State of New York v. Covanta Hempstead Company.,
No. 007549/2013 (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Nassau Cty.).
Case Overview
Status: | Status: Pending |
Related Practices: | Related Practices: Whistleblower |
Representation of a whistleblower who alleges that waste-to-energy plant operator Covanta violated environmental regulations by creating hazardous ash as a by-product of the burning of garbage from multiple Long Island towns. The case has been brought on behalf of New York State, certain local governments on Long Island, and the Long Island Power Authority (LIPA). Over the course of a decade, these local governments paid $890 million to Covanta to take their communities’ garbage in an environmentally safe way. As alleged, Covanta did not, in fact, abide by the necessary protocols to keep the ash that was dumped in the Brookhaven landfill from being hazardous.
Case Updates
Newsday reports on DEC probe showing Covanta violated state environmental law in practices brought to light by KM whistleblower case
Newsday has published an article covering the results of a New York Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) probe, initiated in 2021, concerning the conduct of Covanta, a waste incineration company, at its Brookhaven landfill in Westbury, Long Island between 2007 and 2013. The probe, which was initiated further to a case brought by KM whistleblower client Patrick Fahey and, later, a Newsday investigation of the alleged conduct, found that the company had indeed repeatedly violated environmental law.