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WEST VIRGINIA RECORD

Saturday, November 2, 2024

Judge grants class status again in case involving 2015 WVAWC leak

State Court
Wvawc

CHARLESTON – A Kanawha Circuit judge has granted class certification again in a lawsuit related to a 2015 West Virginia-American Water Company leak in Dunbar.

On July 5, Circuit Judge Carrie Webster issued an order granting the class certification to the case originally filed in 2017. Webster previously granted class status in the case, but that decision was taken to the state Supreme Court to make sure it followed the guidelines for class certification set by a 2020 state Supreme Court ruling that slightly changed how class certifications are made.

In her latest 32-page order, Webster says the class will be defined as all WVAWC customers, residents and businesses located within the boundaries of the service area served by the 36-inch water main that broke, but excluding any WVAWC employees or its affiliates, judicial officers and immediate family members and associated court staff assigned to the case, class counsel and attorneys who have made an appearance for the defendants in the case and those who exclude themselves from the class via opt outs.


diTrapano

Richard Jeffries and Colours Hair Salon are the class representatives in the case. Stuart Calwell and the firm of Calwell Luce diTrapano as well as Van Bunch and the firm of Bonnett Fairbourn Friedman & Ballist are lead counsel for the case.

“Judge Webster will hold a status conference soon and determine when NOTICE will go out to the class members,” plaintiff attorney L. Dante diTrapano told The West Virginia Record. He declined further comment on the case.

But, he previously told The Record he believes the case is stronger than the other highly publicized Kanawha County case against WVAWC because it is not complicated by the competing fault of Freedom Industries and Eastman Chemical.

This case is similar to the Freedom Industries case related to the 2014 Kanawha Valley water crisis except it’s a smaller class and there are no other defendants involved except WVAWC.

According to court filings, initial repair attempts were unsuccessful, and repair efforts created other issues. Regular service was not restored until June 27, 2015. Then, another issue on June 29 created more problems for thousands of the same customers. Regular service was not restored again until July 1.

This interruption of service occurred in what the water company calls the western Kanawha Valley District and affected a total of about 120,000 residents and businesses in Kanawha and Putnam counties.

“The western portion of the Kanawha Valley District is entirely dependent on a single large-diameter 36-inch pre-stressed concrete cylinder pipe (PCCP) which is known to be unreliable and prone to breaks,” the Feb. 4 memorandum states. “Indeed, dating back as far as 1989, this main broke repeatedly, approximately every 3-4 years.”

These incidents occurred shortly after the first settlement proposal was issued related to the 2014 water crisis that affected more than 300,000 WVAWC customers in nine counties. The settlement was for more than $150 million.

The original complaint says the water company had a contract with the customers who lost tap water pressure and service. It says the company also failed to maintain facilities to provide adequate and continuous service, and it says the company violated statutory obligations and was negligent.

The plaintiffs seek compensatory damages for the loss of use of residential tap water, annoyance, inconvenience, incidental expenses, lost profits and other relief. They also seek punitive damages based on what they call the company’s willful, reckless and wanton behavior in refusing to address known issues.

According to court documents, the plaintiffs say they suffered following a “preventable and foreseeable” loss of water service by a leak in Dunbar on June 23, 2015.

Previously, the water company had said it didn’t think a class certification was proper in the case.

“We continue to believe that class action is not an appropriate procedure to deal with any portion of the claims related to the 2015 water transmission main break in Dunbar,” the company previously told The Record. “Regardless of the ultimate resolution of the class action questions, West Virginia American Water will continue to vigorously defend its actions in response to these allegations.”

According to court filings, initial repair attempts were unsuccessful, and repair efforts created other issues. Regular service was not restored until June 27, 2015. Then, another issue on June 29 created more problems for thousands of the same customers. Regular service was not restored again until July 1.

This interruption of service occurred in what the water company calls the western Kanawha Valley District and affected a total of about 120,000 residents and businesses in Kanawha and Putnam counties.

“The western portion of the Kanawha Valley District is entirely dependent on a single large-diameter 36-inch pre-stressed concrete cylinder pipe (PCCP) which is known to be unreliable and prone to breaks,” the Feb. 4 memorandum states. “Indeed, dating back as far as 1989, this main broke repeatedly, approximately every 3-4 years.”

These incidents occurred shortly after the first settlement proposal was issued related to the 2014 water crisis that affected more than 300,000 WVAWC customers in nine counties. The settlement was for more than $150 million.

The original complaint says the water company had a contract with the customers who lost tap water pressure and service. It says the company also failed to maintain facilities to provide adequate and continuous service, and it says the company violated statutory obligations and was negligent.

The plaintiffs seek compensatory damages for the loss of use of residential tap water, annoyance, inconvenience, incidental expenses, lost profits and other relief. They also seek punitive damages based on what they call the company’s willful, reckless and wanton behavior in refusing to address known issues.

The plaintiffs are being represented by diTrapano, Calwell and Alex McLaughlin of Calwell Luce diTrapano in Charleston; Bunch of Bonnett Fairbourn Friedman & Balint in Phoenix, Arizona; and Kevin Thompson and David Barney of Thompson Barney in Charleston.

The attorneys listed as representing WVAWC are Thomas J. Hurney Jr., Alexandra Kitts and Samantha D’Anna of Jackson Kelly in Charleston as well as Kent Mayo of Baker Bott in Washington, D.C.

Kanawha Circuit Court case number 17-C-765

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