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"There are a decent amount of people out there with real injuries who were not a part of the litigation," said Matthew McCauley, a lawyer with the firm Parker Waichman Alonso, which is among the few that have been willing to take on new claims. He and other lawyers said most of the workers face "enormous hurdles" if they wish to try to get compensation through the courts now outside of the settlement, especially those with illnesses that might be difficult to prove are connected to trade center work. Scientists have said that thousands of people exposed to trade center dust have developed respiratory problems similar to asthma, with a smaller number suffering more serious ailments. Many have symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. Doctors still don't know, however, whether there is any connection between the dust and potentially fatal illnesses like cancer. Cancer is killing a growing number of people who were involved in the 9/11 cleanup, but researchers say the death rate so far has been similar to that of the general public. That lack of a solid link has given some critics of the federal bill pause at allocating so many billions of dollars for treatment.
That concern doesn't carry water with people like Richard Dambakly, a former phone company worker exposed to the dust while repairing damage in lower Manhattan. He was diagnosed in early 2002 with lymphoma, an immune system cancer. "Everyone told me the same thing. They said, you can't get sick with cancer in just two or three months," said Dambakly, who now lives in Hampstead, N.C. "I know as a fact -- a fact -- that I got sick from ground zero ... I was there for four months straight, 12 to 16 hours a day. Not one day off. I was coughing so bad, I thought my chest was going to blow right out of my body. "You're going to sit back and tell me I didn't get sick from ground zero? Take a walk," he said. Supporters of the bill say they are trying to find a way to pass it by the end of the year.
[Associated
Press;
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