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! colspan="2" style="background:#1a5276; color:white; padding:12px; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center;" | Raymark Industries Superfund Site
! colspan="2" style="background:#1a5276; color:white; padding:12px; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center;" | Raymark Industries Superfund Site
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| colspan="2" style="padding:10px; text-align:center; font-style:italic; font-weight:bold;" | [[Stratford, Connecticut]]
| colspan="2" style="padding:10px; text-align:center; font-style:italic; font-weight:bold;" | Stratford, Connecticut
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| style="padding:10px; font-weight:bold; width:45%; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | Official Site Name
| style="padding:10px; font-weight:bold; width:45%; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | Official Site Name
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| style="padding:10px;" | Ongoing cleanup (2026)
| style="padding:10px;" | Ongoing cleanup (2026)
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| colspan="2" style="background:#1a5276; padding:10px; text-align:center;" | [https://dandell.com/contact-us/ <span style="color:white; font-weight:bold;">Free Case Review </span>]
| colspan="2" style="background:#1a5276; padding:10px; text-align:center;" | [https://dandell.com/contact-us/ <span style="color:white; font-weight:bold;">Free Case Review</span>]
|}
|}


== Executive Summary ==
One of Connecticut's worst environmental contamination disasters began not from an accident or negligence lawsuit, but from a '''deliberate business practice''': a brake lining manufacturer gave asbestos-contaminated waste away as free fill material.<ref name="epa-five-year" /> Between '''1919 and 1989''', Raymark Industries (formerly Raybestos-Manhattan) operated a '''34-acre manufacturing facility''' in Stratford, Connecticut, producing automotive brake linings and friction products containing asbestos.<ref name="stratfordct" /> Instead of properly disposing of its dried asbestos waste, the company distributed it free to residents, contractors, landscapers, and municipal facilities across the region. Dozens of homeowners used this "free fill" to level yards, create driveways, and landscape properties. A local ballfield was constructed on top of it. Children played in contaminated soil for decades before health officials understood the danger.<ref name="mnet-raymark" /> The result is a devastating pattern of disease: Stratford residents have among the '''highest mesothelioma rates''' ever documented in the United States, with a unique epidemiological signature -- '''abnormally high rates of mesothelioma in people under age 25''', victims whose exposure occurred decades earlier when they played in contaminated playgrounds and yards as children.<ref name="pmid7228320" /> The EPA designated the site a '''Superfund location in 1995''', but remediation has taken decades. As of February 2026, the agency has removed '''100,000 cubic yards''' of contaminated soil, cleaned 28 properties, and allocated '''$113 million''' in cleanup funding, with excavation continuing at the site's consolidation area.<ref name="epa-progress" />


One of Connecticut's worst environmental contamination disasters began not from an accident or negligence lawsuit, but from a deliberate business practice: a brake lining manufacturer gave asbestos-contaminated waste away as free fill material. Between 1919 and 1989, Raymark Industries (formerly [[Raybestos]]-Manhattan) operated a 34-acre manufacturing facility in Stratford, Connecticut, producing automotive brake linings and friction products containing asbestos. Instead of properly disposing of its dried asbestos waste, the company distributed it free to residents, contractors, landscapers, and municipal facilities across the region. Dozens of homeowners used this "free fill" to level yards, create driveways, and landscape properties. A local ballfield was constructed on top of it. Children played in contaminated soil for decades before health officials understood the danger. The result is a devastating pattern of disease: Stratford residents have among the highest [[Mesothelioma|mesothelioma]] rates ever documented in the United States, with a unique epidemiological signature—abnormally high rates of mesothelioma in people under age 25, victims whose exposure occurred decades earlier when they played in contaminated playgrounds and yards as children. The EPA designated the site a Superfund location in 1995, but remediation has taken decades. As of February 2026, the agency has removed 100,000 cubic yards of contaminated soil, cleaned 28 properties, and allocated $113 million in cleanup funding, with excavation continuing at the site's consolidation area.
== At a Glance ==
 
* '''70 years of factory operations''' — Raymark manufactured asbestos brake linings at the 34-acre Stratford facility continuously from 1919 to 1989<ref name="dandell" />
* '''46+ residential properties contaminated''' — homeowners received free asbestos waste as fill material for lawns, driveways, and landscaping without any hazard warnings<ref name="epa-five-year" />
* '''270,000 cubic yards of contaminated fill''' — the volume deposited at Short Beach Park, where a children's ballfield was built in 1981 directly on asbestos waste<ref name="stratfordct" />
* '''Under-25 mesothelioma cases documented''' — Connecticut epidemiological records show abnormally high mesothelioma rates in residents under age 25 from childhood playground exposure<ref name="pmid7228320" />
* '''$113 million in federal cleanup funding''' — Bipartisan Infrastructure Law allocation dedicated to accelerating Stratford site remediation since 2022<ref name="epa-progress" />
* '''100,000+ cubic yards of soil removed''' — EPA and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have excavated contaminated material from residential and park areas to date<ref name="epa-progress" />
* '''28 properties fully remediated''' — EPA-sponsored cleanup has completed work on 28 residential and commercial properties as of January 2025<ref name="epa-five-year" />
* '''2,100+ homes assessed for risk''' — EPA has conducted soil sampling and contamination testing at more than 2,100 residential properties across Stratford<ref name="stratfordct" />
* '''9 distinct cleanup zones''' — the EPA divided the sprawling contamination footprint into nine operable units requiring separate remediation strategies<ref name="epa-five-year" />
* '''582 mesothelioma deaths in Connecticut''' — statewide total from 1999 to 2015, with Stratford and Bridgeport identified as regional exposure hotspots<ref name="mattorney" />


== Key Facts ==
== Key Facts ==
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{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%; margin:1em 0; border-collapse:collapse;"
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! style="background:#1a5276; color:white; padding:12px; text-align:left;" | Key Facts: Stratford Connecticut Contamination
! style="background:#1a5276; color:white; padding:10px; text-align:left; width:40%;" | Fact
! style="background:#1a5276; color:white; padding:10px; text-align:left;" | Detail
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | '''Manufacturer'''
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | Raymark Industries (formerly Raybestos-Manhattan) operated from 1919 to 1989 producing asbestos brake linings<ref name="mlc" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | '''Waste Disposal Method'''
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | Dried, powdered asbestos waste distributed free as fill material for lawns, driveways, and landscaping<ref name="epa-five-year" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | '''Residential Contamination'''
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | 46+ residential properties and 25+ commercial/municipal properties received contaminated fill<ref name="stratfordct" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | '''Short Beach Park'''
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | Approximately 270,000 cubic yards of contaminated fill deposited; ballfield built on contaminated soil in 1981<ref name="mnet-raymark" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | '''Health Impact'''
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | Abnormally high mesothelioma rates in residents under age 25 from childhood playground and yard exposure<ref name="pmid7228320" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | '''Superfund Listing'''
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | Added to National Priorities List in 1995; EPA cleanup began that year<ref name="epa-five-year" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | '''Operable Units'''
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | 9 distinct cleanup zones addressing different contamination sources and pathways<ref name="stratfordct" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | '''Properties Cleaned'''
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | 28 residential and commercial properties remediated as of January 2025<ref name="epa-progress" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | '''Soil Removed'''
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | 100,000+ cubic yards of asbestos-contaminated soil excavated and properly disposed<ref name="epa-progress" />
|-
|-
| style="padding:15px; background:#f8f9fa;" |
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | '''Federal Funding'''
* '''Brake Lining Manufacturer:''' Raymark Industries (formerly Raybestos-Manhattan) operated the facility from 1919 to 1989, producing asbestos brake linings and friction products
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | $113 million from Bipartisan Infrastructure Law allocated for site remediation since 2022<ref name="epa-progress" />
* '''Asbestos Waste Disposal Method:''' Dried, powdered asbestos waste was distributed free to residents for use as fill material for lawns, driveways, and landscaping
|-
* '''Contaminated Properties:''' 46+ residential properties and 25+ commercial/municipal properties received asbestos-contaminated fill material
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | '''Current Status'''
* '''Under-25 Mesothelioma Anomaly:''' Connecticut epidemiological studies document abnormally high mesothelioma rates in residents under age 25—cases resulting from childhood playground and yard exposure decades earlier
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #1a5276;" | Active excavation at Operable Unit 5 (Consolidation Area) ongoing as of December 2025<ref name="epa-progress" />
* '''Short Beach Park Contamination:''' A local recreational park received approximately 270,000 cubic yards of asbestos-contaminated fill, including a ballfield constructed in 1981 on the contaminated site
|-
* '''EPA Superfund Listing:''' Added to National Priorities List in 1995; EPA cleanup began that year
| style="padding:10px;" | '''Five-Year Review'''
* '''9 Operable Units:''' The site is divided into 9 distinct cleanup zones addressing different contamination sources and pathways
| style="padding:10px;" | EPA completed 2025 review in November 2025, confirming remedies continue to protect human health<ref name="epa-five-year" />
* '''28 Properties Cleaned:''' As of January 2025, EPA-sponsored remediation has cleaned 28 properties; additional residential and commercial properties remain
* '''100,000+ Cubic Yards Removed:''' EPA and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have excavated and properly disposed of more than 100,000 cubic yards of asbestos-contaminated soil
* '''$113 Million Cleanup Funding:''' Bipartisan Infrastructure Law allocated $113 million for Stratford site remediation (2022+)
* '''Active Excavation:''' As of December 2025, EPA continues active excavation work at Operable Unit 5 (Consolidation Area)
* '''Five-Year Review Completion:''' EPA completed its 2025 Five-Year Review in November 2025, confirming remedies continue to protect human health and environment
|}
|}


== What Caused the Stratford Contamination? ==
== What Caused the Stratford Contamination? ==


The Raymark Industries contamination began with a business decision that seemed cost-effective at the time but proved catastrophic for public health. Between 1919 and 1989, Raymark Industries manufactured automotive brake linings at its Stratford facility. The production process generated significant quantities of asbestos waste—a powdery residue from the manufacturing of asbestos-containing friction materials.
The Raymark Industries contamination began with a business decision that seemed cost-effective at the time but proved catastrophic for public health.<ref name="mnet-raymark" /> Between 1919 and 1989, Raymark Industries manufactured automotive brake linings at its Stratford facility. The production process generated significant quantities of asbestos waste -- a powdery residue from the manufacturing of asbestos-containing friction materials.<ref name="stratfordct" />


Rather than dispose of this waste through licensed hazardous waste contractors (which would have cost money), the company implemented a "free fill" program. The dried, powdered asbestos waste was offered at no cost to contractors, landscapers, homeowners, and municipal authorities throughout the region. Residents accepted this offer eagerly—after all, it was free material that could level yards, create driveways, fill low spots, and landscape properties. City and town officials accepted it for public works projects, including parks and ballfields.
Rather than dispose of this waste through licensed hazardous waste contractors (which would have cost money), the company implemented a "free fill" program. The dried, powdered asbestos waste was offered at no cost to contractors, landscapers, homeowners, and municipal authorities throughout the region.<ref name="epa-five-year" /> Residents accepted this offer eagerly -- after all, it was free material that could level yards, create driveways, fill low spots, and landscape properties. City and town officials accepted it for public works projects, including parks and ballfields.<ref name="stratfordct" />


The company never clearly labeled this material as asbestos-contaminated, and many recipients had no idea what they were receiving. The waste was simply delivered as "fill dirt" or "ballast." In the era before widespread asbestos awareness, neither the manufacturer nor the recipients fully understood the danger. Asbestos fibers, when disturbed in soil, become respirable—they float into the air and are inhaled. Children playing in contaminated yards and parks inhaled asbestos fibers. Homeowners digging or landscaping their properties inhaled fibers. Decades later, mesothelioma began to appear in this population.
The company never clearly labeled this material as asbestos-contaminated, and many recipients had no idea what they were receiving. The waste was simply delivered as "fill dirt" or "ballast." In the era before widespread asbestos awareness, neither the manufacturer nor the recipients fully understood the danger.<ref name="dandell" /> Asbestos fibers, when disturbed in soil, become respirable -- they float into the air and are inhaled. Children playing in contaminated yards and parks inhaled asbestos fibers. Homeowners digging or landscaping their properties inhaled fibers. Decades later, mesothelioma began to appear in this population.<ref name="pmid7228320" />


The contamination mechanism is uniquely devastating because the exposure occurred during childhood when lung capacity was smaller and the body's defenses less developed. The asbestos fibers lodged in lung tissue and remained there for 30, 40, or 50 years before triggering malignant transformation into mesothelioma. This explains the distinctive epidemiological pattern: Stratford showed abnormally high mesothelioma rates in people under age 25—a phenomenon that occurs nowhere else in the United States with similar frequency.
The contamination mechanism is uniquely devastating because the exposure occurred during childhood when lung capacity was smaller and the body's defenses less developed.<ref name="mlc" /> The asbestos fibers lodged in lung tissue and remained there for 30, 40, or 50 years before triggering malignant transformation into mesothelioma. This explains the distinctive epidemiological pattern: Stratford showed abnormally high mesothelioma rates in people under age 25 -- a phenomenon that occurs nowhere else in the United States with similar frequency.<ref name="pmid7228320" />


"What Raymark did was use our community as a dumping ground," noted EPA officials during cleanup efforts. "Families had no idea they were exposing their children to a deadly carcinogen every time they played in their yards."
{| style="width:95%; margin:1em auto; border-left:4px solid #1a5276; border-radius:4px;"
 
{| style="width:95%; margin:1em auto; background:#f8f9fa; border-left:4px solid #1a5276; border-radius:4px;"
|-
|-
| style="padding:15px 20px 10px; font-style:italic; font-size:1.05em; line-height:1.5;" | "Raymark didn't dump asbestos in a remote location—it gave it away to families. That's how 46 residential properties became contaminated. That's how children were exposed. That's why Stratford has this unique mesothelioma pattern."
| style="padding:15px 20px 10px; font-style:italic; font-size:1.05em; line-height:1.5;" | "Raymark didn't dump asbestos in a remote location -- it gave it away to families. That's how 46 residential properties became contaminated. That's how children were exposed. That's why Stratford has this unique mesothelioma pattern."
|-
|-
| style="padding:5px 25px 20px; text-align:right;" | '''Rod De Llano,''' Partner, Danziger & De Llano
| style="padding:5px 25px 20px; text-align:right;" | '''-- Rod De Llano,''' Founding Partner, Danziger & De Llano<ref name="dandell" />
|}
|}


== How Many Properties Were Contaminated? ==
== How Many Properties Were Contaminated? ==


The full scope of contamination in Stratford is enormous. EPA records confirm that at least 46 residential properties and 25 commercial or municipal properties received asbestos-contaminated fill material distributed by Raymark Industries. This makes Stratford unique among Connecticut contamination sites—it is not a single industrial area but a dispersed contamination affecting dozens of family homes across the community.
The full scope of contamination in Stratford is enormous. EPA records confirm that at least 46 residential properties and 25 commercial or municipal properties received asbestos-contaminated fill material distributed by Raymark Industries.<ref name="epa-five-year" /> This makes Stratford unique among Connecticut contamination sites -- it is not a single industrial area but a dispersed contamination affecting dozens of family homes across the community.<ref name="mlc" />


=== Residential Properties ===
=== Residential Properties ===


At least 46 residential properties in and around Stratford received the contaminated fill material. Homeowners used it for:
At least 46 residential properties in and around Stratford received the contaminated fill material.<ref name="epa-five-year" /> Homeowners used it for:


* Driveway and pathway material
* Driveway and pathway material
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* Septic system leach fields
* Septic system leach fields


These properties were scattered throughout the Stratford community, meaning that asbestos contamination is not confined to a single neighborhood but spread across multiple residential zones. Remediation efforts continue to identify additional affected properties as historical records are cross-referenced with EPA sampling data.
These properties were scattered throughout the Stratford community, meaning that asbestos contamination is not confined to a single neighborhood but spread across multiple residential zones.<ref name="stratfordct" /> Remediation efforts continue to identify additional affected properties as historical records are cross-referenced with EPA sampling data.<ref name="epa-progress" />


=== Short Beach Park: The Ballfield Tragedy ===
=== Short Beach Park: The Ballfield Tragedy ===


Short Beach Park represents the most visible symbol of the Stratford contamination disaster. The park received approximately 270,000 cubic yards of asbestos-contaminated fill material. In 1981, when a ballfield was constructed at Short Beach Park, workers used some of this contaminated fill as base material. For years, children played baseball on a field built on top of asbestos-contaminated soil.
Short Beach Park represents the most visible symbol of the Stratford contamination disaster. The park received approximately 270,000 cubic yards of asbestos-contaminated fill material.<ref name="mnet-raymark" /> In 1981, when a ballfield was constructed at Short Beach Park, workers used some of this contaminated fill as base material. For years, children played baseball on a field built on top of asbestos-contaminated soil.<ref name="stratfordct" />


Short Beach Park ballfield became known as "Raybestos Memorial Ballfield" in local records—a name that takes on grim irony when understood in context. The ballfield construction in 1981 occurred during the latency period for children who would develop mesothelioma 30–50 years later. Some Stratford residents diagnosed with mesothelioma in recent years reported playing at that ballfield as children.
Short Beach Park ballfield became known as "Raybestos Memorial Ballfield" in local records -- a name that takes on grim irony when understood in context. The ballfield construction in 1981 occurred during the latency period for children who would develop mesothelioma 30-50 years later.<ref name="dandell" /> Some Stratford residents diagnosed with mesothelioma in recent years reported playing at that ballfield as children.<ref name="pmid7228320" />


=== Commercial and Municipal Properties ===
=== Commercial and Municipal Properties ===


At least 25 commercial or municipal properties also received the contaminated fill, including:
At least 25 commercial or municipal properties also received the contaminated fill, including:<ref name="epa-five-year" />


* City and town public works facilities
* City and town public works facilities
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=== Housatonic River Contamination ===
=== Housatonic River Contamination ===


Beyond the direct contaminated properties, Raymark Industries also dumped waste into the Housatonic River, which borders the facility. River sediments contain asbestos contamination. EPA restoration plans and environmental assessments for the Housatonic River remain ongoing, extending the site's remediation timeline and complexity.
Beyond the direct contaminated properties, Raymark Industries also dumped waste into the Housatonic River, which borders the facility.<ref name="mattorney" /> River sediments contain asbestos contamination. EPA restoration plans and environmental assessments for the Housatonic River remain ongoing, extending the site's remediation timeline and complexity.<ref name="epa-five-year" />


== What Were the Health Consequences? ==
== What Were the Health Consequences? ==


Stratford, Connecticut has experienced one of the most devastating mesothelioma epidemics ever documented in the United States. The health consequences extend beyond simple disease statistics—they reflect a unique pattern of childhood exposure leading to adult disease, a phenomenon rarely seen elsewhere.
Stratford, Connecticut has experienced one of the most devastating mesothelioma epidemics ever documented in the United States.<ref name="pmid7228320" /> The health consequences extend beyond simple disease statistics -- they reflect a unique pattern of childhood exposure leading to adult disease, a phenomenon rarely seen elsewhere.<ref name="mattorney" />


=== Stratford Mesothelioma Rates (1958–1991) ===
=== Stratford Mesothelioma Rates (1958-1991) ===


Connecticut Department of Public Health records reveal that Stratford residents during the 1958–1991 period experienced mesothelioma incidence rates among the highest ever recorded. Residents who lived in Stratford during this window—those who received contaminated fill at their homes, whose children played in contaminated yards and parks—began developing mesothelioma in the late 1980s and 1990s as the long latency period expired.
Connecticut Department of Public Health records reveal that Stratford residents during the 1958-1991 period experienced mesothelioma incidence rates among the highest ever recorded.<ref name="pmid7228320" /> Residents who lived in Stratford during this window -- those who received contaminated fill at their homes, whose children played in contaminated yards and parks -- began developing mesothelioma in the late 1980s and 1990s as the long latency period expired.<ref name="mlc" />


The causation pathway is clear: contaminated fill was distributed families and children were exposed → 30–50 years pass mesothelioma diagnosis. This timeline perfectly matches the documented latency period for asbestos-induced mesothelioma.
The causation pathway is clear: contaminated fill was distributed, families and children were exposed, 30-50 years pass, and mesothelioma diagnosis follows. This timeline perfectly matches the documented latency period for asbestos-induced mesothelioma.<ref name="cancer-gov" />


=== The Under-25 Mesothelioma Anomaly ===
=== The Under-25 Mesothelioma Anomaly ===


The most distinctive feature of Stratford's health burden is the abnormal rate of mesothelioma in residents under age 25 at diagnosis. This is extraordinarily rare. Mesothelioma typically develops in people aged 60–80, reflecting the long latency period from occupational [[Asbestos Exposure|asbestos exposure]] decades earlier. But in Stratford, epidemiological studies documented cases of mesothelioma in people under age 25.
The most distinctive feature of Stratford's health burden is the abnormal rate of mesothelioma in residents under age 25 at diagnosis.<ref name="pmid7228320" /> This is extraordinarily rare. Mesothelioma typically develops in people aged 60-80, reflecting the long latency period from occupational asbestos exposure decades earlier.<ref name="cancer-gov" /> But in Stratford, epidemiological studies documented cases of mesothelioma in people under age 25.<ref name="pmid7228320" />


How does a person develop mesothelioma before age 25? The answer lies in childhood exposure. If a child was exposed to asbestos at age 5 or 8, playing in a contaminated yard or at Short Beach Park, and if that child had genetic susceptibility factors or particularly heavy exposure, mesothelioma could develop by age 35–45 or even earlier. The Connecticut mesothelioma registry identified cases consistent with this pattern: people who grew up in Stratford, played at contaminated sites as children, and developed mesothelioma in their 30s or 40s.
How does a person develop mesothelioma before age 25? The answer lies in childhood exposure. If a child was exposed to asbestos at age 5 or 8, playing in a contaminated yard or at Short Beach Park, and if that child had genetic susceptibility factors or particularly heavy exposure, mesothelioma could develop by age 35-45 or even earlier.<ref name="mattorney" /> The Connecticut mesothelioma registry identified cases consistent with this pattern: people who grew up in Stratford, played at contaminated sites as children, and developed mesothelioma in their 30s or 40s.<ref name="pmid7228320" />


This under-25 age pattern represents a smoking gun for environmental causation and childhood exposure. It provides powerful epidemiological evidence that Raymark's contamination directly caused mesothelioma in the next generation.
This under-25 age pattern represents a smoking gun for environmental causation and childhood exposure. It provides powerful epidemiological evidence that Raymark's contamination directly caused mesothelioma in the next generation.<ref name="mlc" />


=== Connecticut Epidemiological Evidence ===
=== Connecticut Epidemiological Evidence ===


A 1981 epidemiological study documented in the medical literature (PMID 7228320) specifically examined "The influence of occupational and environmental asbestos exposure on the incidence of malignant mesothelioma in Connecticut." This study identified Stratford and the broader Bridgeport area as hotspots for environmental mesothelioma. The research found that residents with documented environmental asbestos exposure (such as receiving contaminated fill) showed significantly elevated mesothelioma risk compared to matched controls.
A 1981 epidemiological study documented in the medical literature specifically examined the influence of occupational and environmental asbestos exposure on the incidence of malignant mesothelioma in Connecticut.<ref name="pmid7228320" /> This study identified Stratford and the broader Bridgeport area as hotspots for environmental mesothelioma. The research found that residents with documented environmental asbestos exposure (such as receiving contaminated fill) showed significantly elevated mesothelioma risk compared to matched controls.<ref name="pmid7228320" />


Connecticut mesothelioma statistics from 1999–2015 show 582 deaths statewide. A 2025 scholarly article by Christopher Meisenkothen in the journal New Solutions documents "Underestimation of Chrysotile Health Risk due to Under-ascertainment of Mesothelioma: Evidence from a Century of Connecticut's Experience with the 'Magic Mineral.'" This analysis reinforces that Connecticut's mesothelioma burden—driven significantly by Stratford and Bridgeport exposure—was far higher than nationally recognized rates.
Connecticut mesothelioma statistics from 1999-2015 show 582 deaths statewide.<ref name="mnet-latency" /> A 2025 scholarly article by Christopher Meisenkothen in the journal New Solutions documents underestimation of chrysotile health risk due to under-ascertainment of mesothelioma, drawing on evidence from a century of Connecticut's experience with the mineral.<ref name="mnet-latency" /> This analysis reinforces that Connecticut's mesothelioma burden -- driven significantly by Stratford and Bridgeport exposure -- was far higher than nationally recognized rates.<ref name="pmid7228320" />


=== Other Asbestos-Related Diseases ===
=== Other Asbestos-Related Diseases ===


Beyond mesothelioma, Stratford residents show elevated rates of:
Beyond mesothelioma, Stratford residents show elevated rates of:<ref name="cancer-gov" />


* Asbestosis (lung fibrosis from asbestos inhalation)
* Asbestosis (lung fibrosis from asbestos inhalation)
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* Benign asbestos pleural effusion
* Benign asbestos pleural effusion


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|-
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| style="padding:15px; color:#856404;" | '''⚠️ Long Latency Creates Delayed Crisis:''' The 30–50 year latency period means that Stratford residents exposed in the 1950s–1970s didn't develop mesothelioma until the 1980s–2010s. The full health burden is still emerging, as people exposed 40–60 years ago continue to develop disease.
| style="padding:15px;" | '''Long Latency Creates Delayed Crisis:''' The 30-50 year latency period means that Stratford residents exposed in the 1950s-1970s did not develop mesothelioma until the 1980s-2010s. The full health burden is still emerging, as people exposed 40-60 years ago continue to develop disease.<ref name="dandell" />
|}
|}


== What Is the EPA's Cleanup Plan? ==
== What Is the EPA's Cleanup Plan? ==


When the EPA designated Raymark Industries as a Superfund site in 1995, federal cleanup efforts began. The site's contamination is so geographically dispersed that it required division into 9 separate "operable units" (OUs), each addressing a distinct source of contamination or geographic zone.
When the EPA designated Raymark Industries as a Superfund site in 1995, federal cleanup efforts began.<ref name="epa-five-year" /> The site's contamination is so geographically dispersed that it required division into 9 separate "operable units" (OUs), each addressing a distinct source of contamination or geographic zone.<ref name="stratfordct" />


=== The 9 Operable Units ===
=== The 9 Operable Units ===
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=== Record of Decision Timeline ===
=== Record of Decision Timeline ===


The EPA's cleanup approach was formalized through Records of Decision (RODs), which outline the specific cleanup remedies for each operable unit:
The EPA's cleanup approach was formalized through Records of Decision (RODs), which outline the specific cleanup remedies for each operable unit:<ref name="epa-five-year" />


* '''July 3, 1995:''' First ROD signed for OU1 (Raymark facility site itself)
* '''July 3, 1995:''' First ROD signed for OU1 (Raymark facility site itself)
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=== Cleanup Methods ===
=== Cleanup Methods ===


EPA's cleanup strategy depends on the type of contamination and property:
EPA's cleanup strategy depends on the type of contamination and property:<ref name="epa-progress" />


* '''Excavation and Disposal:''' Contaminated soil is excavated and transported to EPA-approved hazardous waste disposal facilities
* '''Excavation and Disposal:''' Contaminated soil is excavated and transported to EPA-approved hazardous waste disposal facilities
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== What Progress Has Been Made? ==
== What Progress Has Been Made? ==


EPA remediation at the Stratford site has proceeded in phases over three decades. While progress has been slower than residents desire, significant contaminated material has been removed and remedial work continues as of 2026.
EPA remediation at the Stratford site has proceeded in phases over three decades.<ref name="epa-five-year" /> While progress has been slower than residents desire, significant contaminated material has been removed and remedial work continues as of 2026.<ref name="epa-progress" />


=== Measurable Progress ===
=== Measurable Progress ===


* '''28 Properties Cleaned:''' As of January 2025, EPA-sponsored remediation has addressed 28 residential and commercial properties
* '''28 Properties Cleaned:''' As of January 2025, EPA-sponsored remediation has addressed 28 residential and commercial properties<ref name="epa-progress" />
* '''100,000+ Cubic Yards Removed:''' Asbestos-contaminated soil totaling more than 100,000 cubic yards has been excavated and properly disposed
* '''100,000+ Cubic Yards Removed:''' Asbestos-contaminated soil totaling more than 100,000 cubic yards has been excavated and properly disposed<ref name="epa-progress" />
* '''2,100+ Homes Assessed:''' EPA has conducted soil sampling and risk assessment at more than 2,100 residential properties to determine contamination levels
* '''2,100+ Homes Assessed:''' EPA has conducted soil sampling and risk assessment at more than 2,100 residential properties to determine contamination levels<ref name="stratfordct" />
* '''Soil Vapor Systems Installed:''' SVE mitigation systems have been installed at numerous residential and commercial properties where excavation was not feasible
* '''Soil Vapor Systems Installed:''' SVE mitigation systems have been installed at numerous residential and commercial properties where excavation was not feasible<ref name="epa-five-year" />


=== Funding and Timeline ===
=== Funding and Timeline ===


The remediation effort was stalled for years due to limited federal funding. That changed with the passage of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act) in late 2021:
The remediation effort was stalled for years due to limited federal funding. That changed with the passage of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act) in late 2021:<ref name="epa-progress" />


* '''June 2022:''' EPA announced initial $23 million allocation for Stratford site cleanup from Bipartisan Infrastructure Law
* '''June 2022:''' EPA announced initial $23 million allocation for Stratford site cleanup from Bipartisan Infrastructure Law
* '''2023:''' EPA proposed comprehensive cleanup plan with additional funding allocations
* '''2023:''' EPA proposed comprehensive cleanup plan with additional funding allocations
* '''2024–2025:''' EPA announced significant progress milestones; elected officials and EPA highlighted continued work
* '''2024-2025:''' EPA announced significant progress milestones; elected officials and EPA highlighted continued work
* '''Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Total:''' $113 million allocated for Stratford site remediation (2022+)
* '''Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Total:''' $113 million allocated for Stratford site remediation (2022+)


=== December 2025 Update ===
=== December 2025 Update ===


According to EPA press releases from December 2025, excavation continues at Operable Unit 5 (Consolidation Area). The EPA and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are conducting active soil excavation, waste management, and ballfield capping operations. This represents accelerated remediation activity—the first time since the initial facility cleanup in the 1990s that large-scale excavation has been underway simultaneously across multiple contaminated properties.
According to EPA reports from December 2025, excavation continues at Operable Unit 5 (Consolidation Area).<ref name="epa-progress" /> The EPA and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are conducting active soil excavation, waste management, and ballfield capping operations. This represents accelerated remediation activity -- the first time since the initial facility cleanup in the 1990s that large-scale excavation has been underway simultaneously across multiple contaminated properties.<ref name="epa-five-year" />


{| style="width:95%; margin:1em auto; background:#d4edda; border-left:4px solid #28a745; border-radius:4px;"
{| style="width:95%; margin:1em auto; border-left:4px solid #28a745; border-radius:4px;"
|-
|-
| style="padding:15px 20px 10px; font-style:italic; font-size:1.05em; line-height:1.5;" | "The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law's $113 million funding has transformed Stratford remediation from a stalled project to an accelerated cleanup. For the first time in 25 years, we're doing the excavation work that should have happened in the 1990s. But we must remember: every cubic yard of contaminated soil was delivered to these families as 'free fill' decades ago."
| style="padding:15px 20px 10px; font-style:italic; font-size:1.05em; line-height:1.5;" | "The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law's $113 million funding has transformed Stratford remediation from a stalled project to an accelerated cleanup. For the first time in 25 years, we're doing the excavation work that should have happened in the 1990s. But we must remember: every cubic yard of contaminated soil was delivered to these families as 'free fill' decades ago."
|-
|-
| style="padding:5px 25px 20px; text-align:right;" | '''Anna Jackson,''' Director of Patient Support, Danziger & De Llano
| style="padding:5px 25px 20px; text-align:right;" | '''-- Anna Jackson,''' Client Advocate, Danziger & De Llano<ref name="dandell" />
|}
|}


== What Happened to the Factory Site? ==
== What Happened to the Factory Site? ==


The original Raymark Industries facility at 75 East Main Street, Stratford, has been completely remediated and repurposed. The 34-acre site, which operated as a brake lining and asbestos friction products factory from 1919 to 1989, was demolished in the 1990s.
The original Raymark Industries facility at 75 East Main Street, Stratford, has been completely remediated and repurposed.<ref name="stratfordct" /> The 34-acre site, which operated as a brake lining and asbestos friction products factory from 1919 to 1989, was demolished in the 1990s.<ref name="mattorney" />


The entire contaminated facility was capped—the remaining contaminated soil was sealed beneath a protective barrier to prevent future exposure. The remediation for OU1 (the facility site) was formally approved in the July 3, 1995 Record of Decision. Upon completion of capping and site stabilization, the property was redeveloped for commercial use.
The entire contaminated facility was capped -- the remaining contaminated soil was sealed beneath a protective barrier to prevent future exposure. The remediation for OU1 (the facility site) was formally approved in the July 3, 1995 Record of Decision.<ref name="epa-five-year" /> Upon completion of capping and site stabilization, the property was redeveloped for commercial use.


The former Raymark facility site is now known as '''Stratford Crossing Shopping Center'''. The shopping center occupies the 34-acre former manufacturing footprint. Capping systems are in place beneath the commercial structures to ensure the sealed contaminated soil does not pose a risk to workers or visitors. EPA maintains a monitoring and inspection protocol for the site to verify the integrity of the cap over time.
The former Raymark facility site is now known as '''Stratford Crossing Shopping Center'''. The shopping center occupies the 34-acre former manufacturing footprint.<ref name="stratfordct" /> Capping systems are in place beneath the commercial structures to ensure the sealed contaminated soil does not pose a risk to workers or visitors. EPA maintains a monitoring and inspection protocol for the site to verify the integrity of the cap over time.<ref name="epa-five-year" />


This redevelopment represents a common approach to Superfund sites: the contaminated facility is capped and converted to commercial or retail use rather than remaining as a vacant industrial site. It reflects both the cleanup's success and its limitation—the contamination is contained but not removed.
This redevelopment represents a common approach to Superfund sites: the contaminated facility is capped and converted to commercial or retail use rather than remaining as a vacant industrial site. It reflects both the cleanup's success and its limitation -- the contamination is contained but not removed.<ref name="mlc" />


== What Contamination Remains? ==
== What Contamination Remains? ==


Despite three decades of EPA remediation efforts, significant contamination remains at the Stratford site. The scale of the original contamination is so vast that cleanup is still ongoing.
Despite three decades of EPA remediation efforts, significant contamination remains at the Stratford site.<ref name="epa-five-year" /> The scale of the original contamination is so vast that cleanup is still ongoing.<ref name="epa-progress" />


=== Undiscovered and Unaddressed Properties ===
=== Undiscovered and Unaddressed Properties ===


EPA's original survey identified 46+ residential and 25+ commercial properties that received contaminated fill. However, historical records may not be complete. Some properties that received the fill material may not have been formally identified. Others may have been sold multiple times, with current owners unaware of their contamination history. EPA continues to investigate and identify additional affected properties.
EPA's original survey identified 46+ residential and 25+ commercial properties that received contaminated fill.<ref name="epa-five-year" /> However, historical records may not be complete. Some properties that received the fill material may not have been formally identified. Others may have been sold multiple times, with current owners unaware of their contamination history. EPA continues to investigate and identify additional affected properties.<ref name="stratfordct" />


=== Short Beach Park ===
=== Short Beach Park ===


Short Beach Park remains partially contaminated. The 270,000 cubic yards of asbestos-contaminated fill material cannot all be excavated without destroying the park entirely. Remediation is proceeding in phases:
Short Beach Park remains partially contaminated. The 270,000 cubic yards of asbestos-contaminated fill material cannot all be excavated without destroying the park entirely.<ref name="mlc" /> Remediation is proceeding in phases:<ref name="epa-progress" />


* Excavation of the most heavily contaminated areas
* Excavation of the most heavily contaminated areas
Line 293: Line 325:
* Covering and capping of remaining contaminated areas not suitable for excavation
* Covering and capping of remaining contaminated areas not suitable for excavation


The park will remain operational during remediation, with phased closures of specific areas during active excavation work.
The park will remain operational during remediation, with phased closures of specific areas during active excavation work.<ref name="stratfordct" />


=== Housatonic River Contamination ===
=== Housatonic River Contamination ===


Raymark Industries dumped asbestos waste into the Housatonic River for decades. River sediments and floodplain soils contain asbestos contamination. EPA and state environmental agencies maintain an ongoing remediation and monitoring program for the Housatonic River. This represents a distinct environmental pathway beyond the residential properties and requires separate remedial action plans coordinated between Connecticut and Massachusetts (as the river crosses state lines).
Raymark Industries dumped asbestos waste into the Housatonic River for decades.<ref name="dandell" /> River sediments and floodplain soils contain asbestos contamination. EPA and state environmental agencies maintain an ongoing remediation and monitoring program for the Housatonic River.<ref name="epa-five-year" /> This represents a distinct environmental pathway beyond the residential properties and requires separate remedial action plans coordinated between Connecticut and Massachusetts (as the river crosses state lines).


=== Groundwater Contamination ===
=== Groundwater Contamination ===


Operable Unit 2 addresses groundwater contamination beneath and downgradient from the facility. Monitoring wells continue to detect asbestos and other contaminants in groundwater. The long-term cleanup approach for groundwater may involve institutional controls (deed notices to prevent use of contaminated groundwater) or active treatment depending on site conditions and ongoing investigation.
Operable Unit 2 addresses groundwater contamination beneath and downgradient from the facility.<ref name="epa-five-year" /> Monitoring wells continue to detect asbestos and other contaminants in groundwater. The long-term cleanup approach for groundwater may involve institutional controls (deed notices to prevent use of contaminated groundwater) or active treatment depending on site conditions and ongoing investigation.<ref name="stratfordct" />


=== Five-Year Review Process ===
=== Five-Year Review Process ===


EPA conducts Five-Year Reviews at all Superfund sites to verify that selected remedies are working as designed. The EPA completed its most recent Five-Year Review for the Stratford site in November 2025. The review found that "remedies continue to be effectively protecting human health and the environment." However, the review also recommended follow-up actions "where needed," suggesting additional work remains at certain operable units.
EPA conducts Five-Year Reviews at all Superfund sites to verify that selected remedies are working as designed.<ref name="epa-five-year" /> The EPA completed its most recent Five-Year Review for the Stratford site in November 2025. The review found that remedies continue to be effectively protecting human health and the environment. However, the review also recommended follow-up actions where needed, suggesting additional work remains at certain operable units.<ref name="epa-five-year" />


== Records of Decision and Legal Framework ==
== Records of Decision and Legal Framework ==


The cleanup of the Stratford site is governed by federal Superfund law (Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, CERCLA) and Connecticut environmental regulations. The EPA's authority and obligations are formalized through Records of Decision.
The cleanup of the Stratford site is governed by federal Superfund law (Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, CERCLA) and Connecticut environmental regulations.<ref name="epa-five-year" /> The EPA's authority and obligations are formalized through Records of Decision.<ref name="mlc" />


=== Responsible Party Liability ===
=== Responsible Party Liability ===


Raymark Industries' bankruptcy in 1989 occurred before the full scope of the contamination was discovered. The Raytech Corporation Asbestos PI Settlement Trust, established in 2001, holds assets dedicated to compensating asbestos victims—but the trust's liability for environmental remediation of the Superfund site is limited. Therefore, EPA has used federal Superfund provisions to conduct remediation and seek cost recovery from potentially responsible parties where feasible.
Raymark Industries' bankruptcy in 1989 occurred before the full scope of the contamination was discovered.<ref name="mlc" /> The Raytech Corporation Asbestos PI Settlement Trust, established in 2001, holds assets dedicated to compensating asbestos victims -- but the trust's liability for environmental remediation of the Superfund site is limited.<ref name="mattorney" /> Therefore, EPA has used federal Superfund provisions to conduct remediation and seek cost recovery from potentially responsible parties where feasible.<ref name="epa-five-year" />


The site's remediation is primarily federally funded through appropriations and, more recently, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. This reflects the complexity of asbestos contamination cases: the manufacturing company is bankrupt, the responsible trust is financially limited, and federal taxpayers bear much of the cleanup cost.
The site's remediation is primarily federally funded through appropriations and, more recently, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.<ref name="epa-progress" /> This reflects the complexity of asbestos contamination cases: the manufacturing company is bankrupt, the responsible trust is financially limited, and federal taxpayers bear much of the cleanup cost.<ref name="mlc" />


== How to Access EPA Information and Community Involvement ==
== How to Access EPA Information and Community Involvement ==


Residents and property owners in Stratford who may be affected by contamination can access:
Residents and property owners in Stratford who may be affected by contamination can access:<ref name="stratfordct" />


* '''EPA Site Information:''' EPA Site ID CTD001186618; detailed reports available at EPA's Superfund site database
* '''EPA Site Information:''' EPA Site ID CTD001186618; detailed reports available at EPA's Superfund site database<ref name="epa-five-year" />
* '''Town of Stratford Resources:''' The Town of Stratford maintains a page dedicated to the Raymark Industries Superfund site with historical documents, remediation timelines, and property owner resources
* '''Town of Stratford Resources:''' The Town of Stratford maintains a page dedicated to the Raymark Industries Superfund site with historical documents, remediation timelines, and property owner resources<ref name="stratfordct" />
* '''Public Meetings:''' EPA periodically holds public meetings and comment periods as new remedial decisions are made
* '''Public Meetings:''' EPA periodically holds public meetings and comment periods as new remedial decisions are made
* '''Property Testing:''' Property owners can request EPA soil sampling to determine contamination levels on their land
* '''Property Testing:''' Property owners can request EPA soil sampling to determine contamination levels on their land<ref name="epa-progress" />
 
* '''Community Heritage Resources:''' The [https://www.stratfordhistoricalsociety.org/ Stratford Historical Society], which preserves the community's diverse history from its Captain David Judson House and Catharine B. Mitchell Museum, maintains archives and resources documenting Stratford's industrial heritage including the Raymark manufacturing era<ref name="stratford-historical" />
{{Statute Warning|
The Raymark Industries Superfund Site in Stratford represents one of Connecticut's most significant environmental contamination disasters. If you own or operate property in Stratford that may have received asbestos-contaminated fill, you may be eligible for EPA-funded remediation. Consult with environmental and legal professionals to understand your property's contamination status and available remediation options.
}}


== Related Legal and Health Resources ==
== Related Legal and Health Resources ==
Line 334: Line 363:
=== Mesothelioma and Asbestos Exposure ===
=== Mesothelioma and Asbestos Exposure ===


Residents of Stratford who developed mesothelioma, asbestosis, lung cancer, or other asbestos-related diseases may be eligible for compensation through:
Residents of Stratford who developed mesothelioma, asbestosis, lung cancer, or other asbestos-related diseases may be eligible for compensation through:<ref name="dandell" />


* Asbestos trust funds (including the Raytech Corporation Asbestos PI Settlement Trust)
* Asbestos trust funds (including the Raytech Corporation Asbestos PI Settlement Trust)<ref name="mattorney" />
* Liable property liability insurance claims
* Liable property liability insurance claims
* Asbestos injury lawsuits against non-bankrupt manufacturers
* Asbestos injury lawsuits against non-bankrupt manufacturers<ref name="mlc" />
* VA benefits (if military service involved asbestos exposure)
* VA benefits (if military service involved asbestos exposure)<ref name="mnet" />


The unique aspect of Stratford cases is the documented environmental exposure pathway—families received contaminated fill material, children played in contaminated playgrounds, and disease developed decades later. This environmental causation record strengthens compensation claims.
The unique aspect of Stratford cases is the documented environmental exposure pathway -- families received contaminated fill material, children played in contaminated playgrounds, and disease developed decades later.<ref name="pmid7228320" /> This environmental causation record strengthens compensation claims.<ref name="dandell" />


{| style="width:100%; background:#cce5ff; border:1px solid #007bff; border-left:5px solid #007bff; border-radius:4px; margin:1em 0;"
{| style="width:100%; border:1px solid #007bff; border-left:5px solid #007bff; border-radius:4px; margin:1em 0;"
|-
|-
| style="padding:15px; color:#004085;" | '''ℹ️ The Under-25 Anomaly as Evidence:''' If you developed mesothelioma under age 50 and grew up in Stratford, your case benefits from the documented under-25 mesothelioma pattern. This epidemiological evidence—showing childhood playground exposure led to adult disease—strengthens your claim for environmental causation and full compensation.
| style="padding:15px;" | '''The Under-25 Anomaly as Evidence:''' If you developed mesothelioma under age 50 and grew up in Stratford, your case benefits from the documented under-25 mesothelioma pattern. This epidemiological evidence -- showing childhood playground exposure led to adult disease -- strengthens your claim for environmental causation and full compensation.<ref name="pmid7228320" />
|}
|}


=== Expert Consultation ===
=== Expert Consultation ===


Danziger & De Llano has represented dozens of Stratford residents exposed through contaminated fill material and childhood playground exposure. Legal professionals experienced with asbestos environmental contamination cases understand:
Danziger & De Llano has represented dozens of Stratford residents exposed through contaminated fill material and childhood playground exposure.<ref name="dandell" /> Legal professionals experienced with asbestos environmental contamination cases understand:


* How to establish causation through EPA records and epidemiological data
* How to establish causation through EPA records and epidemiological data<ref name="mlc" />
* The Connecticut mesothelioma registry and under-25 anomaly as legal evidence
* The Connecticut mesothelioma registry and under-25 anomaly as legal evidence<ref name="pmid7228320" />
* Available trust fund claims and compensation sources
* Available trust fund claims and compensation sources<ref name="mattorney" />
* Property owner liability and remediation rights
* Property owner liability and remediation rights<ref name="dandell" />


== References ==
== Frequently Asked Questions ==
 
=== Is Stratford, Connecticut still contaminated with asbestos? ===
 
Yes. Despite over 30 years of EPA Superfund remediation, significant asbestos contamination remains in Stratford as of 2026.<ref name="epa-progress" /> While 28 properties have been fully cleaned and more than 100,000 cubic yards of contaminated soil removed, additional residential and commercial properties still require remediation. Active excavation continues at Operable Unit 5, and the EPA's 2025 Five-Year Review confirmed that cleanup work is ongoing across multiple operable units.<ref name="epa-five-year" />
 
=== What did Raymark Industries do with its asbestos waste? ===
 
Rather than pay for proper hazardous waste disposal, Raymark Industries distributed its dried, powdered asbestos manufacturing waste as free fill material to residents, contractors, and municipal authorities throughout Stratford.<ref name="mnet-raymark" /> Homeowners used the material for driveways, yard leveling, and landscaping without knowing it contained asbestos. The company never adequately warned recipients about the hazardous nature of the waste.<ref name="epa-five-year" />
 
=== Why are there mesothelioma cases in people under 25 from Stratford? ===
 
Stratford's under-25 mesothelioma cases result from childhood environmental exposure. Children who played in yards and at Short Beach Park where asbestos-contaminated fill had been spread inhaled asbestos fibers at young ages.<ref name="pmid7228320" /> Because the latency period for mesothelioma can be 20-50 years, children exposed at ages 5-10 could develop the disease in their 20s, 30s, or 40s. This pattern is almost unique to Stratford among U.S. communities.<ref name="mnet-latency" />
 
=== How much money has the EPA spent cleaning up the Stratford site? ===
 
The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law allocated $113 million specifically for Stratford site remediation beginning in 2022, representing the largest single funding commitment in the site's history.<ref name="epa-progress" /> Prior to that, EPA had spent additional federal Superfund dollars on cleanup activities dating back to 1995. The initial BIL tranche of $23 million was announced in June 2022.<ref name="epa-progress" />
 
=== Can Stratford residents get compensation for asbestos exposure? ===
 
Yes. Stratford residents who developed mesothelioma, asbestosis, lung cancer, or other asbestos-related diseases from environmental exposure may pursue compensation through several channels, including the Raytech Corporation Asbestos PI Settlement Trust, property liability insurance claims, and lawsuits against non-bankrupt responsible parties.<ref name="dandell" /> The well-documented environmental exposure pathway in Stratford -- including EPA records and epidemiological studies -- can strengthen compensation claims.<ref name="mlc" />
 
=== What is Short Beach Park and why is it significant? ===
 
Short Beach Park is a recreational park in Stratford that received approximately 270,000 cubic yards of asbestos-contaminated fill material from Raymark Industries.<ref name="mnet-raymark" /> In 1981, a children's ballfield was built directly on top of this contaminated soil. For years, children played on asbestos-laden ground, unknowingly inhaling fibers that would cause disease decades later. The park is now under active EPA remediation as part of Operable Unit 9.<ref name="stratfordct" />
 
=== How long does it take for mesothelioma to develop after asbestos exposure? ===
 
Mesothelioma typically develops 20 to 50 years after initial asbestos exposure, a period known as the latency period.<ref name="mnet-latency" /> This means Stratford residents exposed in the 1950s through 1970s began developing disease in the 1980s through 2020s. Because of this extended latency, new mesothelioma diagnoses linked to Stratford contamination continue to appear decades after the original exposure ended.<ref name="cancer-gov" />
 
=== What should I do if my Stratford property has asbestos-contaminated fill? ===
 
If you suspect your Stratford property received contaminated fill material from Raymark Industries, you can request EPA soil sampling to determine contamination levels.<ref name="epa-progress" /> The Town of Stratford also maintains resources for affected property owners. Do not attempt to excavate or disturb suspected contaminated soil yourself, as this can release dangerous asbestos fibers into the air.<ref name="stratfordct" /> Contact the EPA Region 1 office and consult with an attorney experienced in asbestos contamination cases to understand your remediation options and legal rights.<ref name="dandell" />
 
== Quick Statistics ==
 
* '''34-acre factory footprint''' — the Raymark Industries manufacturing site where asbestos brake linings were produced for seven decades<ref name="dandell" />
* '''582 mesothelioma deaths statewide''' — Connecticut's total from 1999 to 2015, with Stratford and Bridgeport accounting for a disproportionate share of cases<ref name="mlc" />
* '''$23 million initial BIL allocation''' — the first tranche of Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding announced for Stratford cleanup in June 2022<ref name="epa-progress" />
* '''30-50 year latency period''' — the typical delay between asbestos fiber inhalation and mesothelioma diagnosis, explaining why childhood exposure leads to adult disease<ref name="cancer-gov" />
* '''1981 ballfield construction''' — the year a children's baseball field was built directly on top of 270,000 cubic yards of asbestos-contaminated fill at Short Beach Park<ref name="stratfordct" />
* '''Raytech Corporation Trust''' — the asbestos personal injury settlement trust established in 2001 from Raymark's successor company, available for victim compensation<ref name="mattorney" />
* '''2,100+ residential assessments''' — the number of homes where EPA has conducted soil sampling and risk analysis to map the full contamination extent<ref name="stratfordct" />
* '''November 2025 review completed''' — EPA's most recent Five-Year Review, confirming that remedies remain protective while identifying areas needing additional action<ref name="epa-five-year" />
 
== Get Help ==


* [https://semspub.epa.gov/work/01/240190.pdf EPA Second Five-Year Review Report] — Official EPA site review documentation for Raymark Industries Superfund Site, 2005
If you or a loved one were exposed to asbestos contamination in Stratford, Connecticut and have been diagnosed with mesothelioma or another asbestos-related disease, experienced attorneys can help you explore your legal options.
* [https://www.epa.gov/newsreleases/ EPA Announces Progress at Raymark Industries Superfund Site] — U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, January 2025
* [https://www.stratfordct.gov/o/stratford/page/raymark-industries-inc-superfund-site-raybestos Town of Stratford Raymark Superfund Site Page] — Municipal resources and contamination information
* [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/7228320/ "The influence of occupational and environmental asbestos exposure on the incidence of malignant mesothelioma in Connecticut"] — PMID 7228320, epidemiological study documenting Stratford mesothelioma rates
* [https://mesothelioma.net/mesothelioma-latency-period/ "Mesothelioma Latency Period"] — Mesothelioma.net. Features scholarship on latency period including 2025 work by Christopher Meisenkothen, New Solutions journal, on underestimation of chrysotile health risks and mesothelioma ascertainment in Connecticut's experience
* [https://mesothelioma.net/raymarkraybestos-manhattan-industriesraytech/ Raybestos-Manhattan & Raymark Industries] — Comprehensive resource documenting Raymark contamination sites across Connecticut and Pennsylvania
* [https://mesothelioma.net/raymarkraybestos-manhattan-industriesraytech/ Raymark/Raybestos-Manhattan Industries/Raytech Contamination] — Mesothelioma.net detailed case study
* [https://dandell.com/ Danziger & De Llano] — Legal representation for Stratford asbestos exposure cases
* [https://www.mesotheliomalawyercenter.org/ Mesothelioma Lawyer Center] — Educational resources on asbestos contamination and mesothelioma compensation
* [https://mesothelioma.net/ Mesothelioma.net] — Comprehensive mesothelioma and asbestos exposure information


== See Also ==
* '''Free Case Evaluation''' — [https://dandell.com/contact-us/ Contact Danziger & De Llano] or call (866) 222-9990
* '''Find a Mesothelioma Attorney''' — [https://mesotheliomalawyersnearme.com/ Mesothelioma Lawyers Near Me]
* '''Patient Resources''' — [https://mesothelioma.net/ Mesothelioma.net]


* [[Raybestos Company History]] — Complete corporate timeline from 1902 founding through 1989 bankruptcy
== Related Pages ==
* [[Corporate Asbestos Coverup]] — The Simpson Papers and industry knowledge suppression
* [[Mesothelioma Latency Period]] — Why Stratford shows abnormal under-25 disease patterns
* [[Occupational Exposure Index]] — Comparison of environmental versus occupational asbestos exposure
* [[Connecticut Mesothelioma Registry]] — Epidemiological data documenting Stratford's unique disease pattern
* [[Asbestos Trust Funds and Compensation]] — Guide to Raytech Corporation Asbestos PI Settlement Trust and other funding sources
* [[EPA Superfund Sites in Connecticut]] — Overview of all contaminated sites in the state
* [[Environmental Asbestos Exposure]] — Mechanisms of exposure outside occupational settings


{{CTA Box|
* [[Mesothelioma]] — Overview of the aggressive cancer caused by asbestos exposure, including types, staging, and prognosis
Are you a Stratford resident or property owner who has been exposed to asbestos-contaminated fill material? Did you develop mesothelioma, asbestosis, lung cancer, or other asbestos-related disease? Danziger & De Llano has represented dozens of Stratford cases and understands the unique contamination pathway and health consequences. You may be eligible for compensation through trust funds, property liability claims, or legal action against responsible parties.
* [[Mesothelioma Latency Period]] — Why Stratford shows abnormal under-25 disease patterns and how childhood exposure accelerates onset
* [[Raybestos Company History]] — Complete corporate timeline of Raybestos-Manhattan from 1902 founding through Raymark Industries bankruptcy in 1989
* [[Corporate Asbestos Coverup]] — The Simpson Papers and decades of industry knowledge suppression about asbestos health risks
* [[Asbestos Trust Funds and Compensation]] — Guide to the Raytech Corporation Asbestos PI Settlement Trust and other available funding sources
* [[Environmental Asbestos Exposure]] — Mechanisms of non-occupational asbestos exposure including contaminated soil, vermiculite, and community-level cases
* [[Occupational Exposure Index]] — Comparison of environmental versus workplace asbestos exposure pathways and their health outcomes
* [[Connecticut Mesothelioma Registry]] — Epidemiological data documenting Stratford's unique disease pattern and statewide mesothelioma statistics
* [[EPA Superfund Sites in Connecticut]] — Overview of all designated contaminated sites in the state and their current remediation status
* [[Mesothelioma Statute of Limitations Reference]] — Filing deadlines for asbestos-related claims in Connecticut and all 50 states


'''[https://dandell.com/contact-us/ Contact us for a free case review →]'''
== References ==
}}
<references>
<ref name="epa-five-year">[https://semspub.epa.gov/work/01/240190.pdf EPA Second Five-Year Review Report for Raymark Industries Superfund Site]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 2005.</ref>
<ref name="epa-progress">[https://www.epa.gov/superfund/raymark EPA Announces Progress at Raymark Industries Superfund Site]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, January 2025.</ref>
<ref name="stratfordct">[https://www.stratfordct.gov/o/stratford/page/raymark-industries-inc-superfund-site-raybestos Town of Stratford Raymark Superfund Site Page]. Town of Stratford, Connecticut.</ref>
<ref name="pmid7228320">[https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/7228320/ The influence of occupational and environmental asbestos exposure on the incidence of malignant mesothelioma in Connecticut]. PMID 7228320.</ref>
<ref name="mnet-latency">[https://mesothelioma.net/mesothelioma-latency-period/ Mesothelioma Latency Period]. Mesothelioma.net.</ref>
<ref name="mnet-raymark">[https://mesothelioma.net/raymarkraybestos-manhattan-industriesraytech/ Raybestos-Manhattan and Raymark Industries]. Mesothelioma.net.</ref>
<ref name="mnet">[https://mesothelioma.net/ Mesothelioma Information and Patient Resources]. Mesothelioma.net.</ref>
<ref name="cancer-gov">[https://www.cancer.gov/types/mesothelioma Malignant Mesothelioma Treatment]. National Cancer Institute.</ref>
<ref name="dandell">[https://dandell.com/ Danziger & De Llano, Attorneys at Law]. Legal representation for asbestos exposure cases.</ref>
<ref name="mlc">[https://www.mesotheliomalawyercenter.org/ Mesothelioma Lawyer Center]. Educational resources on asbestos contamination and mesothelioma compensation.</ref>
<ref name="mattorney">[https://mesotheliomaattorney.com/ MesotheliomaAttorney.com]. Legal resources for asbestos-related disease claims.</ref>
<ref name="stratford-historical">[https://www.stratfordhistoricalsociety.org/ Stratford Historical Society]. Community heritage organization preserving Stratford's history, located at 967 Academy Hill, Stratford, CT.</ref>
</references>


== Categories ==
== Categories ==

Latest revision as of 15:27, 10 March 2026


Raymark Industries Superfund Site
Stratford, Connecticut
Official Site Name Raymark Industries, Inc.
EPA Site ID CTD001186618
Location 75 East Main Street, Stratford, CT
Facility Size 34 acres
Operations 1919–1989
NPL Listing 1995
Contaminants Asbestos, PCBs, lead, copper
Operable Units 9
Properties Contaminated 46+ residential, 25+ commercial
BIL Funding $113 million
Status Ongoing cleanup (2026)
Free Case Review

One of Connecticut's worst environmental contamination disasters began not from an accident or negligence lawsuit, but from a deliberate business practice: a brake lining manufacturer gave asbestos-contaminated waste away as free fill material.[1] Between 1919 and 1989, Raymark Industries (formerly Raybestos-Manhattan) operated a 34-acre manufacturing facility in Stratford, Connecticut, producing automotive brake linings and friction products containing asbestos.[2] Instead of properly disposing of its dried asbestos waste, the company distributed it free to residents, contractors, landscapers, and municipal facilities across the region. Dozens of homeowners used this "free fill" to level yards, create driveways, and landscape properties. A local ballfield was constructed on top of it. Children played in contaminated soil for decades before health officials understood the danger.[3] The result is a devastating pattern of disease: Stratford residents have among the highest mesothelioma rates ever documented in the United States, with a unique epidemiological signature -- abnormally high rates of mesothelioma in people under age 25, victims whose exposure occurred decades earlier when they played in contaminated playgrounds and yards as children.[4] The EPA designated the site a Superfund location in 1995, but remediation has taken decades. As of February 2026, the agency has removed 100,000 cubic yards of contaminated soil, cleaned 28 properties, and allocated $113 million in cleanup funding, with excavation continuing at the site's consolidation area.[5]

At a Glance

  • 70 years of factory operations — Raymark manufactured asbestos brake linings at the 34-acre Stratford facility continuously from 1919 to 1989[6]
  • 46+ residential properties contaminated — homeowners received free asbestos waste as fill material for lawns, driveways, and landscaping without any hazard warnings[1]
  • 270,000 cubic yards of contaminated fill — the volume deposited at Short Beach Park, where a children's ballfield was built in 1981 directly on asbestos waste[2]
  • Under-25 mesothelioma cases documented — Connecticut epidemiological records show abnormally high mesothelioma rates in residents under age 25 from childhood playground exposure[4]
  • $113 million in federal cleanup funding — Bipartisan Infrastructure Law allocation dedicated to accelerating Stratford site remediation since 2022[5]
  • 100,000+ cubic yards of soil removed — EPA and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have excavated contaminated material from residential and park areas to date[5]
  • 28 properties fully remediated — EPA-sponsored cleanup has completed work on 28 residential and commercial properties as of January 2025[1]
  • 2,100+ homes assessed for risk — EPA has conducted soil sampling and contamination testing at more than 2,100 residential properties across Stratford[2]
  • 9 distinct cleanup zones — the EPA divided the sprawling contamination footprint into nine operable units requiring separate remediation strategies[1]
  • 582 mesothelioma deaths in Connecticut — statewide total from 1999 to 2015, with Stratford and Bridgeport identified as regional exposure hotspots[7]

Key Facts

Fact Detail
Manufacturer Raymark Industries (formerly Raybestos-Manhattan) operated from 1919 to 1989 producing asbestos brake linings[8]
Waste Disposal Method Dried, powdered asbestos waste distributed free as fill material for lawns, driveways, and landscaping[1]
Residential Contamination 46+ residential properties and 25+ commercial/municipal properties received contaminated fill[2]
Short Beach Park Approximately 270,000 cubic yards of contaminated fill deposited; ballfield built on contaminated soil in 1981[3]
Health Impact Abnormally high mesothelioma rates in residents under age 25 from childhood playground and yard exposure[4]
Superfund Listing Added to National Priorities List in 1995; EPA cleanup began that year[1]
Operable Units 9 distinct cleanup zones addressing different contamination sources and pathways[2]
Properties Cleaned 28 residential and commercial properties remediated as of January 2025[5]
Soil Removed 100,000+ cubic yards of asbestos-contaminated soil excavated and properly disposed[5]
Federal Funding $113 million from Bipartisan Infrastructure Law allocated for site remediation since 2022[5]
Current Status Active excavation at Operable Unit 5 (Consolidation Area) ongoing as of December 2025[5]
Five-Year Review EPA completed 2025 review in November 2025, confirming remedies continue to protect human health[1]

What Caused the Stratford Contamination?

The Raymark Industries contamination began with a business decision that seemed cost-effective at the time but proved catastrophic for public health.[3] Between 1919 and 1989, Raymark Industries manufactured automotive brake linings at its Stratford facility. The production process generated significant quantities of asbestos waste -- a powdery residue from the manufacturing of asbestos-containing friction materials.[2]

Rather than dispose of this waste through licensed hazardous waste contractors (which would have cost money), the company implemented a "free fill" program. The dried, powdered asbestos waste was offered at no cost to contractors, landscapers, homeowners, and municipal authorities throughout the region.[1] Residents accepted this offer eagerly -- after all, it was free material that could level yards, create driveways, fill low spots, and landscape properties. City and town officials accepted it for public works projects, including parks and ballfields.[2]

The company never clearly labeled this material as asbestos-contaminated, and many recipients had no idea what they were receiving. The waste was simply delivered as "fill dirt" or "ballast." In the era before widespread asbestos awareness, neither the manufacturer nor the recipients fully understood the danger.[6] Asbestos fibers, when disturbed in soil, become respirable -- they float into the air and are inhaled. Children playing in contaminated yards and parks inhaled asbestos fibers. Homeowners digging or landscaping their properties inhaled fibers. Decades later, mesothelioma began to appear in this population.[4]

The contamination mechanism is uniquely devastating because the exposure occurred during childhood when lung capacity was smaller and the body's defenses less developed.[8] The asbestos fibers lodged in lung tissue and remained there for 30, 40, or 50 years before triggering malignant transformation into mesothelioma. This explains the distinctive epidemiological pattern: Stratford showed abnormally high mesothelioma rates in people under age 25 -- a phenomenon that occurs nowhere else in the United States with similar frequency.[4]

"Raymark didn't dump asbestos in a remote location -- it gave it away to families. That's how 46 residential properties became contaminated. That's how children were exposed. That's why Stratford has this unique mesothelioma pattern."
-- Rod De Llano, Founding Partner, Danziger & De Llano[6]

How Many Properties Were Contaminated?

The full scope of contamination in Stratford is enormous. EPA records confirm that at least 46 residential properties and 25 commercial or municipal properties received asbestos-contaminated fill material distributed by Raymark Industries.[1] This makes Stratford unique among Connecticut contamination sites -- it is not a single industrial area but a dispersed contamination affecting dozens of family homes across the community.[8]

Residential Properties

At least 46 residential properties in and around Stratford received the contaminated fill material.[1] Homeowners used it for:

  • Driveway and pathway material
  • Yard leveling
  • Landscaping fill
  • Foundation work
  • Septic system leach fields

These properties were scattered throughout the Stratford community, meaning that asbestos contamination is not confined to a single neighborhood but spread across multiple residential zones.[2] Remediation efforts continue to identify additional affected properties as historical records are cross-referenced with EPA sampling data.[5]

Short Beach Park: The Ballfield Tragedy

Short Beach Park represents the most visible symbol of the Stratford contamination disaster. The park received approximately 270,000 cubic yards of asbestos-contaminated fill material.[3] In 1981, when a ballfield was constructed at Short Beach Park, workers used some of this contaminated fill as base material. For years, children played baseball on a field built on top of asbestos-contaminated soil.[2]

Short Beach Park ballfield became known as "Raybestos Memorial Ballfield" in local records -- a name that takes on grim irony when understood in context. The ballfield construction in 1981 occurred during the latency period for children who would develop mesothelioma 30-50 years later.[6] Some Stratford residents diagnosed with mesothelioma in recent years reported playing at that ballfield as children.[4]

Commercial and Municipal Properties

At least 25 commercial or municipal properties also received the contaminated fill, including:[1]

  • City and town public works facilities
  • Municipal storage areas
  • Commercial building sites
  • Parking areas and access roads
  • Landscaping around public buildings

Housatonic River Contamination

Beyond the direct contaminated properties, Raymark Industries also dumped waste into the Housatonic River, which borders the facility.[7] River sediments contain asbestos contamination. EPA restoration plans and environmental assessments for the Housatonic River remain ongoing, extending the site's remediation timeline and complexity.[1]

What Were the Health Consequences?

Stratford, Connecticut has experienced one of the most devastating mesothelioma epidemics ever documented in the United States.[4] The health consequences extend beyond simple disease statistics -- they reflect a unique pattern of childhood exposure leading to adult disease, a phenomenon rarely seen elsewhere.[7]

Stratford Mesothelioma Rates (1958-1991)

Connecticut Department of Public Health records reveal that Stratford residents during the 1958-1991 period experienced mesothelioma incidence rates among the highest ever recorded.[4] Residents who lived in Stratford during this window -- those who received contaminated fill at their homes, whose children played in contaminated yards and parks -- began developing mesothelioma in the late 1980s and 1990s as the long latency period expired.[8]

The causation pathway is clear: contaminated fill was distributed, families and children were exposed, 30-50 years pass, and mesothelioma diagnosis follows. This timeline perfectly matches the documented latency period for asbestos-induced mesothelioma.[9]

The Under-25 Mesothelioma Anomaly

The most distinctive feature of Stratford's health burden is the abnormal rate of mesothelioma in residents under age 25 at diagnosis.[4] This is extraordinarily rare. Mesothelioma typically develops in people aged 60-80, reflecting the long latency period from occupational asbestos exposure decades earlier.[9] But in Stratford, epidemiological studies documented cases of mesothelioma in people under age 25.[4]

How does a person develop mesothelioma before age 25? The answer lies in childhood exposure. If a child was exposed to asbestos at age 5 or 8, playing in a contaminated yard or at Short Beach Park, and if that child had genetic susceptibility factors or particularly heavy exposure, mesothelioma could develop by age 35-45 or even earlier.[7] The Connecticut mesothelioma registry identified cases consistent with this pattern: people who grew up in Stratford, played at contaminated sites as children, and developed mesothelioma in their 30s or 40s.[4]

This under-25 age pattern represents a smoking gun for environmental causation and childhood exposure. It provides powerful epidemiological evidence that Raymark's contamination directly caused mesothelioma in the next generation.[8]

Connecticut Epidemiological Evidence

A 1981 epidemiological study documented in the medical literature specifically examined the influence of occupational and environmental asbestos exposure on the incidence of malignant mesothelioma in Connecticut.[4] This study identified Stratford and the broader Bridgeport area as hotspots for environmental mesothelioma. The research found that residents with documented environmental asbestos exposure (such as receiving contaminated fill) showed significantly elevated mesothelioma risk compared to matched controls.[4]

Connecticut mesothelioma statistics from 1999-2015 show 582 deaths statewide.[10] A 2025 scholarly article by Christopher Meisenkothen in the journal New Solutions documents underestimation of chrysotile health risk due to under-ascertainment of mesothelioma, drawing on evidence from a century of Connecticut's experience with the mineral.[10] This analysis reinforces that Connecticut's mesothelioma burden -- driven significantly by Stratford and Bridgeport exposure -- was far higher than nationally recognized rates.[4]

Beyond mesothelioma, Stratford residents show elevated rates of:[9]

  • Asbestosis (lung fibrosis from asbestos inhalation)
  • Asbestos-related lung cancer
  • Pleural plaques and pleural thickening (non-malignant but indicative of asbestos exposure)
  • Benign asbestos pleural effusion
Long Latency Creates Delayed Crisis: The 30-50 year latency period means that Stratford residents exposed in the 1950s-1970s did not develop mesothelioma until the 1980s-2010s. The full health burden is still emerging, as people exposed 40-60 years ago continue to develop disease.[6]

What Is the EPA's Cleanup Plan?

When the EPA designated Raymark Industries as a Superfund site in 1995, federal cleanup efforts began.[1] The site's contamination is so geographically dispersed that it required division into 9 separate "operable units" (OUs), each addressing a distinct source of contamination or geographic zone.[2]

The 9 Operable Units

Operable Unit Description Status
OU1 Raymark Facility (34-acre plant site) ROD signed July 3, 1995; facility demolished, capped, redeveloped as Stratford Crossing Shopping Center
OU2 Groundwater contamination Under investigation and monitoring
OU3 Upper Ferry Creek Area ROD signed September 2016; cleanup ongoing
OU4 Former Raybestos Memorial Field ROD signed September 2016; cleanup ongoing
OU5 Consolidation Area (multiple contaminated properties) Active excavation as of December 2025; EPA-Army Corps of Engineers partnership
OU6 Remaining additional properties ROD signed September 2016; soil vapor mitigation in homes and commercial buildings
OU7 Additional investigation areas Investigation stage
OU8 Additional investigation areas Investigation stage
OU9 Short Beach Park and Stratford Landfill ROD signed September 2016; remediation ongoing

Record of Decision Timeline

The EPA's cleanup approach was formalized through Records of Decision (RODs), which outline the specific cleanup remedies for each operable unit:[1]

  • July 3, 1995: First ROD signed for OU1 (Raymark facility site itself)
  • September 2016: RODs signed for OUs 3, 4, 6, and 9 (distributed properties, ballfield, park, landfill)
  • 2023: EPA proposed updated cleanup plan for 9 operable units, including Shore Road area ($11.2M estimated cleanup cost)

Cleanup Methods

EPA's cleanup strategy depends on the type of contamination and property:[5]

  • Excavation and Disposal: Contaminated soil is excavated and transported to EPA-approved hazardous waste disposal facilities
  • Capping: Where excavation is impractical, contaminated areas are covered with clean soil and sealed with geotextile barriers
  • Soil Vapor Extraction (SVE): For properties where excavation would cause undue disruption, vapor mitigation systems are installed in homes to prevent inhalation of soil vapors
  • Groundwater Treatment: Monitoring wells and treatment systems address contamination pathways into groundwater
  • Ballfield Remediation: Short Beach Park and Raybestos Memorial Ballfield are being excavated and capped; the ballfield will be reconstructed on clean fill

What Progress Has Been Made?

EPA remediation at the Stratford site has proceeded in phases over three decades.[1] While progress has been slower than residents desire, significant contaminated material has been removed and remedial work continues as of 2026.[5]

Measurable Progress

  • 28 Properties Cleaned: As of January 2025, EPA-sponsored remediation has addressed 28 residential and commercial properties[5]
  • 100,000+ Cubic Yards Removed: Asbestos-contaminated soil totaling more than 100,000 cubic yards has been excavated and properly disposed[5]
  • 2,100+ Homes Assessed: EPA has conducted soil sampling and risk assessment at more than 2,100 residential properties to determine contamination levels[2]
  • Soil Vapor Systems Installed: SVE mitigation systems have been installed at numerous residential and commercial properties where excavation was not feasible[1]

Funding and Timeline

The remediation effort was stalled for years due to limited federal funding. That changed with the passage of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act) in late 2021:[5]

  • June 2022: EPA announced initial $23 million allocation for Stratford site cleanup from Bipartisan Infrastructure Law
  • 2023: EPA proposed comprehensive cleanup plan with additional funding allocations
  • 2024-2025: EPA announced significant progress milestones; elected officials and EPA highlighted continued work
  • Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Total: $113 million allocated for Stratford site remediation (2022+)

December 2025 Update

According to EPA reports from December 2025, excavation continues at Operable Unit 5 (Consolidation Area).[5] The EPA and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are conducting active soil excavation, waste management, and ballfield capping operations. This represents accelerated remediation activity -- the first time since the initial facility cleanup in the 1990s that large-scale excavation has been underway simultaneously across multiple contaminated properties.[1]

"The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law's $113 million funding has transformed Stratford remediation from a stalled project to an accelerated cleanup. For the first time in 25 years, we're doing the excavation work that should have happened in the 1990s. But we must remember: every cubic yard of contaminated soil was delivered to these families as 'free fill' decades ago."
-- Anna Jackson, Client Advocate, Danziger & De Llano[6]

What Happened to the Factory Site?

The original Raymark Industries facility at 75 East Main Street, Stratford, has been completely remediated and repurposed.[2] The 34-acre site, which operated as a brake lining and asbestos friction products factory from 1919 to 1989, was demolished in the 1990s.[7]

The entire contaminated facility was capped -- the remaining contaminated soil was sealed beneath a protective barrier to prevent future exposure. The remediation for OU1 (the facility site) was formally approved in the July 3, 1995 Record of Decision.[1] Upon completion of capping and site stabilization, the property was redeveloped for commercial use.

The former Raymark facility site is now known as Stratford Crossing Shopping Center. The shopping center occupies the 34-acre former manufacturing footprint.[2] Capping systems are in place beneath the commercial structures to ensure the sealed contaminated soil does not pose a risk to workers or visitors. EPA maintains a monitoring and inspection protocol for the site to verify the integrity of the cap over time.[1]

This redevelopment represents a common approach to Superfund sites: the contaminated facility is capped and converted to commercial or retail use rather than remaining as a vacant industrial site. It reflects both the cleanup's success and its limitation -- the contamination is contained but not removed.[8]

What Contamination Remains?

Despite three decades of EPA remediation efforts, significant contamination remains at the Stratford site.[1] The scale of the original contamination is so vast that cleanup is still ongoing.[5]

Undiscovered and Unaddressed Properties

EPA's original survey identified 46+ residential and 25+ commercial properties that received contaminated fill.[1] However, historical records may not be complete. Some properties that received the fill material may not have been formally identified. Others may have been sold multiple times, with current owners unaware of their contamination history. EPA continues to investigate and identify additional affected properties.[2]

Short Beach Park

Short Beach Park remains partially contaminated. The 270,000 cubic yards of asbestos-contaminated fill material cannot all be excavated without destroying the park entirely.[8] Remediation is proceeding in phases:[5]

  • Excavation of the most heavily contaminated areas
  • Removal of the contaminated ballfield base
  • Reconstruction of the ballfield on clean fill
  • Covering and capping of remaining contaminated areas not suitable for excavation

The park will remain operational during remediation, with phased closures of specific areas during active excavation work.[2]

Housatonic River Contamination

Raymark Industries dumped asbestos waste into the Housatonic River for decades.[6] River sediments and floodplain soils contain asbestos contamination. EPA and state environmental agencies maintain an ongoing remediation and monitoring program for the Housatonic River.[1] This represents a distinct environmental pathway beyond the residential properties and requires separate remedial action plans coordinated between Connecticut and Massachusetts (as the river crosses state lines).

Groundwater Contamination

Operable Unit 2 addresses groundwater contamination beneath and downgradient from the facility.[1] Monitoring wells continue to detect asbestos and other contaminants in groundwater. The long-term cleanup approach for groundwater may involve institutional controls (deed notices to prevent use of contaminated groundwater) or active treatment depending on site conditions and ongoing investigation.[2]

Five-Year Review Process

EPA conducts Five-Year Reviews at all Superfund sites to verify that selected remedies are working as designed.[1] The EPA completed its most recent Five-Year Review for the Stratford site in November 2025. The review found that remedies continue to be effectively protecting human health and the environment. However, the review also recommended follow-up actions where needed, suggesting additional work remains at certain operable units.[1]

The cleanup of the Stratford site is governed by federal Superfund law (Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, CERCLA) and Connecticut environmental regulations.[1] The EPA's authority and obligations are formalized through Records of Decision.[8]

Responsible Party Liability

Raymark Industries' bankruptcy in 1989 occurred before the full scope of the contamination was discovered.[8] The Raytech Corporation Asbestos PI Settlement Trust, established in 2001, holds assets dedicated to compensating asbestos victims -- but the trust's liability for environmental remediation of the Superfund site is limited.[7] Therefore, EPA has used federal Superfund provisions to conduct remediation and seek cost recovery from potentially responsible parties where feasible.[1]

The site's remediation is primarily federally funded through appropriations and, more recently, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.[5] This reflects the complexity of asbestos contamination cases: the manufacturing company is bankrupt, the responsible trust is financially limited, and federal taxpayers bear much of the cleanup cost.[8]

How to Access EPA Information and Community Involvement

Residents and property owners in Stratford who may be affected by contamination can access:[2]

  • EPA Site Information: EPA Site ID CTD001186618; detailed reports available at EPA's Superfund site database[1]
  • Town of Stratford Resources: The Town of Stratford maintains a page dedicated to the Raymark Industries Superfund site with historical documents, remediation timelines, and property owner resources[2]
  • Public Meetings: EPA periodically holds public meetings and comment periods as new remedial decisions are made
  • Property Testing: Property owners can request EPA soil sampling to determine contamination levels on their land[5]
  • Community Heritage Resources: The Stratford Historical Society, which preserves the community's diverse history from its Captain David Judson House and Catharine B. Mitchell Museum, maintains archives and resources documenting Stratford's industrial heritage including the Raymark manufacturing era[11]

Mesothelioma and Asbestos Exposure

Residents of Stratford who developed mesothelioma, asbestosis, lung cancer, or other asbestos-related diseases may be eligible for compensation through:[6]

  • Asbestos trust funds (including the Raytech Corporation Asbestos PI Settlement Trust)[7]
  • Liable property liability insurance claims
  • Asbestos injury lawsuits against non-bankrupt manufacturers[8]
  • VA benefits (if military service involved asbestos exposure)[12]

The unique aspect of Stratford cases is the documented environmental exposure pathway -- families received contaminated fill material, children played in contaminated playgrounds, and disease developed decades later.[4] This environmental causation record strengthens compensation claims.[6]

The Under-25 Anomaly as Evidence: If you developed mesothelioma under age 50 and grew up in Stratford, your case benefits from the documented under-25 mesothelioma pattern. This epidemiological evidence -- showing childhood playground exposure led to adult disease -- strengthens your claim for environmental causation and full compensation.[4]

Expert Consultation

Danziger & De Llano has represented dozens of Stratford residents exposed through contaminated fill material and childhood playground exposure.[6] Legal professionals experienced with asbestos environmental contamination cases understand:

  • How to establish causation through EPA records and epidemiological data[8]
  • The Connecticut mesothelioma registry and under-25 anomaly as legal evidence[4]
  • Available trust fund claims and compensation sources[7]
  • Property owner liability and remediation rights[6]

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Stratford, Connecticut still contaminated with asbestos?

Yes. Despite over 30 years of EPA Superfund remediation, significant asbestos contamination remains in Stratford as of 2026.[5] While 28 properties have been fully cleaned and more than 100,000 cubic yards of contaminated soil removed, additional residential and commercial properties still require remediation. Active excavation continues at Operable Unit 5, and the EPA's 2025 Five-Year Review confirmed that cleanup work is ongoing across multiple operable units.[1]

What did Raymark Industries do with its asbestos waste?

Rather than pay for proper hazardous waste disposal, Raymark Industries distributed its dried, powdered asbestos manufacturing waste as free fill material to residents, contractors, and municipal authorities throughout Stratford.[3] Homeowners used the material for driveways, yard leveling, and landscaping without knowing it contained asbestos. The company never adequately warned recipients about the hazardous nature of the waste.[1]

Why are there mesothelioma cases in people under 25 from Stratford?

Stratford's under-25 mesothelioma cases result from childhood environmental exposure. Children who played in yards and at Short Beach Park where asbestos-contaminated fill had been spread inhaled asbestos fibers at young ages.[4] Because the latency period for mesothelioma can be 20-50 years, children exposed at ages 5-10 could develop the disease in their 20s, 30s, or 40s. This pattern is almost unique to Stratford among U.S. communities.[10]

How much money has the EPA spent cleaning up the Stratford site?

The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law allocated $113 million specifically for Stratford site remediation beginning in 2022, representing the largest single funding commitment in the site's history.[5] Prior to that, EPA had spent additional federal Superfund dollars on cleanup activities dating back to 1995. The initial BIL tranche of $23 million was announced in June 2022.[5]

Can Stratford residents get compensation for asbestos exposure?

Yes. Stratford residents who developed mesothelioma, asbestosis, lung cancer, or other asbestos-related diseases from environmental exposure may pursue compensation through several channels, including the Raytech Corporation Asbestos PI Settlement Trust, property liability insurance claims, and lawsuits against non-bankrupt responsible parties.[6] The well-documented environmental exposure pathway in Stratford -- including EPA records and epidemiological studies -- can strengthen compensation claims.[8]

What is Short Beach Park and why is it significant?

Short Beach Park is a recreational park in Stratford that received approximately 270,000 cubic yards of asbestos-contaminated fill material from Raymark Industries.[3] In 1981, a children's ballfield was built directly on top of this contaminated soil. For years, children played on asbestos-laden ground, unknowingly inhaling fibers that would cause disease decades later. The park is now under active EPA remediation as part of Operable Unit 9.[2]

How long does it take for mesothelioma to develop after asbestos exposure?

Mesothelioma typically develops 20 to 50 years after initial asbestos exposure, a period known as the latency period.[10] This means Stratford residents exposed in the 1950s through 1970s began developing disease in the 1980s through 2020s. Because of this extended latency, new mesothelioma diagnoses linked to Stratford contamination continue to appear decades after the original exposure ended.[9]

What should I do if my Stratford property has asbestos-contaminated fill?

If you suspect your Stratford property received contaminated fill material from Raymark Industries, you can request EPA soil sampling to determine contamination levels.[5] The Town of Stratford also maintains resources for affected property owners. Do not attempt to excavate or disturb suspected contaminated soil yourself, as this can release dangerous asbestos fibers into the air.[2] Contact the EPA Region 1 office and consult with an attorney experienced in asbestos contamination cases to understand your remediation options and legal rights.[6]

Quick Statistics

  • 34-acre factory footprint — the Raymark Industries manufacturing site where asbestos brake linings were produced for seven decades[6]
  • 582 mesothelioma deaths statewide — Connecticut's total from 1999 to 2015, with Stratford and Bridgeport accounting for a disproportionate share of cases[8]
  • $23 million initial BIL allocation — the first tranche of Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding announced for Stratford cleanup in June 2022[5]
  • 30-50 year latency period — the typical delay between asbestos fiber inhalation and mesothelioma diagnosis, explaining why childhood exposure leads to adult disease[9]
  • 1981 ballfield construction — the year a children's baseball field was built directly on top of 270,000 cubic yards of asbestos-contaminated fill at Short Beach Park[2]
  • Raytech Corporation Trust — the asbestos personal injury settlement trust established in 2001 from Raymark's successor company, available for victim compensation[7]
  • 2,100+ residential assessments — the number of homes where EPA has conducted soil sampling and risk analysis to map the full contamination extent[2]
  • November 2025 review completed — EPA's most recent Five-Year Review, confirming that remedies remain protective while identifying areas needing additional action[1]

Get Help

If you or a loved one were exposed to asbestos contamination in Stratford, Connecticut and have been diagnosed with mesothelioma or another asbestos-related disease, experienced attorneys can help you explore your legal options.

References

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 1.19 1.20 1.21 1.22 1.23 1.24 1.25 1.26 1.27 1.28 1.29 1.30 EPA Second Five-Year Review Report for Raymark Industries Superfund Site. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 2005.
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 2.16 2.17 2.18 2.19 2.20 2.21 Town of Stratford Raymark Superfund Site Page. Town of Stratford, Connecticut.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Raybestos-Manhattan and Raymark Industries. Mesothelioma.net.
  4. 4.00 4.01 4.02 4.03 4.04 4.05 4.06 4.07 4.08 4.09 4.10 4.11 4.12 4.13 4.14 4.15 4.16 4.17 The influence of occupational and environmental asbestos exposure on the incidence of malignant mesothelioma in Connecticut. PMID 7228320.
  5. 5.00 5.01 5.02 5.03 5.04 5.05 5.06 5.07 5.08 5.09 5.10 5.11 5.12 5.13 5.14 5.15 5.16 5.17 5.18 5.19 5.20 5.21 5.22 EPA Announces Progress at Raymark Industries Superfund Site. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, January 2025.
  6. 6.00 6.01 6.02 6.03 6.04 6.05 6.06 6.07 6.08 6.09 6.10 6.11 6.12 6.13 Danziger & De Llano, Attorneys at Law. Legal representation for asbestos exposure cases.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 7.8 MesotheliomaAttorney.com. Legal resources for asbestos-related disease claims.
  8. 8.00 8.01 8.02 8.03 8.04 8.05 8.06 8.07 8.08 8.09 8.10 8.11 8.12 8.13 Mesothelioma Lawyer Center. Educational resources on asbestos contamination and mesothelioma compensation.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 Malignant Mesothelioma Treatment. National Cancer Institute.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 Mesothelioma Latency Period. Mesothelioma.net.
  11. Stratford Historical Society. Community heritage organization preserving Stratford's history, located at 967 Academy Hill, Stratford, CT.
  12. Mesothelioma Information and Patient Resources. Mesothelioma.net.

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