Erin
Brockovich
Erin
Brockovich-Ellis (born June 22, 1960) is an American
legal clerk who, despite the lack of a formal
law school education, was instrumental in constructing
a case against the $28 billion Pacific Gas and
Electric Company (PG&E), of California in
1993. Since the release of the movie that shares
her story and name, she has hosted Challenge America
with Erin Brockovich on ABC and Final Justice
on Lifetime. She is the president of Brockovich
Research & Consulting, a consulting firm.
Biography
Background
Brockovich
was born Erin L. E. Pattee in Lawrence, Kansas,
and attended Kansas State University in Manhattan,
Kansas. She worked as a management trainee for
Kmart in 1981 but quit after a few months and
entered some potentially lucrative beauty pageants.
After winning Miss Pacific Coast in 1981, she
soon gave up pageant life because she found it
shallow. She has lived in California since 1982.
Pacific Gas litigation
The
case alleged contamination of drinking water with
hexavalent chromium, also known as chromium (VI),
in the southern California town of Hinkley. At
the center of the case is a facility called the
Hinkley Compressor Station, part of a natural
gas pipeline connecting to the San Francisco Bay
Area and constructed in 1952. The case was settled
in 1996 for $333 million, the largest settlement
ever paid in a direct action lawsuit in U.S. history.
Chromium
(VI) is known to be toxic and carcinogenic, and
the 0.58 ppm in the groundwater in Hinkley exceeded
the Maximum Contaminant Level of 0.10 ppm currently
set by the United States Environmental Protection
Agency. However, while it has long been known
that chromium (VI) is carcinogenic when ingested
via inhalation, drinking water laced with chromium
(VI) is widely believed to be less toxic; some
experts argue that the exposures at Hinkley were
too low to cause health effects, while others
respond that there were too many gaps in the data
on chromium to dismiss the Hinkley residents'
case. When Harvard's School of Public Health gave
Brockovich an award in 2005, scientists were divided
on the merits of her work. National Institutes
of Health researchers announced May 16, 2007 there
is strong evidence that hexavalent chromium causes
cancer in laboratory animals when it is consumed
in drinking water. The two-year study conducted
by the National Toxicology Program (NTP) shows
that animals given hexavalent chromium for three
months developed malignant tumors on their pituitary
gland. The report warns that extrapolation of
these results to other species, including characterization
of hazards and risks to humans, requires analyses
beyond the intent of the report. Nevertheless,
health care professionals agree that the current
data on Chromium (VI) are sufficient to justify
strict legal limits on the hexavalent Cr concentration
in water, and that neglect of these limits imposes
a major health threat on the affected population.
Working
with Thousand Oaks, California-based lawyer Edward
L. Masry, Brockovich went on to participate in
other anti-pollution lawsuits. One accuses Whitman
Corporation of chromium contamination in Willits,
California. Another lawsuit, which lists 1,200
plaintiffs, alleges contamination near PG&E's
Kettleman Hills Compressor Station in Kings County,
California, along the same pipeline as the Hinkley
site. After experiencing problems with mold contamination
in her own home in the Conejo Valley, Brockovich
became a prominent activist and educator in this
area as well. Today, Brockovich is a noted speaker
in demand all over the U.S.
Popular culture
Her
story is the topic of a feature film, Erin Brockovich,
starring Julia Roberts in the title role. The
film was nominated for several Academy Awards,
including Best Actress in a Leading Role, Best
Actor in a Supporting Role, Best Director, Best
Picture, and Best Writing in a Screenplay Written
Directly for the Screen. Roberts won the Academy
Award for Best Actress for her portrayal of Erin
Brockovich. Erin Brockovich herself had a cameo
role as a waitress named Julia.
Recently
she featured in an advertising campaign for Noel
Leeming, a homeware chain from New Zealand.
After
the success of the film about her, Brockovich
was the target of a blackmail attempt by her old
boyfriend, George (played by Aaron Eckhart in
the film), one of her ex-husbands, and an attorney
who threatened to smear her reputation as a parent.
She called the police, who later arrested the
three for extortion after conducting a sting operation.
She
did a cameo appearance as herself in The Simpsons
Movie, but the scene ended up being cut. (Credit:
Wikipedia).
Websites
Erin
Brockovich official website
The
Brockovich Report - BrockovichBlog.com
Profiles
Social
and Community Entrepreneurs
Disclaimer:
Media Man Australia does not represent Erin Brockovich
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