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8.6. SR 07-20-2015
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8.6. SR 07-20-2015
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7/132015 Minnesota city sues makers ot'flushable' wipes over clogged sewers - SlarTribune.com <br />LOCAL <br />Minnesota city sues makers of 'flushable' <br />wipes over clogged sewers <br />Wyoming, Minn., is taking legal action against six firms over cloths <br />that cause costly clogs. <br />By Jenne Ross (http://w .startribunexom/Jenna-rocs/l0645826/) Star Tribune <br />APRIL 25.2015 — 2:16PM <br />The city of Wyoming, Minn., is suing six makers of wet wipes, arguing that so-called <br />"flushable" wipes are dogging plumbing networks and costing the city big money. <br />The lawsuit, filed Thursday in federal court, might be the fust seeking class-action status <br />on behalf of cities grappling with the disposable cloths that wastewater officials say are <br />Plugging pipes and pumps. <br />"These flushable wipes do not degrade after flushing," the city of Wyoming's suit says. <br />"Rather, the flushable wipes remain intact long enough to pass through private <br />wastewater drain pipes into the municipal sewer line, causing dogs and other issues for <br />municipal and county sewer systems and wastewater treatment plants, resulting in <br />thousands, if not millions, of dollars of damages." <br />But representatives of the industry behind wet wipes argue that people are flushing <br />cloths that never claimed to be flushable, such as cheap baby wipes, meant to be <br />bundled in disposable diapers and thrown in the trash. <br />That industry has "empathy for the challenges the wastewater operators are having with <br />nonflushable materials impacting their systems," said Dave Rousse, president of the <br />Association of Nonwoven Fabrics Industry, a trade group representing manufacturers of <br />wipes and other products. "However, we take great exception to any effort to blame <br />flushable wipes for the problems being caused by nonflushable wipes." <br />Makers of wipes — including baby, facial and cleaning wipes —have faced increased <br />criticism as their industry has grown. In 2014, a New York man sued Kimberly-Clark <br />Corp. and Costco Wholesale Corp. in federal court with a class -action -styled complaint <br />that featured "homeowner horror stories" of "flushable" wipes clogging homes' <br />plumbing. <br />But until now, cities have not brought forward such a suit, said Garrett Blanchfield, a <br />partner at Reinhardt Wendorf & Blanchfield in Minneapolis, representing Wyoming, <br />population 7,800. <br />In its lawsuit, Wyoming is seeking "a declaration that the defendants' flushable wipes do <br />not degrade and are not sewer safe," an order that the companies stop advertising them <br />as such, and the establishment of a fund to compensate cities for the costs of cleaning <br />and removing wipes from their sewer systems. <br />'They want to make sure that people know that these things really aren't flushable," <br />Blanchfield said. <br />A spokesman for Kimberly-Clark, one of the companies named in Wyoming's suit, <br />declined to comment on the litigation. But the company does "extensive testing" on the <br />wipes it calls "flushable," said Bob Brand, director of external communications for the <br />Texas-based company. They include Kleenex Cottonelle FreshCare, which it labels with <br />the words "SafeFlush Technology," beside an image of a wipe going down a toilet. <br />"Our wipes do break down," Brand said. <br />Across Minnesota and the country, cities have been cautioning residents not to flush <br />wipes, which have forced them to boost their monitoring and buy expensive grinders. <br />Wadena, Minn., posted its warning on Facebook: A wipe labeled flushable "only means <br />they will fit down the piping within your home." <br />(http://stmedia.startribune.conV mages/l flush42515.jpg <br />The lawsuit by the city of Wyoming, Minn., <br />includes this photo of flushable wipes that <br />remain intact at a wastewater treatment... <br />MIPy www.startrilxne.com/minresota-city-sues-makers-of-flushable-wipes-over-cloggec -sewersl3oi228331/ 1/2 <br />
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