A number of developments have taken place in the high-profile Ohio CRT case over the past month. | mojo cp/Shutterstock[/caption]
An Iowa solid waste commission agreed to pay nearly $240,000 to help fund removal of CRT materials abandoned in Ohio, and two e-scrap operators agreed to pay lower amounts. Meanwhile, settlement negotiations continue with one of the largest suppliers.
In recent weeks, a number of events have occurred in the federal lawsuit, which pits owners of Columbus, Ohio warehouses against dozens of companies that shipped CRT materials to the sites when they were run by failed CRT outlet Closed Loop Refining and Recovery.
The landlords, Garrison Southfield Park and Olymbec USA, first sued over 40 suppliers in March 2019, claiming the companies are responsible to help pay for cleanup at the sites. An estimated 159 million pounds are in storage in the Columbus facilities. The case is in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio.
The following is an update of significant changes in the case over the past month:
[caption id="attachment_12934" align="aligncenter" width="900"]
A number of developments have taken place in the high-profile Ohio CRT case over the past month. | mojo cp/Shutterstock[/caption]
An Iowa solid waste commission agreed to pay nearly $240,000 to help fund removal of CRT materials abandoned in Ohio, and two e-scrap operators agreed to pay lower amounts. Meanwhile, settlement negotiations continue with one of the largest suppliers.
In recent weeks, a number of events have occurred in the federal lawsuit, which pits owners of Columbus, Ohio warehouses against dozens of companies that shipped CRT materials to the sites when they were run by failed CRT outlet Closed Loop Refining and Recovery.
The landlords, Garrison Southfield Park and Olymbec USA, first sued over 40 suppliers in March 2019, claiming the companies are responsible to help pay for cleanup at the sites. An estimated 159 million pounds are in storage in the Columbus facilities. The case is in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio.
The following is an update of significant changes in the case over the past month:
A number of developments have taken place in the high-profile Ohio CRT case over the past month. | mojo cp/Shutterstock[/caption]
An Iowa solid waste commission agreed to pay nearly $240,000 to help fund removal of CRT materials abandoned in Ohio, and two e-scrap operators agreed to pay lower amounts. Meanwhile, settlement negotiations continue with one of the largest suppliers.
In recent weeks, a number of events have occurred in the federal lawsuit, which pits owners of Columbus, Ohio warehouses against dozens of companies that shipped CRT materials to the sites when they were run by failed CRT outlet Closed Loop Refining and Recovery.
The landlords, Garrison Southfield Park and Olymbec USA, first sued over 40 suppliers in March 2019, claiming the companies are responsible to help pay for cleanup at the sites. An estimated 159 million pounds are in storage in the Columbus facilities. The case is in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio.
The following is an update of significant changes in the case over the past month:
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