U.S. Senate passes bill to help veterans exposed to toxic burn pits
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[June 17, 2022]
By Moira Warburton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A major bill
expanding health care and benefits for veterans exposed to toxic
military burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan passed the U.S. Senate on
Thursday, as senators praised their bipartisan work on one of the few
issues on which they can find common ground.
The bill eases and expands access to health services and disability
benefits for veterans who were exposed to toxic smoke from the U.S.
military's use of burn pits on foreign bases until the mid-2010s.
If enacted into law, the bill would cost an estimated $180 billion over
the first four years. It would benefit nearly 3.5 million veterans who
developed cancer and other illnesses after being exposed to fumes from
pits that sometimes were as large as a football field. The pits were
used to burn waste including plastic tires, batteries, explosives, human
feces and chemicals.
"For too long, our nation’s veterans have faced an absurd indignity:
They enlisted to serve our country, went abroad in good health, and came
back home only to get sick from toxic exposure endured while in the line
of duty," Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a Senate speech.
He noted that around 80% of disability claims related to burn pits have
been rejected by the Veterans Administration. The issue is personal for
President Joe Biden, who believes his late son Beau's fatal brain cancer
could have been caused by such a pit from when he served in Iraq.
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Sgt. Richard Ganske, 84th Combat Engineer Battalion uses a bulldozer
to maneuver trash and other burnable items around in the burn pit at
the landfill of Logisitics Support Area Anaconda in Balad, Iraq
August 24, 2004. Picture taken August 24, 2004. Pfc. Abel
Trevino/U.S. Army/Handout via REUTERS
Servicemembers returning home from Afghanistan and
Iraq suffered from fatal respiratory illnesses and rare cancers
caused by exposure to the open air pits, but were frequently denied
coverage or put through protracted self-funded legal battles in
order to prove their eligibility.
"The cost of war is not fully paid when the war is over. We are now
on the verge of honoring that commitment to American veterans and
their families," Republican Senator Jerry Moran said ahead of the
vote on Thursday.
"This is a day of our democracy actually working," Democratic
Senator Kyrsten Gillibrand, who championed the bill in the Senate,
said at a press conference after the vote.
The bill will also expand coverage for servicemembers exposed to
Agent Orange, a herbicide used by the U.S. military during the
Vietnam War.
The measure will now go to the House of Representatives for a vote
before being sent to Biden's desk for signature into law.
(Reporting by Moira Warburton in Washington; Editing by Lisa
Shumaker and David Gregorio)
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