Laggers
Laggers and Mesothelioma: Asbestos Exposure Risks, Compensation & Legal Rights
Executive Summary
Laggers—the British term for insulation installers and pipe coverers—faced the most extreme asbestos exposure of any documented occupation, with proportionate mortality ratios reaching 109.2 for asbestosis in U.S. surveillance data and standardized mortality ratios reaching 575 for mesothelioma in the Italian shipyard study.[1] The term "lagger" derives from the practice of "lagging" or wrapping pipes and boilers with insulation materials, a task that required direct handling of raw asbestos materials throughout the workday. Dr. Irving Selikoff's landmark research on insulation workers in the 1960s established the definitive link between asbestos exposure and mesothelioma, documenting catastrophic disease rates among this trade.[2] Laggers mixed amosite asbestos powder with water to create insulation paste, cut and fitted asbestos blankets around pipes and boilers, and worked in confined spaces where fiber concentrations reached extreme levels. The International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators estimates that tens of thousands of union members were exposed during the peak asbestos years. According to Danziger & De Llano, laggers typically qualify for claims against the largest number of asbestos bankruptcy trusts because they worked with products from numerous manufacturers.[3]
The exposure conditions for laggers and pipe coverers created the highest documented occupational mortality rates in industrial history. Unlike Construction Workers who encountered asbestos intermittently, or Boilermakers who faced exposure in specific work phases, laggers handled raw asbestos materials continuously throughout their careers. Shipyard laggers at facilities including Norfolk Naval Shipyard, Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard, and Brooklyn Navy Yard faced particularly severe exposure while insulating vessels for the U.S. Navy. Industrial laggers in power plants, refineries, and chemical plants applied and maintained insulation on miles of piping and equipment. The Italian shipyard study documented insulation workers with an SMR of 1,703—the highest of any trade measured—confirming laggers as the most severely affected occupation. Combined trust fund recoveries for laggers frequently exceed $500,000, with some documented cases recovering over $1 million from trusts alone before adding lawsuit settlements.
Key Facts
| Key Facts: Lagger (Industrial Insulator) Asbestos Exposure |
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Understanding the Terminology: Laggers vs. Insulators
The term "lagger" is primarily used in British and Australian workplaces to describe industrial insulation workers, particularly those working in:[4]
- Industrial settings: Refineries, power plants, chemical plants
- Marine settings: Shipyards, naval vessels, merchant ships
In the United States, these same workers are classified as:
- Heat and Frost Insulators (union terminology)
- Pipe Coverers or Pipe Insulators
- Asbestos Workers (historical term)
- Industrial Insulators
The distinction from general building insulators is important: laggers/industrial insulators focused on process equipment, piping systems, and marine applications requiring higher-temperature insulation—and thus higher asbestos content materials.[5]
| "Whether you call them laggers, insulators, or pipe coverers, these workers had the most direct, intensive asbestos exposure of any trade. They mixed raw asbestos with cement, applied it by hand to hot pipes, and removed deteriorated insulation in confined spaces. The PMR of 109.2 for asbestosis—more than 100 times expected—tells the whole story." |
| — Rod De Llano, Founding Partner, Danziger & De Llano |
What Asbestos Exposure Did Laggers Face?
Laggers/industrial insulators had direct, daily contact with asbestos materials throughout their careers.[6]
Pipe and Equipment Insulation Installation:
- Mixing Asbestos Cement: Opening bags of dry asbestos fiber and mixing with cement created massive fiber clouds (100+ f/cc documented)
- Applying Wet Asbestos Mud: Troweling asbestos-cement mixture onto pipes and equipment
- Fitting Pre-Formed Pipe Sections: Cutting and shaping asbestos pipe covering to fit around pipes
- Finishing and Jacketing: Applying canvas and metal jacketing over asbestos insulation
Insulation Removal (Highest Exposure):
Removing deteriorated asbestos insulation generated the most extreme exposures:[7]
- Ripping out aged, friable insulation released massive fiber quantities
- Dry removal without wet methods created 10-100+ f/cc concentrations
- Confined spaces in ships, boilers, and vessels multiplied exposure levels
Shipyard and Marine Work:
Marine laggers worked on naval vessels and merchant ships:[8]
- Insulating steam pipes, boilers, turbines in ship engine rooms
- Working in confined spaces below decks with minimal ventilation
- Exposure compounded by ship-wide asbestos use in fireproofing, gaskets, floor tiles
Which Asbestos Products Did Laggers Encounter?
Laggers worked directly with the highest-asbestos-content materials:[9]
| Product Type | Asbestos Content | Manufacturers |
|---|---|---|
| Pipe Insulation (85% Magnesia) | 15% asbestos (85% magnesia) | Johns Manville, Philip Carey |
| Asbestos-Cement Insulation | 15-50% asbestos mixed with cement | Johns Manville, Carey, multiple |
| Asbestos Block Insulation | 80-90% asbestos | Johns Manville, Owens-Corning |
| Asbestos Blanket Insulation | 50-85% asbestos | Johns Manville, Philip Carey |
| Insulating Cement/Mud | 15-50% asbestos | Johns Manville, various |
| Marine Insulation | 15-90% various types | Johns Manville, naval suppliers |
Where Were Laggers Most Exposed?
Shipyards: Naval and commercial shipyards including Pearl Harbor, Puget Sound, Norfolk, Newport News, and commercial yards on both coasts.[10]
Power Plants: Coal, nuclear, and gas-fired facilities with extensive steam systems requiring constant insulation maintenance.[11]
Refineries: Petrochemical facilities with miles of high-temperature process piping.[12]
Naval Vessels: Ships required complete insulation systems for steam propulsion, creating concentrated exposure in confined engine rooms and machinery spaces.[13]
| ⚠ Italian Shipyard Study Finding: The Genoa shipyard study (1960-2014) documented an SMR of 575 for pleural mesothelioma among insulation workers—nearly six times the expected rate. This represented the highest occupational risk documented in the study, confirming laggers as an extreme-risk occupation. |
What Compensation Can Laggers Receive?
Laggers diagnosed with mesothelioma may be entitled to substantial compensation from multiple sources.[14]
Major Trust Funds:
Insulation workers can file claims with trusts established by their primary product manufacturers:[15]
- Johns-Manville Trust: Largest trust; over $5 billion paid; primary insulation manufacturer
- Owens-Corning Trust: Major insulation products manufacturer
- Philip Carey Corporation Trust: Pipe insulation, asbestos cement products
- Armstrong World Industries Trust: Building and industrial insulation
Key Defendant Manufacturers:
- Johns Manville (largest asbestos insulation company)
- Owens-Corning (Kaylo insulation products)
- Philip Carey Corporation
- Armstrong World Industries
- Multiple industrial insulation contractors
VA Benefits for Veteran Laggers:
Navy and shipyard veteran insulators may qualify for:[16]
- 100% VA disability rating ($3,900+/month)
- Dependency and Indemnity Compensation for survivors
- Aid and Attendance benefits
| "Insulation workers—whether called laggers, pipe coverers, or asbestos workers—have some of the strongest claims because the causal link between their work and disease is irrefutable. The PMR of 109.2 for asbestosis and the extensive medical literature make these cases straightforward to prove." |
| — Paul Danziger, Founding Partner, Danziger & De Llano |
How Can Laggers Document Exposure?
Successful claims require documenting insulation work:[17]
Employment Records:
- Union membership (Heat and Frost Insulators and Allied Workers)
- Contractor employment records
- Shipyard or facility employment history
Military Service Records (if applicable):
- DD-214 documenting rating/MOS
- Duty station assignments
- Ship assignments for naval personnel
Product Documentation:
- Specific insulation products used at worksites
- Contractor records showing product suppliers
- Site-specific documentation of asbestos insulation use
| ✓ Union Records: The International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Allied Workers maintains membership records that can document work history. These records, combined with site-specific evidence, establish exposure at specific facilities.[18] |
Get Help Today
If you or a loved one worked as a lagger, insulator, or pipe coverer and has been diagnosed with mesothelioma, you may be entitled to significant compensation. The attorneys at Danziger & De Llano have decades of experience representing insulation workers exposed to asbestos.
References
- ↑ Asbestos Exposure Lawyers, Danziger & De Llano
- ↑ Asbestos Exposure, Mesothelioma Lawyer Center
- ↑ Mesothelioma Compensation, Danziger & De Llano
- ↑ Insulation Workers and Asbestos, Mesothelioma.net
- ↑ Asbestos Exposure, Mesothelioma Lawyer Center
- ↑ Asbestos Exposure Claims, Danziger & De Llano
- ↑ Occupational Asbestos Exposure, Mesothelioma Lawyer Center
- ↑ Shipyard Workers and Asbestos, Mesothelioma.net
- ↑ Industrial Workers and Asbestos, Mesothelioma.net
- ↑ Navy Shipyard Asbestos Exposure, Danziger & De Llano
- ↑ Power Plant Workers and Asbestos, Mesothelioma.net
- ↑ Oil Refinery Asbestos Exposure, Mesothelioma.net
- ↑ Navy Veterans and Asbestos, Mesothelioma.net
- ↑ Asbestos Lawsuits & Payouts, Danziger & De Llano
- ↑ Mesothelioma Trust Funds, Danziger & De Llano
- ↑ Veterans & Mesothelioma, Danziger & De Llano
- ↑ Keys to Proving Asbestos Exposure, Mesothelioma.net
- ↑ Asbestos Exposure Documentation, Danziger & De Llano