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Tuesday, October 11, 2011

9/11 Victims Compensation Fund (Re) Opens

In the 9/11/2011 column on Assoluta Tranquillita, published here, there was this:

There is clearly a disconnect from our government...[...] The moral [...] is that the government needs to become - must be - pro-active for First Responders. Laws specific to 9/11 have been written that would support the First Responders and their families. [...] If the government was really committed to the First Responders, they would be implementing these laws for any future event as well. The Victims Compensation Bill was only valid - could only be drawn against - for two years after 9/11.

Jack Delaney - Director of Emergency Services at New York Presbyterian Hospital on 9/11/2001

We have lost many First Responders who survived 9/11, who have since died horrible deaths because of all the terrible toxins - and experiences - they were exposed to that day. As I wrote in March 2011, about Lt. Randy Wiebicke, and Harold J Smith:

It seems every week we lose more of the heroes from 9/11. We don't always get to hear of these heroes passing,...


And that is the facts. I also wrote about John McNamara, a 9/11 Firefighter, and Roy Chelsen, Firefighter. These men are but a few of the many who have fought hard, but have ultimately succumbed to the diseases/after effects of that terrible day. As recently as last November, some estimates said that we have lost almost 1,000 Ground Zero Responders, and Search and Rescue/Recovery personnel, as a direct result of their involvement in 9/11.

For ten years, First Responders and their families have had to fight the politicians and the bureaucracies every single step to ensure that the illnesses and diseases they contracted are properly recognised, adequately addressed and compensated for.

Back in March 2010, when the msm was full of the latest 'offer' to be presented to the First Responders, I wrote a column called:

9/11 rescuers/responders: What price heroism?



Immediately following 9/11, Christie Whitman of the EPA infamously insisted:

October 3, 2001: Officials Say ‘No Evidence of Any Significant Public Health Hazard’ near Ground Zero

EPA Administrator Christine Todd Whitman and John Henshaw, US Department of Labor Assistant Secretary for OSHA, announce that their two agencies “have found no evidence of any significant public health hazard to residents, visitors or workers beyond the immediate World Trade Center area.” [emphasis mine]

But later in the statement, they acknowledge that to date, “Of 177 bulk dust and debris samples collected by EPA and OSHA and analyzed for asbestos, 48 had levels over 1 percent, the level EPA and OSHA use to define asbestos-containing material.” Additionally, they say that out “of a total of 442 air samples EPA has taken at Ground Zero and in the immediate area, only 27 had levels of asbestos above the standard EPA uses to determine if children can re-enter a school after asbestos has been removed….”
[Environmental Protection Agency, 10/3/2001] (here)

In that column I introduced more than a few other First Responders, and search and rescue and recovery workers, one was Retired New York City Police Det. Sgt. Gary White, who "retired after 23 years on the job, White has cancer, suffered two strokes, has a range of neurological problems and a host of other ailments including sleep apnea.

He also suffered from post traumatic stress disorder so profound that at one point he didn't leave his home for three weeks, hanging dark sheets over the windows to keep the world away..."


Then there was Retired detective Al Schille:


[...] of Great Kills who was first routed to St. Vincent's and Beekman hospitals to await the arrival of survivors of the Twin Towers who never came.

He then made his way to Ground Zero with a colleague to search for the man's firefighter son who was never found.

In the weeks that followed, Schille spent 300 hours at Fresh Kills, "sifting through ash that big dump trucks would dump. We went through it with rakes, shovels, our hands, going through it, looking for anything, pieces of flesh, fragments of bone."

He developed chronic back pain and then cancer. Despite near-debilitating treatments, "I wanted to go back to work," said Schille, who finally retired in 2007. "But my bones are too compromised to do anything."

There are a few more 9/11 First Responder survivors featured - along with videos of interviews some First Responders gave to their last breath, as they tried to shame the politicians into doing the right thing - in my column here.

In the years since 9/11/2001, First Responders, their families and those who support their struggle for justice, have lobbied the politicians hard. One such group formed a FaceBook page called: Tell Obama to help sick and dying 9-11 responders, by Anthony Emanuele

Their mission, simply put, is to ensure that every first responder who served on 9/11, has the health care services WE OWE every single one of those heroes who selflessly ran to help their fellow Americans on that terrible day.

From the little research I have done on this, it appears that the politicians, as always, are dragging their heels, playing politics. As they do that, we lose more of our 9/11 heroes to illnesses that they would never have been exposed to if they had turned away on 9/11.

Please join this group, and also read Bill HR 847 here.


This information was included in my column here. Bill HR 847 was named James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act of 2010, and was the culmination of years of lobbying the politicians to quit playing 'politics as usual,' and do the morally right thing by the Ground Zero Responders....



Go read much more, and this week's update, over at Assoluta Tranquillita HERE.