Engineering company settles Flint water lawsuits for $53M but denies any
blame for lead crisis
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[February 22, 2025]
By ED WHITE
DETROIT (AP) — An engineering company said Friday it has agreed to pay
$53 million to settle all remaining lawsuits that alleged some blame for
lead-contaminated water in Flint, Michigan, a decade ago.
The deal by Veolia North America and Flint residents comes on top of
$26.3 million in previous settlements with the company, and $626 million
from the state of Michigan and other parties.
Veolia has denied responsibility for the contamination and repeatedly
noted that it was briefly hired by Flint as a consultant months after
the city began pulling water from the Flint River in 2014. The water was
not treated to reduce corrosion, causing lead to leach from old pipes.
Critics claimed Veolia could have done much more before then-Gov. Rick
Snyder and Flint switched the city's water source back to a regional
supplier in fall 2015. By that time, tests showed elevated lead levels
in children.
“This final settlement is in no way an admission of responsibility, but
the best resolution to avoid decades of costly, unproductive, and
time-consuming litigation, and to bring closure for all parties
involved,” Veolia said.
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The Flint water plant tower is seen, Thursday, Jan. 6, 2022, in
Flint, Mich. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, File)
 The company said the Flint water
crisis was “caused by government officials.” Veolia said it had no
role in the water switch or running the Flint water plant and was
told that the water was meeting standards.
The $53 million settlement will be distributed to approximately
26,000 people represented by law firms, the Michigan attorney
general's office said. As part of the deal, the state will dismiss
its own separate lawsuit against Veolia.
“After years of drawn-out legal battles, this settlement finally
closes a chapter for Flint residents,” Attorney General Dana Nessel
said.
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