Fertilizer Makers Place Blame on City in West, Texas, Explosion

August 4, 2014

Two fertilizer companies that sued following a deadly Texas explosion are claiming the small town deserves blame for failing to properly train volunteer firefighters and first responders, who made up most of the 15 people killed by the blast.

El Dorado Chemical Co. and CF Industries argued in a state district court in Waco that the city of West, which has about 2,800 people, had insufficient protocols in place to battle the April 2013 blaze at West Fertilizer Co. that triggered the explosion.

The fertilizers suppliers are now seeking to have the city designated as a “responsible third party” in lawsuits filed against the companies, the Waco-Tribune Herald reported on July 26.

The Texas State Fire Marshal’s Office concluded in a report published in May that members of the West Volunteer Fire Department arrived at the scene that day unprepared for the dangers.

“The Texas State Fire Marshal also determined that strategies and tactics utilized by the WVFD were not appropriate for the situation and unnecessarily exposed the firefighters, many of whom have brought claims against the CF defendants in this matter, to extreme risks,” CF Industries says in the motion.

A motion from El Dorado also alleges that the city should be named as a responsible third party because it failed to protect its citizens by allowing through its zoning authority schools and a nursing home to operate in a close proximity to the plant.

Waco attorney Steve Harrison, who represents the city of West in the lawsuit as well as many of those killed or injured in the blast, said it is common in lawsuits for defendants to blame everyone but themselves.

“Some things really just don’t need any comment,” Harrison said.

West Mayor Tommy Muska, who also is a volunteer firefighter, declined comment on the motions by the company, saying he cannot discuss pending litigation on the advice of Harrison.

About 200 plaintiffs, including families of those killed and injured, have filed lawsuits in the wake of the blast. State District Judge Jim Meyer has divided them into three trials, with the first scheduled to begin in July 2015.