KIMBERLY LIFTON Staff Writer S tanding beside his boss in the town of Asbestos, Quebec, Dr. Kenneth Smith stared at the dust coming from a large open pit at the Johns- Manville Corp. mill. It was the late 1940s and Dr. Smith, then the com- pany's assistant medical of- ficer, heard his boss say, "My God, why didn't we build the town on that hill over there instead of having the dust going all over it?" The men saw bundles of fiber and other remains from the mine rolling like tumbleweed down the main streets of the town. Dr. Smith knew it was time to put warning labels on pro- ducts containing asbestos, advising that it could create airborne dust which is harm- ful — sometimes deadly — when inhaled. In a deposition taken for a lawsuit against Johns- Manville on behalf of a man who died from asbestos cancer, Dr. Smith quoted his superiors: "In general the response was, 'Yes, doctor, it's very interesting, very probably factual. We recog- nize the potential hazard that you mentioned, the suggested use of a caution label. We will discuss it among ourselves and make a decision.' " Some 30 years later, Johns-Manville Corp. placed warning labels on products containing asbestos. Other manufactuers followed the company's lead. Yet it wasn't until 1985, three years after Manville filed for protection with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court due to overwhelming lawsuits, that the company removed all asbestos from its products, using fiberglass as a substitute. I n his Birmingham office, attorney Michael Serling is piecing together final documents for claims on behalf of 56 Israeli factory workers from the Isasbest plant in Nahariya. Each worker suffers from some ailment associated with asbestos, a mineral fiber extracted from rock mined' primarily in Canada, South Africa and the Soviet Union. Known for its super strength, asbestos is an in- destructible product once 'used routinely in the United States for fireproofing, in- sulation and pipe covering. "I refer to this subject as industrial Holocaust," says Serling, who has made a ca- reer out of asbestos injury cases since taking on Mich- igan's first precedent-setting case in 1975. "It's a slow death." The Israelis are seeking compensation from the Johns-Manville Personal In- jury Settlement Trust, a fund of over $2 billion set up in 1988 to settle claims against the massive com- pany once known as the un- disputed leader of asbestos manufacturers. Before it removed asbestos from its products, Manville was the largest manufacturer of raw asbestos to Isasbest, now called Etanit. With the aid of an Israeli attorney, Serling hopes to settle the cases within the Michael Serling next two months. An addi- tional 51 asbestos injury cases from the Israeli factory are pending. Of the workers fighting the Johns-Manville trust, 36 suffer from asbestosis, a degenerative disease which scars the lungs, makes breathing difficult and can be fatal in its advanced stages; 12 have mesothelioma, cancer of the lung lining which medical experts say is always ter- minal; three have lung cancer. The remainder face related ailments. Serling accepted the case after a trip to Israel in 1984. Through a friend whom he met while living in Israel for a year in 1971, he met a reporter who had been in- vestigating asbestos. "The reporter found scores of deaths from the plant, which employed nearly 500 people," Serling says. "Their only hope was to plug them into our system." Etanit still imports asbestos for insulation pro- ducts. Workers wear protec- tive equipment when handl- ing the material. Despite its use in other parts of the world, strict government regulations now prevent U.S. companies from using asbestos in the con- struction industry. Small amounts are still used for brake linings in automobiles, but asbestos will be phased out of the in- dustry within eight years under a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency mandate. Johns-Manville is just one of about 40 companies targeted for lawsuits and in- jury claims. Manville shock- ed the nation when it filed for protection in 1982 with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court. At the time a $2 billion-a- year manufacturer of insula- tion products for the building industry traded on the New York Stock Exchange, Manville claimed lawsuits over asbestos would be overpowering in the corn- ing years. It took six years to work out a plan to compen- sate the estimated 130,000 claims filed throughout the world against the company. Manville, which emerged from Chapter 11 in November 1988, today esti- mates its annual assets at $2.2 billion. Serling is one of a few Michigan attorneys handl- ing asbestos litigation cases. He has devoted his entire profession to asbestos litiga- tion since the first case in 1975, recovering millions of dollars for victims. With offices in Birm- ingham and Saginaw and a staff of 25 including four at- torneys, Serling boasts he has enough work to specialize in the relatively new field of worker's com- pensation from asbestos in- jury. In Michigan, 1,500 asbestos injury cases have been settled or are pending. Of those, Serling's cases number 600. The first case netted $200,000 in an out-of-court settlement for the widow of an asbestos insulator who died from mesothelioma. "I couldn't find anyone to help me handle the case in 1975," Serling says. "I look- ed to my seniors in the pro- fession. No one knew anything. So I started doing research." On Serling's client roster are occupationally exposed individuals such as asbestos insulators, pipe fitters, boilermakers, carpenters, plumbers, plasterers, drywall handlers, bricklayers and plant workers in Michigan, a half dozen other states and Israel. Serling also is represent- ing government, hospitals and. private building owners, who are seeking compensa- tion for the costly process of removing asbestos. Among the cases is a state-wide asbestos school class action lawsuit in which Akiva Heb- rew Day School is listed as a plaintiff. ❑ THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 57