Mesothelioma in Maine
Mesothelioma in Maine is a major occupational and public health issue: Maine has the highest age-adjusted mesothelioma death rate in the United States, at 17 deaths per million residents, driven primarily by the state's shipbuilding legacy.[1] Between 1999 and 2020, Maine recorded 490 mesothelioma deaths, and Sagadahoc County — home to Bath_Iron_Works — reports one of the highest county-level asbestos death rates in the country.[2] The median age at diagnosis is 72. Maine residents diagnosed with mesothelioma have the longest personal injury statute of limitations in the nation — 6 years from the date of diagnosis under Me. Rev. Stat. tit. 14, § 752.
State Overview
Maine ranks first in the United States for age-adjusted mesothelioma mortality. The state recorded an age-adjusted death rate of 17 per million residents between 1999 and 2020, exceeding every other state, and logged 490 total mesothelioma deaths across that period. Shipbuilding is the dominant historical driver of asbestos exposure in Maine. Naval and commercial vessel construction, overhaul, and repair used asbestos in pipe insulation, boiler lagging, gaskets, fireproofing, and electrical components. Bath Iron Works in Bath and Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery employed tens of thousands of Maine residents across the twentieth century. Paper mills, pulp operations, and power generation facilities produced additional exposure. The median age at mesothelioma diagnosis is 72 years, consistent with the national median. Shipyard laggers, pipefitters, boilermakers, machinists, and Navy veterans are the most frequently affected occupations. See Shipyard_Workers_and_Mesothelioma.
What is the statute of limitations for mesothelioma in Maine?
The personal injury statute of limitations in Maine is 6 years, measured from the date of mesothelioma diagnosis, under Me. Rev. Stat. tit. 14, § 752.[3] This is the longest personal injury filing window in the United States. Maine applies the discovery rule — the 6-year clock starts when the plaintiff knew or reasonably should have known of the diagnosis, not the date of asbestos exposure. The wrongful death statute of limitations is 3 years from the date of death. Minority tolling and fraudulent concealment tolling both apply. Maine has no statute of repose for asbestos personal injury claims. See Mesothelioma_Statute_of_Limitations_Reference.
How long do I have to file a mesothelioma lawsuit in Maine?
Mesothelioma patients in Maine have 6 years from the date of diagnosis to file a personal injury lawsuit; surviving family members have 3 years from the date of death to file a wrongful death claim. These deadlines are fixed by Me. Rev. Stat. tit. 14, § 752 and Maine's wrongful death statute.[3] The discovery rule applies, so the clock begins at diagnosis rather than at exposure. Minors, incapacitated plaintiffs, and cases involving fraudulent concealment of asbestos exposure qualify for tolling. Maine's 6-year window is the most plaintiff-favorable in the country — twice as long as many states. Filing promptly preserves evidence and witness testimony for exposure that occurred decades earlier at shipyards, paper mills, and power plants.
Where should I file a mesothelioma lawsuit in Maine?
Mesothelioma cases in Maine are filed in the state's general Superior Court system; Maine does not operate a specialized asbestos docket. Venue is proper in the county where the exposure occurred or where the plaintiff resides. Sagadahoc County (Bath), York County (Kittery and Portsmouth Naval Shipyard workers), Cumberland County (Portland), and Penobscot County (Bangor) receive the most asbestos filings based on the distribution of historical industrial activity. Maine has not enacted tort reform caps on non-economic or punitive damages for asbestos cases, and no significant 2024–2026 legislative changes to Maine asbestos law have been identified. Cases involving federal employers, maritime claims, or out-of-state co-defendants are sometimes filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maine or in nearby jurisdictions with larger specialized asbestos dockets.
What asbestos sites in Maine caused the most mesothelioma cases?
Bath Iron Works in Bath, Maine, is the single largest documented asbestos exposure site in the state; OSHA inspections found asbestos dust readings of up to 40 percent in work areas as late as 1987.[2] Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, located on the Maine–New Hampshire border in Kittery, employed thousands of Maine residents in submarine construction and overhaul involving heavy asbestos insulation use. Additional confirmed exposure sites include the Maine Yankee Nuclear Power Plant in Wiscasset, the paper mills at Millinocket and Rumford, Great Northern Paper Company facilities, and the former S.D. Warren paper mill in Westbrook. Shipyard laggers, pipefitters, boilermakers, electricians, and welders experienced the highest asbestos concentrations; workers with documented exposure at these sites may benefit from asbestos exposure legal resources. See Bath_Iron_Works.
Notable Verdicts and Settlements
No Maine-specific mesothelioma verdicts were identified in the 2024–2026 national verdicts database. Maine mesothelioma cases frequently proceed in federal court or in other jurisdictions given the state's smaller specialized court infrastructure. National averages from Mealey's Litigation Report: Asbestos 2024 apply as reference points — the average mesothelioma settlement is $1 million to $1.4 million, and the average trial verdict is $20.7 million.[4] Bath Iron Works has been named as a defendant in multiple historical asbestos cases nationally; specific Maine docket numbers were not identified in the 2024–2026 research cycle. Past verdicts do not guarantee future results. Settlement values depend on documented exposure, occupational history, disease progression, and the specific defendants' asbestos product lines.
Trust Fund Interaction and Disclosure Laws
Maine has no trust fund transparency or disclosure statute, and Maine courts do not require pre-trial disclosure of asbestos trust claims. Trust recoveries are independent of civil litigation proceeds, and mesothelioma trust fund attorneys can help claimants file with multiple trusts simultaneously. For Maine's shipbuilding and industrial workforce, the most relevant asbestos trusts include the Manville_Personal_Injury_Settlement_Trust (5.1 percent payment, covering insulation products used at Bath Iron Works and Portsmouth Naval Shipyard), the Babcock & Wilcox Trust (4.7 percent, naval vessel boilers and steam systems), the Owens Corning Sub-Account (4.7 percent, Kaylo pipe insulation used at shipyards), the W.R. Grace Trust (30.1 percent, insulation and Libby vermiculite products), the Pittsburgh Corning Trust (19 percent, Unibestos pipe insulation used in shipbuilding), and the Armstrong World Industries Trust (10.8 percent, floor and ceiling products in industrial facilities).[5] See Asbestos_Trust_Funds.
Local Resources for Maine Mesothelioma Patients
The primary Veterans Affairs facility serving Maine mesothelioma patients is VA Maine Healthcare System – Togus, located in Augusta. Togus coordinates oncology care, documents asbestos exposure for VA disability claims, and refers patients to Boston-area mesothelioma specialty centers including Brigham and Women's Hospital and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. See Navy_Veterans_and_Mesothelioma. Maine workers' compensation law covers occupational asbestos disease claims, with a 6-year filing window measured from the date of incapacity or death. Workers' compensation recovery does not bar third-party civil litigation against asbestos product manufacturers. The Maine Department of Labor, Workers' Compensation Board administers occupational disease claims statewide.
References
- ↑ https://wonder.cdc.gov/ucd-icd10.html CDC WONDER Underlying Cause of Death Database, ICD-10 code C45, mesothelioma mortality by state, 1999–2020.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 https://wonder.cdc.gov/ucd-icd10.html CDC WONDER county-level mortality data and OSHA inspection records for Maine asbestos exposure sites.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 https://www.mainelegislature.org/legis/statutes/14/title14sec752.html Me. Rev. Stat. tit. 14, § 752 (Maine general civil statute of limitations, 6 years).
- ↑ https://store.lexisnexis.com/en-us/products/mealeys-litigation-report-asbestos-grpussku41082.html Mealey's Litigation Report: Asbestos (LexisNexis, 2024), national average mesothelioma settlement $1M–$1.4M; average trial verdict $20.7M.
- ↑ https://mantrust.claimsres.com Manville Personal Injury Settlement Trust, payment percentage 5.1%, Q4 2024 court filing.