Updated
Updated · MarketWatch · Apr 28
Justice Department and Cleveland-Cliffs settle hazardous waste lawsuit with $12 million cleanup
Updated
Updated · MarketWatch · Apr 28

Justice Department and Cleveland-Cliffs settle hazardous waste lawsuit with $12 million cleanup

11 articles · Updated · MarketWatch · Apr 28
  • The proposed settlement requires Cleveland-Cliffs to perform $12 million in long-term corrective measures at its Middletown, Ohio steel mill and address closed landfills that received hazardous waste.
  • The consent decree, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, mandates corrective actions at production and slag processing areas and is subject to a 30-day public comment period.
  • This agreement resolves a civil lawsuit originally filed against AK Steel, Cleveland-Cliffs' predecessor, and follows earlier cleanup actions involving contaminated streams and site investigations by AK Steel.
Why is Cleveland-Cliffs funding a cleanup while scrapping a major green steel project at the same plant?
Is a $12 million settlement enough to fix decades of hazardous waste pollution in this Ohio community?
As the world moves to green steel, why is this Ohio facility recommitting to coal-fired technology?
Is a multi-million dollar fine simply the cost of doing business for polluting legacy industries?
With lead and arsenic found in local soil, what does this settlement mean for residents' long-term health?