Trump signs measure to permanently extend compensation for Sept. 11
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[July 30, 2019]
By Jeff Mason and Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Calling emergency
first responders "heroes," U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday signed
into law a measure authorizing permanent benefits for police,
firefighters and others suffering from illnesses connected to their work
reacting to the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.
The legislation, known as the "Never Forget the Heroes Act," approves
federal funding through 2092 for an estimated 18,100 people who are
likely to qualify for benefits, according to government estimates.
First responders who rushed to the site of the World Trade Center's twin
towers in New York following their destruction in the Sept. 11 hijacked
plane attacks, and others who worked for months cleaning up, were
exposed to toxic chemicals despite early government statements that the
site was safe.
The fund compensates those people, or their relatives if they have since
died, for economic and other losses. Trump hailed the men and women who
rushed to the site in hopes of rescuing survivors and finding remains of
victims.
"Today we come together as one nation to support our September 11
heroes, to care for their families, and to renew our eternal vow: never,
ever forget," Trump told a crowd at a ceremony in the White House Rose
Garden, which he said included more than 60 of the first responders.
Without the legislation passed in the U.S. Senate last Tuesday,
victims would have seen reduced benefits because of a lack of funding.
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President Donald Trump pumps his fist during a signing ceremony for
the "Permanent Authorization of the September 11th Victim
Compensation Fund Act" in the Rose Garden of the White House in
Washington, U.S., July 29, 2019. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
The attacks on the United States using four hijacked planes killed
more than 2,900 people and injured over 6,000. Of those, more than
2,600 people were killed in New York.
Former New York businessman Trump said he visited the World Trade
Center site in the aftermath.
"I was down there also, but I'm not considering myself a first
responder, but I was down there," Trump said.
The remark drew the ire of some Twitter users who recounted Trump's
comments at the time on the towers' destruction, including one on
WWOR-TV about a 72-story building he said he owned in lower
Manhattan - "and now it's the tallest."
Lawmakers attended the ceremony along with former New York Mayor
Rudy Giuliani, who was in office at the time of the attacks and was
praised for his leadership then. Giuliani is now an attorney for
Trump.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason and Richard Cowan; editing by Grant McCool)
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