Residents will be able to resubmit Chemtool claims that didn't go through
"This process should capture all those class members," says attorney Dan Flynn.
Thousands of residents filed claims before the September 12, 2024 deadline to receive their portion of a $94.5 million settlement from the 2021 Chemtool explosion and fire.
Later the claims administrator told dozens of these residents that there was no record of their claims, each of which is worth thousands of dollars. Now hundreds more are wondering if their claims were lost too.
But attorney Dan Flynn of DiCello Levitt has good news. On October 19, he told us that the claims administrator, Analytics Consulting, has found records of the online claims that errored out. Doug Clayburg of South Beloit, one of the class members in the Chemtool lawsuit, had been pressing Flynn for a solution.
Everyone who submitted a missing or incomplete claim should receive a notice soon telling them they have 30 days to resubmit their claim. For questions, you can email Chemtoolclassaction@noticeadministrator.com or call 833-457-5350.
In the next week or two, Flynn said, the claims administrator "will be sending out deficiency notices to all class members who timely submitted a paper claim that did not contain all the requisite information and all class members who attempted to submit a claim online that did not go through for whatever reason."
Flynn says, "As part of that process, each class member who receives a deficiency notice will have 30 days to submit a completed claim form." Since none of our editors are class members, Flynn told us he would inform Doug Clayburg when the notices have been sent.
When Judge Stephen E. Balogh approved the final settlement on Friday, Sept. 27, 2024, he mentioned that only 2,300 claims had been sent in. That's a typical response rate for class action lawsuits, which usually offer much smaller payments than this one. Now it turns out the actual number was higher.
Another attorney, Ed Manzke, has also been investigating the problem of missing claims. Though he didn't keep a count of how many residents he referred back to the claims administrator, he presumably convinced them to stop replying to these residents with statements such as "You are not eligible" or "It is too late."
However, this "second chance" only applies to those who filed their claims before the September 12, deadline. It doesn't apply to those who didn't file at all or who didn't live within a three-mile radius of the Chemtool factory. In mid-June 2024, more than 6,000 people were sent a letter inviting them to file their claim online or to download a claim form from the website.
But Flynn says, "This process should capture all those class members" whose claims were incomplete or lost.
Flynn doesn't know the exact number of missed claims. Flynn says, "While Ed and I do not have the precise number yet since Analytics is still going through the claims data, it is more than 24" which was Manzke's original count.
Residents could receive their payments between December 2024 and January 2025.
Flynn and Manzke are two of the nine personal injury attorneys representing Stateline residents and businesses in the class action lawsuit. Based in Chicago, Flynn specializes in health and the environment. Besides the Chemtool fire, his cases have involved PFAS contamination in Cordova, Illinois and carcinogenic chlorinated solvents in Union, Illinois.
Related stories from our archive
- Chemtool deadline is Saturday, Nov. 23, 2024
- Residents will be able to resubmit Chemtool claims that didn't go through
- Chemtool claims from more than 100 Rockton residents may be missing
- Missing Chemtool claims are being investigated
- Judge approves Chemtool settlement
- Residents near Chemtool can file claims for a portion of the $94.5 million settlement
- Judge will issue preliminary approval of Chemtool settlement in next few weeks
- Blackhawk Acres residents can connect to Rockton water at no charge
- The unfolding legal chronicles of Chemtool, Lubrizol, Rockton, and Holian
- Chemtool cleans up, lawsuits warm up
- The EPA found metals in Rockton water in 2004, but not enough to keep testing for them.
- Heavy metals found in Rockton neighborhood groundwater, may not be new
- Chemtool finally estimates what burned in the fire and what was released over Rockton
- Chemtool hasn't released list of materials, says fire reduced everything to its elemental form
- Chemtool fire: officials claim they're gathering information, not holding it back
- Chemtool responds to state lawsuit
- State attorneys file suit against Chemtool for environmental recovery
- Environmental expert: be concerned about years, not days, of exposure to chemicals
- Rockton fire chief: Chemtool contractor released mineral oil, ignition occurred
- Chemtool fire dwindles, cleanup continues, lawsuits emerge
- Rockton air quality remains stable, Chemtool will pay for debris cleanup and evacuee expenses
- Chemtool employees still being paid, Rockton still under evacuation order
- Lubrizol employees in France think they've seen this smoke plume before
- Gov. Pritzker sends National Guard to respond to chemical fire in Rockton