government total immunity from lawsuits that claim many Gulf Coast
hurricane victims were exposed to potentially dangerous fumes while
living in FEMA trailers.
Friday's ruling by U.S. District Judge Kurt Engelhardt says
there is evidence that the Federal Emergency Management Agency
delayed its response to concerns about formaldehyde levels in its
trailers due to liability concerns.
Lawyers for victims of hurricanes Katrina and Rita have accused
FEMA of negligence for sheltering people in trailers with elevated
levels of formaldehyde. The preservative can cause breathing
problems and is classified as a carcinogen.
Roughly 800 storm victims are named as plaintiffs in the cases
before Engelhardt, but plaintiffs attorneys want the judge to
certify a class action on behalf of thousands of people who lived
in FEMA trailers after the 2005 hurricanes.
Govt. Denied Immunity From FEMA Trailer Lawsuits









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Mustuknow, you’re right. FEMA made a lot of mistakes after Katrina. And you’re right in that they had never faced anything like its devestation. Neither had the people living here on the Mississippi coast. I’m a widow, raising my daughter alone. I’m on a fixed income…no its not welfare! I can speak for most of the people in Bay Saint Louis and Waveland, MS when I say we are very grateful for all the assistance that we received. What we are not grateful for is the health concerns that many of us face on a day to day basis from not having a choice for housing other than those FEMA trailers. My trailer was tested and found to have a higher than normal level of Formaldehyde level. It has brought about some pretty severe reactions to my daughters health. We have been out of the trailer for 6 months now, and her health has not improved. She still suffers almost on a daily basis with the same problems…problems she did not have before living in a FEMA trailer.