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District Attorneys announce settlement of hazardous waste case against Firestone Complete Auto Care

For release on February 7, 2022

CONTACT: 
Bud Porter
Supervising Deputy District Attorney
Environmental Protection Unit
(408) 792-2962


 

District Attorneys announce settlement of hazardous waste case against Firestone Complete Auto Care

Firestone Complete Auto Care has agreed to a nearly $4 million settlement with the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office and 28 other prosecutors in an environmental protection case that alleged the company unlawfully disposed of hazardous waste.

On Friday, February 4th, a judge ordered $2.865 million in civil penalties to be paid by Bridgestone Retail Operations, LLC, the company that does business as Firestone Complete Auto Care at more than 150 locations in California. The civil complaint, filed in Santa Clara County Superior Court, alleged that the automotive repair company did not properly manage hazardous waste, such as solvents, automotive fluids, aerosols, batteries, and electronic devices. The settlement also resolves allegations that the company failed to redact or shred confidential customer information before throwing the paperwork in the trash. 

“Hazardous waste does not belong in the air, on the ground, in the water, or in this case, headed to a regular landfill," District Attorney Jeff Rosen said. "We will continue to work with our fellow prosecutors around the state to enforce our strong environmental protection laws.”

In addition to paying civil penalties, Firestone was ordered to pay $350,000 for the cost of the investigation and $725,000 in agreed-upon compliance and training expenditures. Firestone cooperated with prosecutors during the investigation and took steps to improve its compliance with the environmental and consumer protection violations brought to its attention.

The investigation began in 2016 when Santa Clara County and Alameda County DA investigators conducted unannounced inspections of Firestone trash containers, revealing non-empty containers of hazardous waste and pages of customer records. Additional inspections in those counties and in San Diego, San Bernardino, and Orange counties took place over the next three years.

The Firestone judgment is the latest in a series of environmental civil enforcement actions successfully brought by California prosecutors against large automotive service providers and retailers. The prior judgments, which included civil penalties and injunctions, were against Service King (2019, $2.3 million), Pep Boys (2019, $3.7 million), AutoZone (2019, $11 million), Cooks Collision (2018, $1.5 million), AutoNation (2018, $3.3 million), and O’Reilly Auto Parts (2016, $9.8 million).


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