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		U.S. senators seek review of lead in 
		military housing, citing Reuters 
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		 [August 24, 2018] 
		By Andrea Januta and Joshua Schneyer 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - Eight U.S. senators 
		are pushing for a federal review of the military's plans to protect 
		children from exposure to lead, citing a Reuters report on lead 
		poisoning in military housing.
 
 In an amendment filed this week to a defense funding bill, the senators, 
		including senior members of the Senate Armed Services and Veterans' 
		Affairs committees, are asking the Government Accountability Office to 
		examine the military's handling of lead poisoning risks nationwide. Most 
		military family housing has been privatized and is operated by 
		corporations in partnership with the branches of the armed services.
 
 "The recent reports regarding lead poisoning in some military housing 
		units is disturbing and must absolutely be corrected," Georgia 
		Republican Senator Johnny Isakson, chair of the Senate Committee on 
		Veterans' Affairs, said in a statement Thursday. "Our military families 
		sacrifice greatly in service to our country, and it is our 
		responsibility to do everything we can to ensure their safety."
 
		
		 
		Isakson sponsored the amendment with Democratic Senator Claire McCaskill 
		of Missouri, a senior member of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
 The U.S. Army did not respond to a request for comment on the amendment.
 
 The congressional push follows an August 16 Reuters investigation 
		detailing dangerous lead levels and cases of childhood poisoning on 
		several Army bases across the country, including at Fort Benning, 
		Georgia.
 
 At least 1,050 small children tested high for lead at Army hospitals and 
		clinics in recent years, Reuters found, but many of these results were 
		going unreported to state health authorities. The Army told Reuters it 
		has since begun reporting the test results.
 
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			Army residences, some of which are almost a century old and which 
			house lead hazards, are pictured at Fort Benning, Georgia U.S. in 
			this undated archival handout photo obtained by Reuters August 15, 
			2018. Courtesy The Columbus Museum, Georgia/Handout via REUTERS 
            
 
            Reuters conducted its own lead testing in homes at several Army 
			bases and found severe poisoning hazards, such as deteriorating 
			lead-based paint within reach of small children. Exposure to the 
			potent neurotoxin, once a common ingredient in household paint, can 
			cause lifelong health impairments.
 Poisoning is preventable if housing is well-maintained. Yet Reuters 
			found failures in remediating risks on military bases, and a culture 
			some say discourages families from speaking out.
 
 The amendment would be part of a larger defense bill, the 2019 
			Department of Defense Appropriations Act, currently on the Senate 
			floor. Under the amendment, the GAO would have a year to complete 
			its report and submit it to Congress.
 
 Last week, four of the senators proposing this amendment wrote to 
			the Secretary of the Army demanding action 
			https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-military-senate/u-s-senators-demand-answers-from-army-after-reuters-report-on-lead-poisoning-idUSKBN1L22DG 
			and answers to address lead hazards. The Army said it is "committed 
			to providing a safe and secure environment on all of our 
			installations."
 
 (Editing by Ronnie Greene.)
 
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