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The new federal money will speed the home-by-home cleanup of some 900 additional properties in Libby and the nearby town of Troy. When the EPA has permission to clean a home, they put a plastic tent over the building and workers in asbestos abatement uniforms with respirators vacuum dust from the attic and all the crevices. They also dig up the front and back yard to remove asbestos outside. Each house takes a few days to decontaminate. The Health and Human Services Department also said it would spend an additional $6 million on medical assistance for residents suffering from asbestos-related illnesses. Money for medical care is key, said former mayor Tony Berget. Libby is a remote town, and many people haven't had a lot of money for health problems, he said. But don't expect the independent-minded people of Libby to talk too much about their medical woes, said Mary Tevebaugh, a retired teacher whose former husband worked in the mine and died of an asbestos-related disease. "It's like if somebody complains that they have a problem, you tell them, so does everybody else," she said.
___ On the Net: EPA: http://www.epa.gov/ Center for Asbestos Related Disease: http://www.libbyasbestos.org/
[Associated
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