15 Corporations. One Poisoned Lake. A Century of Impunity.
The federal government just named General Electric, Honeywell, Lockheed Martin, Bristol-Myers Squibb, RTX, Carrier, and nine other corporate giants in a CERCLA lawsuit over the Onondaga Lake Superfund Site. The lake near Syracuse, New York was so contaminated it was called the most polluted in America. Swimming was banned in 1940. Fishing in 1970. The cleanup bill? Taxpayers are footing it.
The Non-Financial Ledger: What Numbers Cannot Measure
Before we talk about the corporations, the lawsuits, and the dollar amounts, understand what was taken. Onondaga Lake is roughly 4.5 miles long, one mile wide, and sits just north of Syracuse, New York. Centuries before European settlement, the Haudenosaunee Confederacy — the Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, and Mohawk Nations — was formed on the shores of this lake. The Peacemaker brought warring nations together here. They laid down their arms. The lake became sacred ground, a symbol of the first representative democracy in the Western world.
By 1880, the salt industry and chemical manufacturers had found it. By 1901, ice harvesting had to stop because the ice was too contaminated to sell. By 1907, the state government was threatening legal action over waste being dumped directly into the water. By 1940, the water was too dangerous to swim in. By 1970, the fish were too toxic to eat.
“Mercury-contaminated waste was dumped directly into Onondaga Lake. It is estimated that Allied Chemical was dumping approximately 25 pounds of mercury into the lake per day.”
That dumping happened for decades. Allied Chemical Corporation — which would eventually become AlliedSignal, then merge with Honeywell — discharged an estimated 165,000 pounds of mercury into Onondaga Lake. Scientists estimate that 7 million cubic yards of lake-bottom sediment are contaminated as a result. The lake that the Onondaga Nation considers a sacred trust, a place of peace, became a receptacle for the byproducts of corporate profit.
Think about what that means for the people who lived alongside this water. Families who fished there for generations. Children who swam in it before the ban. The Onondaga Nation, who watched their sacred site fill with mercury, PCBs, chlorinated benzenes, and 45 other contaminants while the companies responsible posted profits on quarterly earnings statements. There is no settlement amount that compensates for what was destroyed. The consent decree filed on July 10, 2025 does not restore what was taken from the Haudenosaunee people. It does not give back the decades of lost fishing. It does not undo the contaminated groundwater that seeped into the surrounding community for over a century.
The corporations named in this lawsuit were not peripheral actors. General Electric, Carrier Corporation, National Grid, Niagara Mohawk Power — these are companies that operated facilities along Ley Creek and the surrounding watershed. Their industrial operations contributed contaminants to a system that eventually flows from Onondaga Lake into the Seneca River, then the Oswego River, and ultimately into Lake Ontario. The contamination these companies put into the ground did not stay in their industrial park. It moved. It spread. It entered the food chain. And for decade after decade, the cost of containing it was deferred, argued about in legal proceedings, or simply ignored.
“Every day, the lake carries that contamination forward. The corporations moved on. The community did not.”
The consent decree exists because after decades of deferred cleanup and shifting liability, the federal government finally filed suit under CERCLA to recover costs it had already spent cleaning up what these companies left behind. The legal system is catching up. The damage was done long before any courtroom opened.
Legal Receipts: Straight From the Court Documents
These are the facts as filed in the federal courthouse of the Northern District of New York on July 10, 2025. Civil No. 5:25-cv-904 (DNH/ML).
“In this action, the United States seeks, under section 107 of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (‘CERCLA’) from the defendants in this action reimbursement of costs incurred by EPA for response actions at the Upper Ley Creek Subsite (‘Site’) of the Onondaga Lake Superfund Site.”
Source: DOJ Complaint, Civil No. 5:25-cv-904, U.S. District Court, N.D.N.Y., Filed 07/10/2025, Page 1The complaint was brought by the United States of America, acting on behalf of the Regional Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 2. The case was filed by John A. Sarcone III, United States Attorney for the Northern District of New York, with Assistant United States Attorney John D. Hoggan, Jr. on the pleadings, and Of Counsel from EPA Region 2: James Doyle, Team Leader and Sarena Malsin, Assistant Regional Counsel.
On the same day the complaint was filed, the government simultaneously lodged a consent decree — meaning the corporations had already agreed to terms before the lawsuit became public. The consent decree signature pages reveal the full corporate roster and who signed on behalf of each defendant:
“The RACER Trust — the Revitalizing Auto Communities Environmental Response Trust — is the Administrative Trustee entity acting through EPLET, LLC, whose sole managing member is Elliott P. Laws. The RACER Trust holds properties left over from the General Motors bankruptcy.”
Source: Consent Decree Signature Pages, Civil No. 5:25-cv-904, Pages 36-37That last point matters enormously. The RACER Trust was created out of the General Motors bankruptcy to hold and remediate contaminated GM properties. It appears in this consent decree as the entity responsible for RACER Properties LLC and the broader RACER Trust liability. When GM went bankrupt in 2009, its environmental liabilities were not simply forgiven. They were placed into this trust. The trust, however, does not have unlimited resources. The EPA confirmed that RACER lacks sufficient funds to perform the actual Ley Creek construction cleanup — which is precisely why $23 million in federal taxpayer money from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law was deployed to start the work instead.
Societal Impact Mapping
Environmental Degradation
Onondaga Lake covers 4.6 square miles and drains a basin of approximately 285 square miles in Onondaga County, New York. Its water flows north into the Seneca River, then the Oswego River, and ultimately into Lake Ontario — one of the Great Lakes. This is not a closed system. Contamination introduced into Onondaga Lake and its tributaries like Ley Creek is connected to one of the largest freshwater systems on Earth.
The lake contains 48 distinct contaminants and stressors identified in water, sediment, soil, plants, and fish. The primary ones include mercury, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), chlorinated benzenes, BTEX compounds (benzene, ethylbenzene, toluene, and xylene), lead, cobalt, and arsenic. These were not accidentally spilled. They were the routine byproducts of industrial operations that these corporations ran for profit, dumped into waterways and soil, and then walked away from.
The Ley Creek subsite specifically is contaminated with PCBs and metals. The remediation plan calls for excavating approximately 144,000 cubic yards of contaminated floodplain soil and 9,600 cubic yards of contaminated sediment from the creek bottom. That is the physical scale of what was left behind.
Ley Creek Remediation: Scale of Contaminated Material to be Excavated
Public Health
When 165,000 pounds of mercury enter a lake’s sediment, it does not stay put. Mercury bioaccumulates. It works its way up the food chain: microorganisms absorb it from sediment, small fish eat the microorganisms, larger fish eat the smaller fish, and the mercury concentration multiplies at each step. Mercury has been measured in fish from Onondaga Lake at levels that far surpass federal and state safety standards. The fishing ban that went into effect in 1970 was not precautionary. It was a response to documented contamination of a food source that communities had relied on for generations.
PCBs — polychlorinated biphenyls — are persistent organic pollutants. They do not break down in the environment on any human timescale. They are linked to cancer, immune system disruption, reproductive harm, and developmental damage in children. The PCBs introduced into Ley Creek and the broader Onondaga Lake system by companies like General Electric, Carrier Corporation, and National Grid are still in the sediment. They will remain there until excavated — and excavation does not begin until spring 2027 at the earliest.
The people most harmed were those with the least ability to leave or to access alternative food sources. Low-income communities near the lake. The Onondaga Nation, whose land rights and sacred relationship to the lake placed them directly in the path of the contamination and directly excluded from any meaningful corporate accountability for decades.
Economic Inequality
The corporations named in this lawsuit made money from the operations that contaminated this watershed. GE made products. Carrier made air conditioning systems. Lockheed Martin built weapons systems. Bristol-Myers Squibb made pharmaceuticals. None of these profit streams required those companies to absorb the cost of the environmental damage their operations caused. That cost was externalized — pushed onto the public, onto the ecosystem, onto the communities living downstream.
The NYSDEC estimates Honeywell’s total remediation costs alone at $451 million. That number represents only one company’s share of the cleanup of a site that took over a century to contaminate. The RACER Trust, created to handle the General Motors bankruptcy portion of the liability, does not have enough money to build the Ley Creek cleanup. So $23 million in federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding — your tax dollars — were deployed to start the work. Another $7 million from a separate bankruptcy settlement was also allocated. Corporate liability transformed into public debt, again.
“This issue has languished for decades and proper removal of PCBs from soil and sediments from the GM site and Ley Creek streambed is long overdue.” — Edward Michalenko, Ph.D., President, Onondaga Environmental Institute
The “Cost of a Life” Metric
CERCLA — the Superfund law — allows the government to pursue cost recovery from responsible parties. But the corporations have to be sued to pay. While the lawsuit works through the courts, here is the math of corporate externalization in plain view:
What Now: The Watchlist and the Next Steps
The consent decree has been signed. The lawsuit is filed. The court must now approve the decree. The EPA has confirmed that construction of the Ley Creek remediation is scheduled to begin spring 2027 and will take three to four years to complete. The Lower Ley Creek cleanup is separately still in design phase under a different enforcement agreement.
These are the corporate executives and legal representatives whose signatures are on this consent decree. These are the people who signed off:
For General Electric: Andrew J. Thomas, Jr. (Managing Director and Chief Counsel, Environmental Program) and Eric Merrifield (Executive Counsel, Environmental, Health and Safety). For Honeywell: Charles Anthony (VP and General Counsel, HSEPS). For Lockheed Martin: Kerri R. Morey (VP and General Counsel, Rotary and Mission Systems) and Todd W. Billmire (Assistant General Counsel, Corporate Environmental, Safety and Health Law). For Bristol-Myers Squibb: William S. Pufko (Senior Corporate Counsel) and Donald C. Le Gower (VP, Litigation and Government Investigations). For RTX Corporation: Seth Huttner (VP, Chief Litigation Counsel).
Regulatory Watchlist: Who Has Authority Over This Case
- EPA Region 2 — Primary federal enforcement agency. Oversees Onondaga Lake Superfund cleanup. Contact: 290 Broadway, New York, NY 10007.
- NYSDEC Region 7 — New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. Responsible for state-level enforcement agreements with PRPs at all Onondaga Lake subsites.
- DOJ Environment and Natural Resources Division — Filed and is prosecuting Civil No. 5:25-cv-904.
- U.S. District Court, Northern District of New York — Presiding court. The consent decree must be court-approved within 60 days of lodging.
- SEC — All publicly traded defendants (GE, Honeywell, Lockheed Martin, Bristol-Myers Squibb, RTX, Carrier, National Grid, Magna) are required to disclose material environmental liabilities in their 10-K filings. Cross-reference those filings against this consent decree.
- Onondaga Nation — The sovereign nation whose sacred lake is at the center of this case. Their land rights advocacy and documentation of contamination impacts are at onondaganation.org.
If you live in Onondaga County, Central New York, or anywhere downstream along the Seneca River or Oswego watershed, here is what you can do right now:
Contact the Onondaga Environmental Institute (oei2.org) — a community science organization that has been monitoring the lake for decades. Their data is public and their advocacy work directly supports community residents. The Onondaga Nation has an active land rights and lake restoration program at onondaganation.org. Both organizations accept volunteers, community data reporters, and financial support. If you are a downstream community member near the Seneca or Oswego Rivers, the Atlantic States Legal Foundation (ASLF) based in Syracuse has a documented history of citizen legal action on Onondaga Lake — they filed the original 1987 Clean Water Act lawsuit that helped start the enforcement process. Find your local mutual aid networks through Onondaga County’s community resource directories, as cleanup delays mean health risks continue for residents near the site.
Monitor the court docket for Civil No. 5:25-cv-904 (DNH/ML) in the Northern District of New York for any challenge to the consent decree during its 60-day public comment period. Public comment on federal consent decrees is a legal right. Use it.
The source documents for this investigation are attached below.
This consent decree can be found on the Department of Justice’s website: https://www.justice.gov/enrd/media/1407736/dl?inline
You can find this legal complaint on the DOJ’s website: https://www.justice.gov/enrd/media/1407731/dl?inline
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