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Monsanto hit with $165 million verdict over PCBs in school

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Monsanto

(Reuters) — A U.S. jury has ordered Bayer’s Monsanto to pay $165 million to employees of a school northeast of Seattle who claimed chemicals made by the company called polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs, leaked from light fixtures and got them sick.

The Washington state court jury found the company liable for selling products containing PCBs used in the Sky Valley Education Center in Monroe, Washington, that were not safe and did not include adequate warnings. The award included nearly $50 million in compensatory damages and $115 million in punitive damages.

The verdict in favor of six teachers and a custodian who said exposure to the PCBs gave them cancer, brain injuries and other issues marks the latest trial loss for the company, which is now facing nearly $870 million in verdicts from alleged PCB exposure at the Sky Valley center, said an attorney for the plaintiffs.

The company is appealing those verdicts.

Monsanto said in a statement that it will contest Monday's verdict and that blood, air and other tests show the school employees were not exposed to unsafe levels of PCBs.

The company said Monday it stopped producing PCBs in 1977. It also said the school had been warned repeatedly since the 1990s that its light fixtures needed to be retrofitted but those warnings were ignored.

The lawsuit named Monsanto spinoff Pharmacia as the defendant in the case, though Monsanto is expected to be required to cover the damages due to legal agreements between the companies governing liabilities from historic chemicals production, according to attorneys for the plaintiffs and financial reports.