on 3/18/22 at 7:47 am to goofball
Is this like Tangi parish winning a lawsuit against the state and them never paying it ?
You edited
You edited
This post was edited on 3/18/22 at 7:50 am
Posted on 3/18/22 at 7:50 am to goofball
Comes out to about $15k per resident. I don't know housing values, but that is not exactly "we were conned into buying a house on a landfill" kind of money to me.
Posted on 3/18/22 at 7:53 am to goofball
o/u- it will be 2050 before they get their money
Posted on 3/18/22 at 7:53 am to Boss13
quote:
Comes out to about $15k per resident. I don't know housing values, but that is not exactly "we were conned into buying a house on a landfill" kind of money to me.
No it's not.
And how do you sell your property?
3bedroom/2bathroom ranch house with convenient access to I-10, and only 150' from a Superfund site....
Posted on 3/18/22 at 7:53 am to goofball
The houses were in NOLA.
Is that a toxic landfill on a toxic landfill?
Is that a toxic landfill on a toxic landfill?
Posted on 3/18/22 at 7:54 am to Boss13
quote:
Comes out to about $15k per resident
Wonder what the lawyers score was...?
Posted on 3/18/22 at 7:56 am to Boss13
quote:
Comes out to about $15k per resident.
The lawyers are taking half that
Try like 5-7k per resident. They ain’t getting shite
Posted on 3/18/22 at 7:56 am to Hangover Haven
quote:
Wonder what the lawyers score was...? ?
Good point, probably minimum 30% of that? That's enough money to piss me off.
Posted on 3/18/22 at 7:56 am to Boss13
quote:
Comes out to about $15k per resident. I don't know housing values, but that is not exactly "we were conned into buying a house on a landfill" kind of money to me.
Yeah, and most likely these were low income housing marketed at a time when these kinds of things were not publicized.
Posted on 3/18/22 at 8:02 am to goofball
They'll never see a penny of that money.
Posted on 3/18/22 at 8:05 am to dewster
Since it's a superfund site, does that mean it will get federal dollars to clean up?
Does that mean the land will get put back on the market later after that? How does it get cleaned up?
Does that mean the land will get put back on the market later after that? How does it get cleaned up?
Posted on 3/18/22 at 8:06 am to Boss13
quote:
Bagneris said the $75 million will be apportioned based on factors including the number of years each resident lived in the affected places and the locations of their homes. An example cited by the newspaper: Someone who lived in Gordon Plaza for 20 or more years could receive $25,000 and 20% of the value of their home. But residents have questioned whether their homes have any value, given the Superfund designation.
Posted on 3/18/22 at 8:08 am to goofball
Lol good luck collecting that
Posted on 3/18/22 at 8:12 am to Boss13
quote:The money won't be distributed equally. Not all of the 5,000 people currently live there.
Comes out to about $15k per resident.
The money will probably be distributed based upon a matrix: (1) the value of the property the person currently own in the designated area, and (2) the number of years the person lived in the designated area.
Some of those people moved out years ago. For many of those homes in that area, only the foundation remains.
The people who no longer live there will receive compensation based upon the number of years they lived there.
Posted on 3/18/22 at 8:43 am to goofball
They’ll get out on a list and offered 25% of that in 15 years. City if NO doesn’t pay judgments.
This post was edited on 3/18/22 at 8:44 am
Posted on 3/18/22 at 8:46 am to goofball
I’ve seen better toxic landfills in the quad
Posted on 3/18/22 at 8:47 am to goofball
Everybody knows this is why you have to get one of the lawyers on the city council as co-counsel. Have people not learned from judgments against the state? Got to have some legislators co-counseled in with skin in the game.
Posted on 3/18/22 at 9:15 am to goofball
So New Orleans is growing thousands of toxic avengers to save the city? Oh what will the OT be able to post about????
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