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Railway wants more time to respond to $4-million Lac-Megantic lawsuit

Surete du Quebec investigators work at the Montreal, Maine and Atlantic Railway Inc. office in Farnham, Que., on Thursday, July 25, 2013.
Surete du Quebec investigators work at the Montreal, Maine and Atlantic Railway Inc. office in Farnham, Que., on Thursday, July 25, 2013. Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press

MONTREAL – The embattled railway implicated in the Lac-Megantic train disaster has asked for an extended deadline to respond to one of the threatened lawsuits it faces.

The Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway has asked for the Quebec municipality to wait until Tuesday for its response to a legal notice.

It has already missed last week’s deadline, and the municipality has said it’s now speaking with lawyers to evaluate a possible lawsuit.

At issue is the estimated $4 million cost to clean up the crash site – which is now being shouldered by authorities within Quebec.

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MMA is accused of shirking its duty to pay workers to clean up the site and has received a lawyers’ letter hinting at a lawsuit.

That dispute is one of several now weighing on the U.S.-based company, which is now the focus of different attempts at class-action suits and also a police investigation into the July 6 derailment and fire that killed 47 people.

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The company had failed to respond in time to the letter over cleanup costs but it has indicated plans to respond by Tuesday, said Karine Dube, spokeswoman for Lac-Megantic Mayor Colette Roy-Laroche.

Lac-Megantic’s mayor announced last week that a letter was sent to MMA, demanding that it immediately reimburse the town for environmental cleanup costs.

A railway official, Yves Bourdon, has since told The Canadian Press that the company had planned to discuss the issue last Friday.

Fear the company wouldn’t pay cleanup costs had been prompting work crews to threaten to walk off the job.

However, the municipality and provincial government ensured that workers got paid. They are now seeking a refund from the railway.

Thousands of residents joined Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Gov. Gen. David Johnston and other political leaders on Saturday for a memorial service for the people who died in the disaster.

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