Wal-Mart pleads guilty for Calif. hazardous waste!!!!
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Wal-Mart Stores Inc. will pay $81 million after pleading
guilty to criminal charges the company dumped hazardous waste across California, a company spokeswoman
said Tuesday.
Wal-Mart entered the plea in San Francisco federal court to
misdemeanor counts of negligently dumping pollutants from its stores into
sanitation drains across the state, spokeswoman Brooke Buchanan said.
As part of the plea, the company will pay the
substantial fine that also will cover charges in Missouri.
The plea agreements announced Tuesday end a
nearly decade-old investigation involving more than 20 prosecutors and 32
environmental groups.In 2010, the company agreed to pay $27.6 million
to settle similar allegations made by California authorities that led to
the overhaul of its hazardous waste compliance program nationwide. The state
investigation began eight years ago when a San Diego County health department
employee saw a worker pouring bleach down a drain.
In another instance, officials said a Solano County boy was found playing in
a mound of fertilizer near a Wal-Mart garden section. The yellow-tinted powder
contained ammonium sulfate, a chemical compound that causes irritation to
people's skin, eyes and respiratory tract.
"We have fixed the problem," Buchanan
said. "We are obviously happy that this is the final resolution."Court documents show the illegal dumping
occurred in 16 California counties between 2003
and 2005. Federal prosecutors said the company didn't train its employees on
how to handle and dispose hazardous materials at its stores.
The result, prosecutors say, was that waste was
tossed into local trash bins or poured into the local sewer systems. The waste
also was improperly taken to one of several product return centers throughout
the United Sates without proper safety documentation.Buchanan said employees are better trained on
how clean up, transport and dispose of dangerous products such as fertilizer
that are spilled in the store or have their packages damaged.For instance, workers are armed with scanners
that tell them whether a damaged package is considered to contain a hazardous
material and are trained on how to handle it, she said.
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