About El Dorado Springs Solar Farm Cedar Missouri
El Dorado Springs, located in Cedar County in southwestern Missouri, has historically been served by Missouri’s network of municipal and cooperative electric utility systems. The Missouri Joint Municipal Power & Electric Utility Commission (MJMEUC) — a joint action agency representing publicly owned electric utilities throughout Missouri — coordinated power generation and purchasing for smaller municipal systems that could not independently operate large generating stations. Before transitioning to purchased wholesale power and renewable sources, Cedar County’s municipal utility reportedly operated coal-fired steam-generation equipment comparable to regional contemporaries. Municipal utilities across Missouri operated within the same Mississippi River industrial corridor that supplied equipment, labor, and materials to major facilities — including Ameren’s Labadie Energy Center in Franklin County and the Portage des Sioux Power Station in St. Charles County — both of which reportedly relied on the same categories of asbestos-containing insulation, gaskets, and boiler materials during the same peak exposure decades. Workers at the El Dorado Springs generating station may have been exposed to similar asbestos-containing materials. Cedar County’s utility drew from the same regional supply chains, the same union labor pools, and the same equipment manufacturers that served larger facilities along the corridor. That equipment may have reportedly included: boilers and steam generators, turbines and generators, high-pressure steam piping systems, thermal insulation wrapping and coverings, gaskets, seals, and packing materials, electrical switchgear, and roof and floor materials.
Workers reportedly maintained, repaired, and operated coal-fired systems primarily from the 1940s through the 1980s — exactly the decades when asbestos-containing materials use in power generation peaked and remained almost entirely unregulated. What changed and when: Pre-1970, asbestos-containing products were used without protective equipment or exposure controls. In 1970, the Occupational Safety and Health Act created OSHA; the Clean Air Act established the first regulatory framework. In 1972, OSHA issued its first asbestos standard, widely criticized as inadequate. In 1978, OSHA strengthened asbestos-containing materials regulations. In 1986, OSHA issued the Asbestos Standards requiring exposure controls, medical surveillance, and mandatory worker training. In 1989, EPA sought to ban most asbestos-containing products; courts substantially overturned that ban in 1991.
At a coal-fired municipal generating station in Cedar County, asbestos-containing materials may have reportedly been present in virtually every major system: main steam lines and headers, boiler drums and steam separators, turbine casings and associated steam lines, feedwater heater piping, condensate return lines, auxiliary steam distribution systems, valves, flanges, and fittings throughout the facility, electrical switchgear insulation, control room insulation, roofing materials, and floor tiles and walkways.
General Equipment at El Dorado Springs Solar Farm Cedar Missouri
The equipment below represents the systems and infrastructure documented or typically present at this facility during the era when asbestos-containing materials were specified in industrial construction. This is general facility-equipment reference — not a legal attribution of any specific product, manufacturer, or exposure event to this facility. Material-category and manufacturer information is addressed in the AsbestosIndex Product Crosswalk linked under the records table below.
Documented Asbestos Evidence
The records below are verified, state-documented asbestos removals at this facility. Each entry represents a regulated abatement project where the Missouri Department of Natural Resources (Missouri DNR) was notified under federal NESHAP rules, the work was logged, and the asbestos-containing material was confirmed and removed under regulated conditions. These are not allegations or estimates — they are paper records tying documented asbestos-containing material to this specific site.
No Missouri DNR NESHAP abatement notifications have been identified for this facility in current public records. Per the framing above, absence of state-agency documentation should not be read as absence of asbestos — only as absence of a formal, regulated abatement event meeting reporting thresholds. Workers who recall encountering pipe insulation, block insulation, gaskets, or other asbestos-era construction materials at this facility may still have viable claims regardless of whether a state record exists.
Material Categories in Documented Records
The materials documented above (and similar asbestos-containing materials commonly encountered in records of this type) appear in the AsbestosIndex catalog with historical manufacturer and trust-fund information. Click a category to view manufacturers historically associated with that material:
Who May Have Been Exposed at El Dorado Springs Solar Farm Cedar Missouri
Workers at the El Dorado Springs municipal power facility in Cedar County, Missouri — particularly those employed between the 1940s and mid-1980s — may have been exposed to asbestos-containing materials without adequate protective equipment or warning. Decades later, former employees are developing mesothelioma, lung cancer, and asbestosis.
Workers who may have labored at El Dorado Springs’s municipal generating station were reportedly part of a regional workforce that routinely crossed the Missouri-Illinois border. Members of Heat and Frost Insulators Local 1 (St. Louis, Missouri), UA Local 562 (United Association plumbers and pipefitters, St. Louis), and Boilermakers Local 27 (St. Louis) are alleged to have worked throughout this corridor — at major power stations and at smaller municipal facilities alike. Union insulators reportedly used asbestos-containing insulation products extensively throughout the Missouri-Illinois corridor, and are alleged to have applied asbestos-containing insulation products at regional power generating facilities during the peak exposure decades.
⚠️ Critical Filing Deadline
Missouri law gives mesothelioma and asbestos-disease victims 5 years from the date of medical diagnosis to file a personal injury lawsuit (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.120). For wrongful death claims after an asbestos-related death, the filing window is 3 years from the date of death (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 537.100). Miss either deadline by a single day and the right to file is permanently gone. No exceptions, no extensions.
About the two deadlines: Missouri keeps the personal-injury clock (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.120) and the wrongful-death clock (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 537.100) on separate tracks. The 5 years personal-injury deadline runs from the date of diagnosis and applies to the diagnosed person's own claim while they are alive. The 3 years wrongful-death deadline runs from the date of death and applies to surviving family members. The two are independent — preserving one does not extend the other, and an asbestos attorney with experience in Missouri can keep both options open as the situation evolves.
The personal-injury clock runs from the date of medical diagnosis — not from the date of asbestos exposure. Mesothelioma can take 20 to 50 years to develop after exposure. Many workers are only now receiving diagnoses from exposures that occurred decades ago.
Treat the 5 years deadline as a hard outer limit, not a planning horizon.
⚠️ Why You Must Act Now
Missouri's filing window may sound like ample time. It is not. Every month that passes after a mesothelioma diagnosis is a month in which your case gets harder to build and your options narrow.
Witnesses Become Harder to Reach
The tradespeople who worked alongside mesothelioma victims at facilities of this era are now in their 70s and 80s. Witnesses from many years ago are harder and harder to contact by the day — coworkers who can testify about which asbestos-containing materials were used, who supplied them, and how the work was done are increasingly difficult to locate. Once first-hand testimony becomes unavailable, that record is gone.
Records Disappear
Employment records, union records, purchasing records, and product invoices that document exactly which asbestos-containing materials were used at this facility are being lost every year. Plants close. Corporate owners change. Storage facilities are cleared. Records that existed five years ago may not exist today.
Mesothelioma Cases Are Complex to Build
Identifying every responsible manufacturer and every jobsite across a tradesperson's career requires intensive investigation by experienced toxic-tort counsel. A case against the manufacturers who supplied asbestos-containing materials to this facility may involve dozens of defendants. That investigation takes time that waiting families do not have.
Asbestos Trust Fund Claims Run on a Separate Track
More than 60 asbestos bankruptcy trusts exist to compensate victims whose exposures came from manufacturers that have since gone bankrupt — including the Manville Personal Injury Settlement Trust, established after the 1982 Johns-Manville bankruptcy. Each trust has its own claim forms, exposure criteria, documentation requirements, and processing timelines. Pursuing trust-fund compensation in parallel with a lawsuit takes months. The trust-fund process should start now, not after you decide whether to file suit.
What To Do Next
If you or a family member has been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease — and you worked at this facility, lived with someone who did, or worked at neighboring industrial sites in the corridor — the practical next steps are:
- Speak with an asbestos attorney with experience in Missouri. The first conversation is free, confidential, and creates no obligation. An experienced attorney will help you understand which trust-fund claims may apply, which civil claims are viable, and what documentation you should start gathering.
- Gather what you can about your work history. Pay stubs, W-2s, union cards, photographs, names of coworkers, and dates of employment all become important evidence. The WorkChain widget on this page can help you organize and email yourself a copy of your facility list.
- Preserve your medical records. Pathology reports, biopsy results, imaging, and pulmonary-function tests all become part of the legal record. Ask your treating physicians for full copies of everything in your chart.
- Identify household members who may also have been exposed. Spouses who laundered work clothing and children who hugged a parent returning from the plant are eligible for secondary-exposure claims when they have been diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease.
- Act before the filing deadline runs. Missouri's statute of limitations is a hard outer limit. Even if you are still in the middle of treatment decisions, beginning the legal process early preserves your options.
Get a free case evaluation from an asbestos attorney with experience in Missouri →
Asbestos-Related Diseases
Asbestos fiber exposure can cause several specific diseases that typically appear decades after the original exposure. The latency period — the gap between exposure and diagnosis — usually runs 20 to 50 years. That's why workers exposed in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s are receiving diagnoses today.
Mesothelioma
A rare, aggressive cancer that affects the lining of the lungs (pleural mesothelioma), abdomen (peritoneal), or heart (pericardial). Mesothelioma is almost exclusively caused by asbestos exposure, which is why a mesothelioma diagnosis often points directly to historical workplace exposure. Average latency from first exposure to diagnosis is 30-50 years.
Asbestosis
A chronic, non-cancerous scarring of lung tissue caused by inhaled asbestos fibers. Asbestosis causes progressive shortness of breath, persistent cough, and reduced lung function. It does not improve with treatment, and it is a recognized basis for compensation under most trust schedules and civil claims.
Lung Cancer
Asbestos exposure significantly increases the risk of lung cancer, particularly when combined with a history of smoking. Asbestos-related lung cancer is compensable under the same trust schedules and civil claim avenues as mesothelioma.
Other Recognized Diseases
Pleural plaques, pleural thickening, laryngeal cancer, ovarian cancer, and certain gastrointestinal cancers are also recognized as asbestos-related under various trust schedules and case-law authorities, though eligibility and proof requirements vary by claim type.
If you have any of these diagnoses and you worked at this facility, lived with someone who did, or were exposed in any documented capacity, you may have a claim worth pursuing. Speak with an attorney before assuming you don't qualify.
Cross-State & Regional Corridor Workers
Missouri and Illinois share the Mississippi River industrial corridor — one of the most heavily industrialized stretches of river in the United States. From the Granite City Steel complex in Madison County, Illinois, to Monsanto chemical operations in St. Louis County, Missouri, and north through the Labadie and Portage des Sioux generating stations, this corridor was served by a common network of asbestos-containing materials distributors, insulation contractors, and union labor. Workers who may have labored at El Dorado Springs’s municipal generating station were reportedly part of a regional workforce that routinely crossed the Missouri-Illinois border. Members of Heat and Frost Insulators Local 1 (St. Louis, Missouri), UA Local 562 (United Association plumbers and pipefitters, St. Louis), and Boilermakers Local 27 (St. Louis) are alleged to have worked throughout this corridor — at major power stations and at smaller municipal facilities alike. The asbestos-containing materials those workers may have applied at larger facilities were allegedly the same product lines, from the same manufacturers, that supplied facilities like Cedar County’s generating station. This regional context matters legally: Product identification evidence and exposure testimony developed in St. Louis City Circuit Court cases involving Labadie or Portage des Sioux workers may be directly relevant to claims arising from the El Dorado Springs facility.Data Sources
Information about facility equipment, industrial materials, and occupational records referenced on this page is drawn from publicly available sources where applicable, including:
- EPA ECHO Facility Compliance Database — enforcement and compliance records for industrial facilities
- OSHA Establishment Search — federal workplace inspection history
- EIA Form 860 Plant Data — power-plant equipment and ownership records (where applicable)
- Missouri Department of Natural Resources (MDNR) NESHAP asbestos abatement notification records
- Published asbestos trial and trust fund records (publicly filed court documents)
- AsbestosIndex Product & Manufacturer Crosswalk — historical asbestos-containing product schedules linked to manufacturers
If specific equipment or product claims in this article are sourced from a non-public database, the source is identified parenthetically within the text above.