[{"content":"IW Iron Workers in Illinois Illinois was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to power plants (Commonwealth Edison + Ameren), refineries (Marathon + Phillips), steel (US Steel Granite City + National Steel), auto (Chrysler + Ford Chicago area), chemical (BASF/Amoco Chicago-adjacent), Chicago high-rise construction — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\nPlaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW members applied, removed, worked adjacent to, and disturbed chrysotile-bearing and amphibole-bearing asbestos-containing materials throughout every working day of the asbestos era. The trade carries one of the highest documented mesothelioma rates of any occupational group in federal health research.\nIW Locals Covering Illinois The following Local unions of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organize structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers in Illinois:\nLocal 1 — Chicago Local 63 — Chicago Local 111 — Rock Island Local 112 — Peoria Local 392 — East Alton Local 393 — Waukegan Local 444 — Joliet Local 498 — Rockford Local 499 — Springfield For the full Local history, dispatch territory, and the products members handled, see each Local\u0026rsquo;s dedicated page above.\nIllinois Statute of Limitations for IW Asbestos Claims The Illinois asbestos personal injury statute of limitations is 2 years from diagnosis under 735 ILCS 5/13-213. This deadline runs from the date of confirmed mesothelioma, asbestosis, or asbestos-related lung cancer diagnosis — not from the date of exposure, which may have occurred 30–50 years earlier.\nIW Iron Workers who worked in Illinois during the asbestos era and have been diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease should consult an asbestos attorney promptly. The deadline is strict and individual.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nIllinois Asbestos Jobsite Research For the full catalog of Illinois facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly worked — including power plants, refineries, steel mills, and major industrial sites — see the partner state research archive:\nIllinois Asbestos Exposure Archive →\nThe state archive covers jobsite-level facility records, federal NESHAP data, and the documented defendants whose products were present at Illinois industrial sites.\nFor informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Statute of limitations periods should be confirmed with a licensed attorney in Illinois. © 2026 Rights Watch Media Group LLC.\n","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/states/illinois/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-in-illinois\"\u003eIW Iron Workers in Illinois\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eIllinois was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to power plants (Commonwealth Edison + Ameren), refineries (Marathon + Phillips), steel (US Steel Granite City + National Steel), auto (Chrysler + Ford Chicago area), chemical (BASF/Amoco Chicago-adjacent), Chicago high-rise construction — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\u003c/p\u003e","title":"Illinois IW Iron Workers — Asbestos Exposure \u0026 Claims"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers in Indiana Indiana was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Gary/Burns Harbor integrated steel mills (US Steel, Bethlehem, National Steel), refineries (BP Whiting), power plants (Duke Energy/AEP), Fort Wayne GE motors + Studebaker/Bloomington-Muncie Westinghouse — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\nPlaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW members applied, removed, worked adjacent to, and disturbed chrysotile-bearing and amphibole-bearing asbestos-containing materials throughout every working day of the asbestos era. The trade carries one of the highest documented mesothelioma rates of any occupational group in federal health research.\nIW Locals Covering Indiana The following Local unions of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organize structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers in Indiana:\nLocal 22 — Indianapolis Local 103 — Evansville Local 292 — Hammond Local 395 — Hammond For the full Local history, dispatch territory, and the products members handled, see each Local\u0026rsquo;s dedicated page above.\nIndiana Statute of Limitations for IW Asbestos Claims The Indiana asbestos personal injury statute of limitations is 2 years from discovery under Ind. Code § 34-11-2-4. This deadline runs from the date of confirmed mesothelioma, asbestosis, or asbestos-related lung cancer diagnosis — not from the date of exposure, which may have occurred 30–50 years earlier.\nIW Iron Workers who worked in Indiana during the asbestos era and have been diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease should consult an asbestos attorney promptly. The deadline is strict and individual.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nIndiana Asbestos Jobsite Research For the full catalog of Indiana facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly worked — including power plants, refineries, steel mills, and major industrial sites — see the partner state research archive:\nIndiana Asbestos Exposure Archive →\nThe state archive covers jobsite-level facility records, federal NESHAP data, and the documented defendants whose products were present at Indiana industrial sites.\nFor informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Statute of limitations periods should be confirmed with a licensed attorney in Indiana. © 2026 Rights Watch Media Group LLC.\n","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/states/indiana/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-in-indiana\"\u003eIW Iron Workers in Indiana\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eIndiana was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Gary/Burns Harbor integrated steel mills (US Steel, Bethlehem, National Steel), refineries (BP Whiting), power plants (Duke Energy/AEP), Fort Wayne GE motors + Studebaker/Bloomington-Muncie Westinghouse — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\u003c/p\u003e","title":"Indiana IW Iron Workers — Asbestos Exposure \u0026 Claims"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers in Iowa Iowa was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Cedar Rapids Square D + Amana refrigeration, Waterloo John Deere, Quad Cities nuclear, grain-elevator + ethanol/food processing plants across the state — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\nPlaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW members applied, removed, worked adjacent to, and disturbed chrysotile-bearing and amphibole-bearing asbestos-containing materials throughout every working day of the asbestos era. The trade carries one of the highest documented mesothelioma rates of any occupational group in federal health research.\nIW Locals Covering Iowa The following Local unions of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organize structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers in Iowa:\nLocal 67 — Des Moines Local 89 — Cedar Rapids Local 577 — Burlington For the full Local history, dispatch territory, and the products members handled, see each Local\u0026rsquo;s dedicated page above.\nIowa Statute of Limitations for IW Asbestos Claims The Iowa asbestos personal injury statute of limitations is 2 years from diagnosis under Iowa Code § 614.1. This deadline runs from the date of confirmed mesothelioma, asbestosis, or asbestos-related lung cancer diagnosis — not from the date of exposure, which may have occurred 30–50 years earlier.\nIW Iron Workers who worked in Iowa during the asbestos era and have been diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease should consult an asbestos attorney promptly. The deadline is strict and individual.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nIowa Asbestos Jobsite Research For the full catalog of Iowa facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly worked — including power plants, refineries, steel mills, and major industrial sites — see the partner state research archive:\nIowa Asbestos Exposure Archive →\nThe state archive covers jobsite-level facility records, federal NESHAP data, and the documented defendants whose products were present at Iowa industrial sites.\nFor informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Statute of limitations periods should be confirmed with a licensed attorney in Iowa. © 2026 Rights Watch Media Group LLC.\n","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/states/iowa/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-in-iowa\"\u003eIW Iron Workers in Iowa\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eIowa was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Cedar Rapids Square D + Amana refrigeration, Waterloo John Deere, Quad Cities nuclear, grain-elevator + ethanol/food processing plants across the state — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\u003c/p\u003e","title":"Iowa IW Iron Workers — Asbestos Exposure \u0026 Claims"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 1 — Chicago, IL Local 1 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Chicago, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 1 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 1 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 1 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 1 in the Chicago, IL jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-1/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-1--chicago-il\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 1 — Chicago, IL\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 1 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Chicago, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 1 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 1 — Chicago, IL"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 10 — Kansas City, MO Local 10 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Kansas City, MO jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 10 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 10 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 10 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 10 in the Kansas City, MO jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-10/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-10--kansas-city-mo\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 10 — Kansas City, MO\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 10 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Kansas City, MO jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 10 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 10 — Kansas City, MO"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 103 — Evansville, IN Local 103 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Evansville, IN jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 103 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 103 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 103 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 103 in the Evansville, IN jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-103/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-103--evansville-in\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 103 — Evansville, IN\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 103 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Evansville, IN jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 103 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 103 — Evansville, IN"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 111 — Rock Island, IL Local 111 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Rock Island, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 111 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 111 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 111 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 111 in the Rock Island, IL jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-111/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-111--rock-island-il\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 111 — Rock Island, IL\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 111 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Rock Island, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 111 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 111 — Rock Island, IL"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 112 — Peoria, IL Local 112 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Peoria, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 112 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 112 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 112 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 112 in the Peoria, IL jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-112/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-112--peoria-il\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 112 — Peoria, IL\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 112 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Peoria, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 112 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 112 — Peoria, IL"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 17 — Cleveland, OH Local 17 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Cleveland, OH jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 17 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 17 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 17 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 17 in the Cleveland, OH jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-17/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-17--cleveland-oh\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 17 — Cleveland, OH\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 17 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Cleveland, OH jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 17 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 17 — Cleveland, OH"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 172 — Columbus, OH Local 172 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Columbus, OH jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 172 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 172 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 172 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 172 in the Columbus, OH jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-172/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-172--columbus-oh\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 172 — Columbus, OH\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 172 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Columbus, OH jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 172 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 172 — Columbus, OH"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 2 — St. Louis, MO Local 2 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the St. Louis, MO jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 2 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 2 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 2 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 2 in the St. Louis, MO jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-2/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-2--st-louis-mo\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 2 — St. Louis, MO\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 2 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the St. Louis, MO jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 2 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 2 — St. Louis, MO"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 21 — Omaha, NE Local 21 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Omaha, NE jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 21 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 21 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 21 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 21 in the Omaha, NE jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-21/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-21--omaha-ne\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 21 — Omaha, NE\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 21 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Omaha, NE jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 21 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 21 — Omaha, NE"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 22 — Indianapolis, IN Local 22 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Indianapolis, IN jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 22 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 22 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 22 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 22 in the Indianapolis, IN jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-22/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-22--indianapolis-in\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 22 — Indianapolis, IN\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 22 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Indianapolis, IN jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 22 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 22 — Indianapolis, IN"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 25 — Detroit, MI Local 25 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Detroit, MI jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 25 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 25 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 25 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 25 in the Detroit, MI jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-25/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-25--detroit-mi\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 25 — Detroit, MI\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 25 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Detroit, MI jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 25 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 25 — Detroit, MI"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 292 — Hammond, IN Local 292 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Hammond, IN jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 292 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 292 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 292 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 292 in the Hammond, IN jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-292/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-292--hammond-in\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 292 — Hammond, IN\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 292 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Hammond, IN jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 292 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 292 — Hammond, IN"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 340 — Battle Creek, MI Local 340 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Battle Creek, MI jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 340 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 340 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 340 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 340 in the Battle Creek, MI jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-340/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-340--battle-creek-mi\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 340 — Battle Creek, MI\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 340 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Battle Creek, MI jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 340 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 340 — Battle Creek, MI"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 372 — Cincinnati, OH Local 372 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Cincinnati, OH jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 372 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 372 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 372 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 372 in the Cincinnati, OH jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-372/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-372--cincinnati-oh\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 372 — Cincinnati, OH\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 372 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Cincinnati, OH jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 372 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 372 — Cincinnati, OH"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 383 — Madison, WI Local 383 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Madison, WI jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 383 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 383 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 383 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 383 in the Madison, WI jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-383/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-383--madison-wi\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 383 — Madison, WI\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 383 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Madison, WI jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 383 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 383 — Madison, WI"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 392 — East Alton, IL Local 392 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the East Alton, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 392 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 392 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 392 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 392 in the East Alton, IL jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-392/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-392--east-alton-il\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 392 — East Alton, IL\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 392 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the East Alton, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 392 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 392 — East Alton, IL"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 393 — Waukegan, IL Local 393 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Waukegan, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 393 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 393 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 393 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 393 in the Waukegan, IL jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-393/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-393--waukegan-il\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 393 — Waukegan, IL\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 393 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Waukegan, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 393 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 393 — Waukegan, IL"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 395 — Hammond, IN Local 395 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Hammond, IN jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 395 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 395 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 395 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 395 in the Hammond, IN jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-395/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-395--hammond-in\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 395 — Hammond, IN\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 395 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Hammond, IN jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 395 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 395 — Hammond, IN"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 396 — St. Louis, MO Local 396 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the St. Louis, MO jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 396 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 396 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 396 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 396 in the St. Louis, MO jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-396/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-396--st-louis-mo\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 396 — St. Louis, MO\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 396 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the St. Louis, MO jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 396 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 396 — St. Louis, MO"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 44 — Cincinnati, OH Local 44 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Cincinnati, OH jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 44 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 44 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 44 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 44 in the Cincinnati, OH jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-44/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-44--cincinnati-oh\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 44 — Cincinnati, OH\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 44 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Cincinnati, OH jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 44 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 44 — Cincinnati, OH"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 444 — Joliet, IL Local 444 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Joliet, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 444 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 444 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 444 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 444 in the Joliet, IL jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-444/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-444--joliet-il\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 444 — Joliet, IL\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 444 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Joliet, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 444 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 444 — Joliet, IL"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 498 — Rockford, IL Local 498 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Rockford, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 498 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 498 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 498 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 498 in the Rockford, IL jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-498/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-498--rockford-il\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 498 — Rockford, IL\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 498 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Rockford, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 498 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 498 — Rockford, IL"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 499 — Springfield, IL Local 499 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Springfield, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 499 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 499 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 499 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 499 in the Springfield, IL jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-499/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-499--springfield-il\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 499 — Springfield, IL\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 499 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Springfield, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 499 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 499 — Springfield, IL"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 508 — Escanaba, MI Local 508 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Escanaba, MI jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 508 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 508 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 508 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 508 in the Escanaba, MI jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-508/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-508--escanaba-mi\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 508 — Escanaba, MI\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 508 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Escanaba, MI jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 508 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 508 — Escanaba, MI"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 512 — Superior, WI Local 512 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Superior, WI jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 512 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 512 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 512 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 512 in the Superior, WI jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-512/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-512--superior-wi\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 512 — Superior, WI\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 512 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Superior, WI jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 512 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 512 — Superior, WI"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 55 — Toledo, OH Local 55 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Toledo, OH jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 55 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 55 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 55 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 55 in the Toledo, OH jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-55/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-55--toledo-oh\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 55 — Toledo, OH\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 55 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Toledo, OH jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 55 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 55 — Toledo, OH"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 550 — Canton, OH Local 550 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Canton, OH jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 550 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 550 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 550 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 550 in the Canton, OH jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-550/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-550--canton-oh\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 550 — Canton, OH\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 550 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Canton, OH jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 550 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 550 — Canton, OH"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 577 — Burlington, IA Local 577 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Burlington, IA jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 577 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 577 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 577 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 577 in the Burlington, IA jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-577/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-577--burlington-ia\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 577 — Burlington, IA\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 577 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Burlington, IA jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 577 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 577 — Burlington, IA"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 606 — Kansas City, KS Local 606 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Kansas City, KS jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 606 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 606 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 606 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 606 in the Kansas City, KS jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-606/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-606--kansas-city-ks\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 606 — Kansas City, KS\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 606 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Kansas City, KS jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 606 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 606 — Kansas City, KS"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 619 — Springfield, MO Local 619 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Springfield, MO jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 619 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 619 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 619 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 619 in the Springfield, MO jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-619/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-619--springfield-mo\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 619 — Springfield, MO\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 619 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Springfield, MO jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 619 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 619 — Springfield, MO"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 63 — Chicago, IL Local 63 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Chicago, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 63 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 63 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 63 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 63 in the Chicago, IL jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-63/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-63--chicago-il\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 63 — Chicago, IL\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 63 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Chicago, IL jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 63 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 63 — Chicago, IL"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 67 — Des Moines, IA Local 67 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Des Moines, IA jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 67 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 67 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 67 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 67 in the Des Moines, IA jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-67/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-67--des-moines-ia\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 67 — Des Moines, IA\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 67 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Des Moines, IA jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 67 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 67 — Des Moines, IA"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 70 — Louisville, KY Local 70 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Louisville, KY jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 70 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 70 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 70 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 70 in the Louisville, KY jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-70/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-70--louisville-ky\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 70 — Louisville, KY\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 70 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Louisville, KY jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 70 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 70 — Louisville, KY"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 751 — Wichita, KS Local 751 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Wichita, KS jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 751 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 751 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 751 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 751 in the Wichita, KS jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-751/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-751--wichita-ks\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 751 — Wichita, KS\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 751 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Wichita, KS jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 751 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 751 — Wichita, KS"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 782 — Ashland, KY Local 782 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Ashland, KY jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 782 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 782 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 782 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 782 in the Ashland, KY jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-782/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-782--ashland-ky\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 782 — Ashland, KY\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 782 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Ashland, KY jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 782 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 782 — Ashland, KY"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 8 — Milwaukee, WI Local 8 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Milwaukee, WI jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 8 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 8 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 8 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 8 in the Milwaukee, WI jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-8/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-8--milwaukee-wi\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 8 — Milwaukee, WI\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 8 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Milwaukee, WI jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 8 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 8 — Milwaukee, WI"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers Local 89 — Cedar Rapids, IA Local 89 of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Cedar Rapids, IA jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 89 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\nIW Iron Workers Trade — Asbestos Exposure Overview Iron Workers in the International Association (IW / IABSORIW) are the U.S. trade responsible for erecting the structural steel skeletons of high-rise buildings, bridges, power plants, refineries, steel mills, industrial process plants, and Navy shipyards; installing reinforcing steel (rebar) in concrete construction; setting precast panels; installing ornamental ironwork; and rigging heavy machinery. Across the U.S. asbestos era, plaintiffs alleged that iron workers were exposed to airborne chrysotile asbestos every time they worked overhead beneath sprayed asbestos fireproofing on structural steel — a coating that the Iron Workers trade was uniquely proximate to during every hour of every steel-erection workday from the mid-1950s through the 1973 U.S. EPA ban.\nIW members allegedly worked in direct contact with sprayed asbestos-cementitious fireproofing (W.R. Grace Monokote MK-3, U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield, Asbestospray Limpet, Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt, Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux, Spraycraft, National Gypsum Audicote, CertainTeed sprayed fireproofing) — sprayed onto the structural steel WHILE iron workers were still connecting bolts and welding beams overhead. IW members also worked around asbestos-cement roofing sheet + siding (CertainTeed Transite, Johns-Manville Transite, Nicolet) they connected steel-frame buildings to, asbestos-refractory brick + castable in the steel-mill blast furnaces + BOFs + coke ovens they were erecting the structural steel for, and asbestos pipe covering + asbestos gaskets on the process piping they set beams around at refineries and power plants.\nDocumented ACM Product Vectors Named in IW Litigation Products from AP defendant manufacturers that plaintiffs alleged were used, installed, or otherwise present at IW Local 89 jobsites during the asbestos era:\nW.R. Grace Monokote MK-3 Sprayed Cementitious Fireproofing U.S. Mineral Products Cafco Blaze-Shield Sprayed Fireproofing Asbestospray Corporation Limpet Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Keasbey \u0026amp; Mattison Airfelt Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing CertainTeed Corporation Sprayed Asbestos Fireproofing Baldwin-Ehret-Hill Thermalux Sprayed Fireproofing Certainteed Transite Corrugated Asbestos-Cement Roofing Sheet Bird Incorporated Asbestos-Cement Siding Shingles Harbison-Walker Asbestos-Bonded Blast Furnace Refractory Brick Johns-Manville Marinite Asbestos-Cement Marine Bulkhead Panel If You Are a Retired IW Iron Workers Local 89 Member If you or a family member worked as a structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron worker — including as an apprentice, journeyman, foreman, or shop supervisor — under IW Local 89 in the Cedar Rapids, IA jurisdiction during the asbestos era, and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestos lung cancer, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease, you may have a legal claim.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nRelated IW Iron Workers Trade — History \u0026amp; Asbestos Era IW Iron Workers Asbestos Workplaces Asbestos Diseases — IW Iron Workers Asbestos Products — IW Iron Workers ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/locals/local-89/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-local-89--cedar-rapids-ia\"\u003eIW Iron Workers Local 89 — Cedar Rapids, IA\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eLocal 89 of the \u003cstrong\u003eInternational Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers\u003c/strong\u003e (IW) organizes the structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers trade in the Cedar Rapids, IA jurisdiction. Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW Local 89 members were exposed to asbestos-containing materials at industrial, institutional, and construction jobsites across the local jurisdiction throughout the U.S. asbestos era (approximately 1930s-1980).\u003c/p\u003e","title":"IW Iron Workers Local 89 — Cedar Rapids, IA"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers in Kansas Kansas was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Kansas City industrial + Boeing/Beech aviation Wichita, grain-elevator + flour mill operations, Kerr-McGee + refineries, Fort Riley + Fort Leavenworth military installations — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\nPlaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW members applied, removed, worked adjacent to, and disturbed chrysotile-bearing and amphibole-bearing asbestos-containing materials throughout every working day of the asbestos era. The trade carries one of the highest documented mesothelioma rates of any occupational group in federal health research.\nIW Locals Covering Kansas The following Local unions of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organize structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers in Kansas:\nLocal 606 — Kansas City Local 751 — Wichita For the full Local history, dispatch territory, and the products members handled, see each Local\u0026rsquo;s dedicated page above.\nKansas Statute of Limitations for IW Asbestos Claims The Kansas asbestos personal injury statute of limitations is 2 years from injury under K.S.A. § 60-513. This deadline runs from the date of confirmed mesothelioma, asbestosis, or asbestos-related lung cancer diagnosis — not from the date of exposure, which may have occurred 30–50 years earlier.\nIW Iron Workers who worked in Kansas during the asbestos era and have been diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease should consult an asbestos attorney promptly. The deadline is strict and individual.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nKansas Asbestos Jobsite Research For the full catalog of Kansas facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly worked — including power plants, refineries, steel mills, and major industrial sites — see the partner state research archive:\nKansas Asbestos Exposure Archive →\nThe state archive covers jobsite-level facility records, federal NESHAP data, and the documented defendants whose products were present at Kansas industrial sites.\nFor informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Statute of limitations periods should be confirmed with a licensed attorney in Kansas. © 2026 Rights Watch Media Group LLC.\n","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/states/kansas/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-in-kansas\"\u003eIW Iron Workers in Kansas\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eKansas was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Kansas City industrial + Boeing/Beech aviation Wichita, grain-elevator + flour mill operations, Kerr-McGee + refineries, Fort Riley + Fort Leavenworth military installations — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\u003c/p\u003e","title":"Kansas IW Iron Workers — Asbestos Exposure \u0026 Claims"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers in Kentucky Kentucky was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Louisville GE Appliance Park + J\u0026amp;J + power plants (AEP/Kentucky Utilities), Paducah gaseous diffusion plant + Union Carbide, Ashland refineries, TVA generating stations along the Cumberland — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\nPlaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW members applied, removed, worked adjacent to, and disturbed chrysotile-bearing and amphibole-bearing asbestos-containing materials throughout every working day of the asbestos era. The trade carries one of the highest documented mesothelioma rates of any occupational group in federal health research.\nIW Locals Covering Kentucky The following Local unions of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organize structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers in Kentucky:\nLocal 70 — Louisville Local 782 — Ashland For the full Local history, dispatch territory, and the products members handled, see each Local\u0026rsquo;s dedicated page above.\nKentucky Statute of Limitations for IW Asbestos Claims The Kentucky asbestos personal injury statute of limitations is 1 year from diagnosis under KRS 413.140. This deadline runs from the date of confirmed mesothelioma, asbestosis, or asbestos-related lung cancer diagnosis — not from the date of exposure, which may have occurred 30–50 years earlier.\nIW Iron Workers who worked in Kentucky during the asbestos era and have been diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease should consult an asbestos attorney promptly. The deadline is strict and individual.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nKentucky Asbestos Jobsite Research For the full catalog of Kentucky facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly worked — including power plants, refineries, steel mills, and major industrial sites — see the partner state research archive:\nKentucky Asbestos Exposure Archive →\nThe state archive covers jobsite-level facility records, federal NESHAP data, and the documented defendants whose products were present at Kentucky industrial sites.\nFor informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Statute of limitations periods should be confirmed with a licensed attorney in Kentucky. © 2026 Rights Watch Media Group LLC.\n","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/states/kentucky/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-in-kentucky\"\u003eIW Iron Workers in Kentucky\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eKentucky was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Louisville GE Appliance Park + J\u0026amp;J + power plants (AEP/Kentucky Utilities), Paducah gaseous diffusion plant + Union Carbide, Ashland refineries, TVA generating stations along the Cumberland — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\u003c/p\u003e","title":"Kentucky IW Iron Workers — Asbestos Exposure \u0026 Claims"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers in Michigan Michigan was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Detroit auto industry (GM + Ford + Chrysler assembly + Rouge steel), Bay City/Midland Dow Chemical, DTE power plants, Great Lakes Steel/National Steel Ecorse, Bethlehem Detroit fabrication — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\nPlaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW members applied, removed, worked adjacent to, and disturbed chrysotile-bearing and amphibole-bearing asbestos-containing materials throughout every working day of the asbestos era. The trade carries one of the highest documented mesothelioma rates of any occupational group in federal health research.\nIW Locals Covering Michigan The following Local unions of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organize structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers in Michigan:\nLocal 25 — Detroit Local 340 — Battle Creek Local 383 — Kalamazoo Local 508 — Escanaba For the full Local history, dispatch territory, and the products members handled, see each Local\u0026rsquo;s dedicated page above.\nMichigan Statute of Limitations for IW Asbestos Claims The Michigan asbestos personal injury statute of limitations is 3 years from diagnosis under MCL § 600.5805. This deadline runs from the date of confirmed mesothelioma, asbestosis, or asbestos-related lung cancer diagnosis — not from the date of exposure, which may have occurred 30–50 years earlier.\nIW Iron Workers who worked in Michigan during the asbestos era and have been diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease should consult an asbestos attorney promptly. The deadline is strict and individual.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nMichigan Asbestos Jobsite Research For the full catalog of Michigan facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly worked — including power plants, refineries, steel mills, and major industrial sites — see the partner state research archive:\nMichigan Asbestos Exposure Archive →\nThe state archive covers jobsite-level facility records, federal NESHAP data, and the documented defendants whose products were present at Michigan industrial sites.\nFor informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Statute of limitations periods should be confirmed with a licensed attorney in Michigan. © 2026 Rights Watch Media Group LLC.\n","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/states/michigan/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-in-michigan\"\u003eIW Iron Workers in Michigan\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eMichigan was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Detroit auto industry (GM + Ford + Chrysler assembly + Rouge steel), Bay City/Midland Dow Chemical, DTE power plants, Great Lakes Steel/National Steel Ecorse, Bethlehem Detroit fabrication — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\u003c/p\u003e","title":"Michigan IW Iron Workers — Asbestos Exposure \u0026 Claims"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers in Missouri Missouri was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Ameren power plants (Callaway, Meramec, Rush Island, Sioux, Labadie), Kansas City industrial + Bendix nuclear weapons plant, St. Louis chemical + auto + brewery (Anheuser-Busch) + steel (Granite City adjacent) operations — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\nPlaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW members applied, removed, worked adjacent to, and disturbed chrysotile-bearing and amphibole-bearing asbestos-containing materials throughout every working day of the asbestos era. The trade carries one of the highest documented mesothelioma rates of any occupational group in federal health research.\nIW Locals Covering Missouri The following Local unions of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organize structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers in Missouri:\nLocal 2 — St. Louis Local 10 — Kansas City Local 396 — St. Louis Local 619 — Springfield For the full Local history, dispatch territory, and the products members handled, see each Local\u0026rsquo;s dedicated page above.\nMissouri Statute of Limitations for IW Asbestos Claims The Missouri asbestos personal injury statute of limitations is 5 years from diagnosis under Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.120. This deadline runs from the date of confirmed mesothelioma, asbestosis, or asbestos-related lung cancer diagnosis — not from the date of exposure, which may have occurred 30–50 years earlier.\nIW Iron Workers who worked in Missouri during the asbestos era and have been diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease should consult an asbestos attorney promptly. The deadline is strict and individual.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nMissouri Asbestos Jobsite Research For the full catalog of Missouri facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly worked — including power plants, refineries, steel mills, and major industrial sites — see the partner state research archive:\nMissouri Asbestos Exposure Archive →\nThe state archive covers jobsite-level facility records, federal NESHAP data, and the documented defendants whose products were present at Missouri industrial sites.\nFor informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Statute of limitations periods should be confirmed with a licensed attorney in Missouri. © 2026 Rights Watch Media Group LLC.\n","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/states/missouri/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-in-missouri\"\u003eIW Iron Workers in Missouri\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eMissouri was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Ameren power plants (Callaway, Meramec, Rush Island, Sioux, Labadie), Kansas City industrial + Bendix nuclear weapons plant, St. Louis chemical + auto + brewery (Anheuser-Busch) + steel (Granite City adjacent) operations — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\u003c/p\u003e","title":"Missouri IW Iron Workers — Asbestos Exposure \u0026 Claims"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers in Nebraska Nebraska was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Omaha Union Pacific rail + industrial, Lincoln Kawasaki Motors + Cornhusker Army Ammunition Plant, Nebraska Public Power generating stations, meatpacking + food processing across the state — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\nPlaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW members applied, removed, worked adjacent to, and disturbed chrysotile-bearing and amphibole-bearing asbestos-containing materials throughout every working day of the asbestos era. The trade carries one of the highest documented mesothelioma rates of any occupational group in federal health research.\nIW Locals Covering Nebraska The following Local unions of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organize structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers in Nebraska:\nLocal 21 — Omaha For the full Local history, dispatch territory, and the products members handled, see each Local\u0026rsquo;s dedicated page above.\nNebraska Statute of Limitations for IW Asbestos Claims The Nebraska asbestos personal injury statute of limitations is 4 years from diagnosis under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-224. This deadline runs from the date of confirmed mesothelioma, asbestosis, or asbestos-related lung cancer diagnosis — not from the date of exposure, which may have occurred 30–50 years earlier.\nIW Iron Workers who worked in Nebraska during the asbestos era and have been diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease should consult an asbestos attorney promptly. The deadline is strict and individual.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nNebraska Asbestos Jobsite Research For the full catalog of Nebraska facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly worked — including power plants, refineries, steel mills, and major industrial sites — see the partner state research archive:\nNebraska Asbestos Exposure Archive →\nThe state archive covers jobsite-level facility records, federal NESHAP data, and the documented defendants whose products were present at Nebraska industrial sites.\nFor informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Statute of limitations periods should be confirmed with a licensed attorney in Nebraska. © 2026 Rights Watch Media Group LLC.\n","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/states/nebraska/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-in-nebraska\"\u003eIW Iron Workers in Nebraska\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eNebraska was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Omaha Union Pacific rail + industrial, Lincoln Kawasaki Motors + Cornhusker Army Ammunition Plant, Nebraska Public Power generating stations, meatpacking + food processing across the state — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\u003c/p\u003e","title":"Nebraska IW Iron Workers — Asbestos Exposure \u0026 Claims"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers in Ohio Ohio was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Barberton/Alliance/Cambridge B\u0026amp;W boiler plants, Toledo Owens-Illinois + Owens-Corning + auto (Jeep), Cincinnati/Evendale GE Aircraft Engines, Cleveland/Youngstown/Warren steel (Republic, US Steel, Wheeling-Pittsburgh), Mansfield/Springfield Westinghouse, Portsmouth gaseous diffusion + Goodyear Atomic — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\nPlaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW members applied, removed, worked adjacent to, and disturbed chrysotile-bearing and amphibole-bearing asbestos-containing materials throughout every working day of the asbestos era. The trade carries one of the highest documented mesothelioma rates of any occupational group in federal health research.\nIW Locals Covering Ohio The following Local unions of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organize structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers in Ohio:\nLocal 17 — Cleveland Local 44 — Cincinnati Local 55 — Toledo Local 172 — Columbus Local 372 — Cincinnati Local 550 — Canton For the full Local history, dispatch territory, and the products members handled, see each Local\u0026rsquo;s dedicated page above.\nOhio Statute of Limitations for IW Asbestos Claims The Ohio asbestos personal injury statute of limitations is 2 years from diagnosis under Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.10. This deadline runs from the date of confirmed mesothelioma, asbestosis, or asbestos-related lung cancer diagnosis — not from the date of exposure, which may have occurred 30–50 years earlier.\nIW Iron Workers who worked in Ohio during the asbestos era and have been diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease should consult an asbestos attorney promptly. The deadline is strict and individual.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nOhio Asbestos Jobsite Research For the full catalog of Ohio facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly worked — including power plants, refineries, steel mills, and major industrial sites — see the partner state research archive:\nOhio Asbestos Exposure Archive →\nThe state archive covers jobsite-level facility records, federal NESHAP data, and the documented defendants whose products were present at Ohio industrial sites.\nFor informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Statute of limitations periods should be confirmed with a licensed attorney in Ohio. © 2026 Rights Watch Media Group LLC.\n","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/states/ohio/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-in-ohio\"\u003eIW Iron Workers in Ohio\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eOhio was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Barberton/Alliance/Cambridge B\u0026amp;W boiler plants, Toledo Owens-Illinois + Owens-Corning + auto (Jeep), Cincinnati/Evendale GE Aircraft Engines, Cleveland/Youngstown/Warren steel (Republic, US Steel, Wheeling-Pittsburgh), Mansfield/Springfield Westinghouse, Portsmouth gaseous diffusion + Goodyear Atomic — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\u003c/p\u003e","title":"Ohio IW Iron Workers — Asbestos Exposure \u0026 Claims"},{"content":"IW Iron Workers in Wisconsin Wisconsin was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Milwaukee industrial (Allen-Bradley + Falk gears + CE Vulcan boilers), paper mills (Beloit Corporation + Sandy Hill + Kimberly-Clark), Kohler foundry/plumbing, Kewaunee/Point Beach nuclear plants — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\nPlaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that IW members applied, removed, worked adjacent to, and disturbed chrysotile-bearing and amphibole-bearing asbestos-containing materials throughout every working day of the asbestos era. The trade carries one of the highest documented mesothelioma rates of any occupational group in federal health research.\nIW Locals Covering Wisconsin The following Local unions of the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers (IW) organize structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers in Wisconsin:\nLocal 8 — Milwaukee Local 383 — Madison Local 512 — Superior For the full Local history, dispatch territory, and the products members handled, see each Local\u0026rsquo;s dedicated page above.\nWisconsin Statute of Limitations for IW Asbestos Claims The Wisconsin asbestos personal injury statute of limitations is 3 years from injury under Wis. Stat. § 893.54. This deadline runs from the date of confirmed mesothelioma, asbestosis, or asbestos-related lung cancer diagnosis — not from the date of exposure, which may have occurred 30–50 years earlier.\nIW Iron Workers who worked in Wisconsin during the asbestos era and have been diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease should consult an asbestos attorney promptly. The deadline is strict and individual.\nFree, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956\nWisconsin Asbestos Jobsite Research For the full catalog of Wisconsin facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly worked — including power plants, refineries, steel mills, and major industrial sites — see the partner state research archive:\nWisconsin Asbestos Exposure Archive →\nThe state archive covers jobsite-level facility records, federal NESHAP data, and the documented defendants whose products were present at Wisconsin industrial sites.\nFor informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Statute of limitations periods should be confirmed with a licensed attorney in Wisconsin. © 2026 Rights Watch Media Group LLC.\n","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/states/wisconsin/","summary":"\u003ch2 id=\"iw-iron-workers-in-wisconsin\"\u003eIW Iron Workers in Wisconsin\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eWisconsin was an active state for IW Iron Workers work throughout the asbestos era (roughly 1920s through the early 1980s). Members were dispatched to Milwaukee industrial (Allen-Bradley + Falk gears + CE Vulcan boilers), paper mills (Beloit Corporation + Sandy Hill + Kimberly-Clark), Kohler foundry/plumbing, Kewaunee/Point Beach nuclear plants — facilities where structural, ornamental, and reinforcing iron workers allegedly encountered and worked with asbestos-containing materials on a continuous basis.\u003c/p\u003e","title":"Wisconsin IW Iron Workers — Asbestos Exposure \u0026 Claims"},{"content":"If you or a family member worked as a Heat \u0026amp; Frost Insulator at any time from the 1940s through the 1980s and has been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestosis, lung cancer, or another asbestos-related disease, you may be entitled to significant compensation through asbestos trust funds and civil litigation.\nThe case review below connects you directly with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm, an asbestos-mesothelioma practice based in St. Louis, Missouri with experience pursuing claims for insulators nationwide — including members of HFIAW Locals across the country. There is no cost to speak with an attorney, no obligation to retain counsel, and no attorney fee unless a financial recovery is made on your behalf.\nThe insulators trade was uniquely exposed to asbestos throughout the asbestos-products era — pipe covering, block insulation, refractory cement, and asbestos rope were the daily materials of the trade. State statutes of limitation can limit the time available to file. Reaching out early preserves more of your options — including trust-fund claims that can be filed independently of any civil lawsuit.\n","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/free-consultation/","summary":"\u003cp\u003eIf you or a family member worked as a Heat \u0026amp; Frost Insulator at any time from the 1940s through the 1980s and has been diagnosed with \u003cstrong\u003emesothelioma\u003c/strong\u003e, \u003cstrong\u003easbestosis\u003c/strong\u003e, \u003cstrong\u003elung cancer\u003c/strong\u003e, or another asbestos-related disease, you may be entitled to significant compensation through asbestos trust funds and civil litigation.\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThe case review below connects you directly with \u003cstrong\u003eO\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm\u003c/strong\u003e, an asbestos-mesothelioma practice based in St. Louis, Missouri with experience pursuing claims for insulators nationwide — including members of HFIAW Locals across the country. There is no cost to speak with an attorney, no obligation to retain counsel, and no attorney fee unless a financial recovery is made on your behalf.\u003c/p\u003e","title":"Free Asbestos Case Consultation for Insulators"},{"content":"Search across the Heat \u0026amp; Frost Insulators archive — Local unions, asbestos products handled by the trade, workplaces where insulators were dispatched, occupational diseases, and trust-fund references.\n","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/search/","summary":"\u003cp\u003eSearch across the Heat \u0026amp; Frost Insulators archive — Local unions, asbestos products handled by the trade, workplaces where insulators were dispatched, occupational diseases, and trust-fund references.\u003c/p\u003e","title":"Search"},{"content":"This site is an independent media reference documenting the Heat \u0026amp; Frost Insulators trade\u0026rsquo;s history of asbestos exposure and the legal frameworks available to insulators and their families affected by asbestos-related disease.\nPublisher Rights Watch Media Group LLC (RWMG) is an independent media organization that operates a network of public-records research sites covering occupational asbestos exposure in the United States. The full network includes:\nnavyshipexposure.com — Documented asbestos exposure aboard 1,713 U.S. Navy vessels asbestos-products.com — \u0026ldquo;AsbestosIndex\u0026rdquo; — 1,500+ asbestos product catalog with manufacturer crosswalk industrialexposurearchive.com — Cross-state hub linking the 9 state-specific archives 9 state-specific archives covering Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and Wisconsin This site (insulatorsmesothelioma.com) covers the Heat \u0026amp; Frost Insulators trade specifically, cross-referencing the network\u0026rsquo;s product, jobsite, and Navy ship documentation.\nEditorial standards The information published here is drawn from:\nPublic asbestos litigation records — Federal and state court filings, depositions, expert reports Federal NESHAP filings — EPA asbestos abatement notifications maintained by state environmental agencies OSHA records — Federal occupational safety inspection records and citations Federal occupational-health research — Mount Sinai cohort studies, NIOSH research, peer-reviewed medical literature EPA Detailed Facility Reports (ECHO) — Federal enforcement and compliance history per facility Asbestos bankruptcy trust documents — Public 524(g) plan documents and trust schedules Industry-publication histories — Trade press documenting the asbestos era from the 1920s through the 1980s Editorial framing on this site follows the convention of citing information as \u0026ldquo;documented in publicly filed records\u0026rdquo; rather than asserting facts about any specific worker\u0026rsquo;s eligibility. Individual claim eligibility requires diagnosis of an asbestos-related disease, documented employment or presence in covered conditions, and applicable jurisdictional and statute-of-limitations conditions.\nEditorial sponsorship This site is sponsored by O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm, a Kirkwood, Missouri-based plaintiff trial practice with more than three decades of experience in asbestos and mesothelioma cases. The firm provides financial sponsorship of the RWMG network and is the firm to which case-evaluation inquiries from this network are directed.\nThe editorial wall: O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm does not direct, edit, or pre-approve the research content RWMG publishes. The firm appears as the editorial sponsor of the network and as the case-evaluation destination for inquiries; the research content is editorially independent.\nWhat this site is not It is not legal advice. Statute of limitations and case-eligibility decisions require an attorney\u0026rsquo;s analysis of your specific facts. It is not medical advice. Disease descriptions are general; diagnosis and treatment require qualified physicians. It is not affiliated with the International Association of Heat \u0026amp; Frost Insulators and Allied Workers or any specific Heat \u0026amp; Frost Insulators Local. It is not a lead-generation broker. RWMG operates a single editorial-sponsorship relationship with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm; it does not auction inquiries among multiple firms. Contact For questions about the editorial content of this site or to report inaccuracies:\nEmail: mesowatchhelp@gmail.com Mail: Rights Watch Media Group LLC · 906 West Main · Harrisonville, MO 64701 For asbestos case evaluation:\nPhone: (314) 936-2956 — O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm ","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/about/","summary":"\u003cp\u003eThis site is an independent media reference documenting the Heat \u0026amp; Frost Insulators trade\u0026rsquo;s history of asbestos exposure and the legal frameworks available to insulators and their families affected by asbestos-related disease.\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003ch2 id=\"publisher\"\u003ePublisher\u003c/h2\u003e\n\u003cp\u003e\u003cstrong\u003eRights Watch Media Group LLC\u003c/strong\u003e (RWMG) is an independent media organization that operates a network of public-records research sites covering occupational asbestos exposure in the United States. The full network includes:\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003cul\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e\u003cstrong\u003e\u003ca href=\"https://navyshipexposure.com\"\u003enavyshipexposure.com\u003c/a\u003e\u003c/strong\u003e — Documented asbestos exposure aboard 1,713 U.S. Navy vessels\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e\u003cstrong\u003e\u003ca href=\"https://asbestos-products.com\"\u003easbestos-products.com\u003c/a\u003e\u003c/strong\u003e — \u0026ldquo;AsbestosIndex\u0026rdquo; — 1,500+ asbestos product catalog with manufacturer crosswalk\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e\u003cstrong\u003e\u003ca href=\"https://industrialexposurearchive.com\"\u003eindustrialexposurearchive.com\u003c/a\u003e\u003c/strong\u003e — Cross-state hub linking the 9 state-specific archives\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003cli\u003e\u003cstrong\u003e9 state-specific archives\u003c/strong\u003e covering Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and Wisconsin\u003c/li\u003e\n\u003c/ul\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eThis site (insulatorsmesothelioma.com) covers the Heat \u0026amp; Frost Insulators trade specifically, cross-referencing the network\u0026rsquo;s product, jobsite, and Navy ship documentation.\u003c/p\u003e","title":"About This Site"},{"content":"Informational only — not legal advice. The information on this site is for general educational purposes only. It is drawn from public asbestos litigation records, federal regulatory filings, public-domain occupational-health research, and industry-publication histories. It is not legal advice. References to companies, products, and facilities are sourced from publicly filed asbestos litigation records, court filings, and regulatory databases.\nNo attorney-client relationship. No attorney-client relationship is created by reading this site, submitting a form, or calling the phone number listed. Communicating through this site does not by itself create an attorney-client relationship with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm or any other attorney.\nAttorney advertising. This site contains attorney-advertising content republished with the permission of O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm. The choice of a lawyer is an important decision and should not be based solely on advertisements. Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes; each case is evaluated individually on its facts, jurisdiction, and applicable law.\nStatute of limitations vary by state. Asbestos claim filing deadlines vary between states (1 to 5 years from date of medical diagnosis for most). The clock typically runs from the date of medical diagnosis, not the date of exposure. Consultation should not be delayed.\nNot medical advice. Disease descriptions on this site are general educational content. Diagnosis and treatment of mesothelioma, asbestosis, or other asbestos-related disease require qualified physicians. Consult a licensed physician about your specific medical situation.\nNo affiliation with the Heat \u0026amp; Frost Insulators union. This site is published by Rights Watch Media Group LLC. It is not produced, endorsed, or sponsored by the International Association of Heat \u0026amp; Frost Insulators and Allied Workers (HFIAW) or any Local thereof. Trade and Local references are drawn from public industry records and historical documentation.\nEditorial sponsorship disclosure. Rights Watch Media Group LLC is an independent media publisher. O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm is the editorial sponsor of this site and the RWMG network. The firm provides financial sponsorship; the editorial content is RWMG\u0026rsquo;s responsibility. Case-evaluation inquiries from this site are directed to O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm.\nJurisdictional scope. O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm is licensed in Missouri. For cases involving primary exposure or residence outside Missouri, the firm associates with locally licensed counsel as required.\nPrivacy and contact. Forms submitted through this site, calls placed to the number listed, and any voluntary information you provide are subject to the privacy policies of Rights Watch Media Group LLC and O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm. We do not sell visitor information to third parties. For data deletion requests, email mesowatchhelp@gmail.com.\nLast updated 2026-06-09. © 2026 Rights Watch Media Group LLC.\n","permalink":"https://ironworkersmesothelioma.com/legal/disclaimer/","summary":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cstrong\u003eInformational only — not legal advice.\u003c/strong\u003e The information on this site is for general educational purposes only. It is drawn from public asbestos litigation records, federal regulatory filings, public-domain occupational-health research, and industry-publication histories. It is not legal advice. References to companies, products, and facilities are sourced from publicly filed asbestos litigation records, court filings, and regulatory databases.\u003c/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003e\u003cstrong\u003eNo attorney-client relationship.\u003c/strong\u003e No attorney-client relationship is created by reading this site, submitting a form, or calling the phone number listed. Communicating through this site does not by itself create an attorney-client relationship with O\u0026rsquo;Brien Law Firm or any other attorney.\u003c/p\u003e","title":"Disclaimer"}]