Congress
to cut 9/11 first responders' benefits
Only
days after a national health care act was expanded to provide
coverage to September 11 first responders that have been diagnosed
with cancer in the wake of the terrorist attacks, the future of the
federal plan is now up in the air.
RT,
18
September, 2012
When
US President Barack Obama signed his name to the James Zadroga 9/11
Health and Compensation Act in early 2011, he authorized the
government to assist with medical bills incurred by emergency workers
who have developed problems in the years since the World Trade Center
was destroyed in 2001. Under automatic budget cuts expected to start
next year, though, the health care program could be drastically cut
short and stripped of millions of dollars in funding.
Under
current plans, the automatic sequestering expected to save the
country $1.2 trillion over the next ten years will do so by
significantly trimming funding from the Zadroga Act. Huffington Post
reports that $38 million worth of aid could be cut from the program
in 2013 alone, with as much as $300 million in assistance being lost
altogether over the current planned lifespan of the program.
Zadroga,
a NYPD officer that responded to the Twin Towers after the attack,
passed away in 2006 from illnesses he is suspected to have picked up
while working in the toxic ruble after 9/11. Roughly 20,000 gallons
of jet fuel, 100,000 tons of organic debris and 100,000 gallons of
heating and diesel oil were ignited on 9/11 after two airlines
collided into both towers at the World Trade Center, NBC News
reports.
On
the anniversary of the attacks only one week ago, the government
added around 50 different types of cancers to the list of diseases
covered under the act that now bears Zadroga’s name, but the
automatic budget cuts expected to occur next year are expected to
drastically defund the program and leave survivors once more
scrambling to pay for medical bills and routine cancer screenings,
which would otherwise be covered under the bill.
"This
is unacceptable," John Feal, a construction worker who lost half
his foot at Ground Zero in the cleanup, tells Huffington Post. "This
is just another slap in the face from Washington, D.C."
"Last
week, Republicans and Democrats talked about remembering 9/11 and
unity all across the nation, and all that patriotic stuff, and now
we're getting this thrown on our lap,” he says.
"We
just got cancer added, and we don't even know if we have enough money
for cancer, and they want to take money away from us.”
Democratic
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, a state lawmaker for New York, voted
against the sequester and now explains to HuffPo how Congress’
shortcut to pay the country’s bills is burdening Americans who have
long been victimized.
"Nothing
exemplifies this unbalanced and draconian approach to deficit
reduction more than asking our heroes who have already sacrificed so
much to sacrifice yet again so that Republican leadership could
appease their special interests. Our 9/11 heroes who answered the
call of duty should be treated with the same dignity as our veterans.
We need to come together and work towards a balanced approach that
keeps struggling families from sacrificing the most,” she says.
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