
By Harlem Collective Media |
A Crisis That Should Never Have Happened
It began quietly — a few neighbors feeling sick, a few families heading to the ER. Within weeks, over 100 Harlem residents were hospitalized and five confirmed dead.
The culprit: Legionnaires’ disease, a severe form of pneumonia caused by bacteria thriving in warm, unmaintained water.
When investigators traced the source, they found Legionella bacteria in twelve cooling towers — several owned or operated by the City of New York, including Harlem Hospital.
The Lawsuit: “Completely Preventable”
Civil rights attorney Ben Crump and Rev. Al Sharpton have joined a coalition of Harlem families and victims’ attorneys to file lawsuits against multiple defendants — including Skanska USA Building, Rising Sun Construction, Nalco, and potentially the City of New York.
“This didn’t have to happen,” one attorney said. “People died because maintenance was ignored. Harlem deserves better.”
The lawsuits claim negligence, failure to maintain safe systems, and failure to warn the public during the outbreak. Several city-owned buildings had outdated inspection records and improper water treatment logs, despite legal requirements for quarterly cleaning.
A Neighborhood on Edge
The affected area — stretching across 125th Street to 155th Street — includes schools, clinics, and housing complexes.
Local businesses temporarily shut down; residents wore masks outdoors, fearful of the mist that may have carried the bacteria.
“If this happened downtown,” one resident said, “it would’ve been fixed before people started dying.”
The outbreak underscored Harlem’s ongoing struggle with environmental injustice and unequal infrastructure investment.
City Oversight in Question
The New York State Health Department and former Governor Andrew Cuomo have called for an independent state investigation, citing potential conflicts of interest.
“New York City cannot investigate itself,” Cuomo said.
While city officials claim the outbreak is “under control,” residents remain skeptical — and lawyers warn the true death toll could be three times higher than reported.
Environmental Justice Front and Center
For Harlem activists, this lawsuit is part of a larger fight — one about safety, health, and accountability.
“We talk about clean air and clean water,” said a Harlem pastor, “but we never talk about who gets it — and who doesn’t.”
Community leaders are now pushing for a Harlem Water Safety Task Force — a permanent coalition to monitor local water systems and prevent another preventable tragedy.