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DuPont settles contamination claim for $27M

The Associated Press//July 14, 2025//

To settle a long-running lawsuit, chemical maker DuPont will pay the village of Hoosick Falls, N.Y., $27 million for contamination of the municipality’s water supply. (Associated Press file)

DuPont settles contamination claim for $27M

The Associated Press//July 14, 2025//

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HOOSICK FALLS, N.Y. — Chemical maker has agreed to a $27 million settlement to resolve a nearly decade-long over the contamination of an upstate village’s water supply.

The deal was announced Wednesday by lawyers representing residents of Hoosick Falls, located northwest of Albany, just as the case was headed to trial in federal court this week.

The settlement brings the total recovered in the suit brought in 2016 to more than $90 million, lawyers for Rochester-based firm Faraci Lange said.

Three other companies — Performance Plastics, International and — settled for a total of more than $65 million in 2021. DuPont was the last remaining defendant.

“We are gratified to have reached what we believe will be the final resolution of this case that will provide significant added benefit to the residents of Hoosick Falls and the town of Hoosick,” Stephen Schwarz said.

A representative for Delaware-based DuPont didn’t immediately respond to an email seeking comment Friday.

The DuPont settlement, which must still be approved by a federal judge, also includes another $6 million in funding for an existing medical monitoring program for exposed residents, according to attorneys.

In their class action suit, Hoosick Falls residents claimed that a local fabric coating facility operated by Saint-Gobain and Honeywell caused local drinking water to become contaminated with perfluorooctanoic acid, or .

DuPont, which made Teflon materials used at the facility, and 3M, which made the PFOA used by DuPont in its products, were added as defendants to the lawsuit in 2018.

PFOA was once widely used in certain industrial processes but is now considered a harmful “forever chemical” because it can persist in the environment for decades without decomposing.

It has been linked to a number of serious illnesses including kidney and testicular and has recently been classified as a carcinogen.


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