City of South San Francisco header
File #: 23-71    Name:
Type: Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 1/19/2023 In control: City Council
On agenda: 1/25/2023 Final action: 1/25/2023
Title: Report regarding a resolution approving and authorizing the City Manager to execute a legal services agreement with Sher Edling LLP to join a lawsuit filed by the County of San Mateo and other cities in the County against Monsanto to recover costs of remediating PCB contamination. (Sky Woodruff, City Attorney)
Title
Report regarding a resolution approving and authorizing the City Manager to execute a legal services agreement with Sher Edling LLP to join a lawsuit filed by the County of San Mateo and other cities in the County against Monsanto to recover costs of remediating PCB contamination. (Sky Woodruff, City Attorney)

label
RECOMMENDATION
Recommendation
It is recommended that the City Council adopt a resolution approving and authorizing the City Manager to execute a legal services agreement with Sher Edling LLP to join a lawsuit filed by the County of San Mateo and other cities in the County against Monsanto to recover costs of remediating PCB contamination.

Body
BACKGROUND/DISCUSSION
PCBs are chlorinated hydrocarbons that are fire resistant, not readily biodegradable, and are difficult to destroy. Monsanto and its corporate predecessors were the manufacturers of virtually all PCBs in the United States. PCBs were used as cooling and insulating fluids in heavy-duty electrical equipment, including capacitors and transformers. For over 40 years, PCB electrical fluids were required in structures where the risks of fires or explosions were major concerns, including high-rise buildings, schools, hospitals, and industrial operations. Over time, PCBs came to be used in numerous products, including hydraulic fluids, lubricants, paints, and carbonless copy paper. The EPA has concluded that PCBs are probable human carcinogens. In 1979, EPA issued regulations prohibiting the production of PCBs.

Despite the fact that PCBs have not been in wide use for decades, they are ubiquitous in the environment. In particular, they are found in old buildings, sewer systems, and in urban stormwater runoff.

Thirteen cities initiated what became the class action lawsuit City of Long Beach v. Monsanto, in which the plaintiffs allege damages resulting from PCBs on behalf of a class of cities, counties and other governmental entities. The City of South San Francisco was named as one of 2...

Click here for full text