Guest guest Posted April 14, 2000 Report Share Posted April 14, 2000 Compensation announced for U.S. workers exposed to radiation By H. JOSEF HEBERT, Associated Press WASHINGTON (April 12, 2000 12:09 p.m. EDT http://www.nandotimes.com) - The Clinton administration, acknowledging the thousands of people sickened by radiation, is unveiling a broad package of compensation Wednesday for ailing workers who were exposed to radiation at the country's nuclear bomb factories during the Cold War, government sources said. Energy Secretary Bill was to announce the compensation program, most of which will still have to be approved by Congress. The plan would offer lump-sum payments of at least $100,000 to workers or their survivors, or allow them to negotiate a package that would cover medical costs, lost wages and job retraining, according to sources familiar with the proposal. While it's unclear how many people would be affected, the Energy Department has estimated that about 3,000 former workers at nuclear weapons plants, or their families, are likely to be eligible because of exposure to radiation in the 1950s and, in some cases into the 1970s. The plan estimates the cost of the program at as much as $400 million a year in the early years, but costs would decline as the number of eligible workers declines, said officials. The plan represents the first action by the government that would affect long-standing claims by nuclear-weapons workers throughout the government's vast nuclear weapons production complex covering facilities in more than a dozen states. It was not immediately clear what specific facilities would be covered, although workers at uranium enrichment plants in Paducah, Ky., and Piketon, Ohio are among the locations where compensation was expected. Last January, a White House panel concluded there was credible evidence that many workers at the nuclear weapons plants became ill with lung cancer and other serious illnesses because of exposure to radiation or toxic chemicals. Until then, the government had always denied a direct link between work exposure and later illnesses. Under the proposal being unveiled Wednesday, the government would assume workers were exposed to the highest expected level of radiation associated with their work if actual medical records were not available, said the sources, who spoke on condition of not being further identified. The proposed compensation plan, which was put together by the White House National Economic Council, was first reported by The Washington Post and The New York Times. The plan expands an earlier proposal by the Energy Department that would provide compensation to a limited number of workers who have contracted an incurable beryllium disease because of exposure to chemicals and radioactive material at the Kentucky and Ohio uranium enrichment plants. " The government is done fighting workers and now we're going to help them. We're reversing the decades-old practice of opposing worker claims and moving forward to do the right thing, " was quoted as saying by the Post. The findings last January that illnesses were linked to nuclear weapons work was based on a review of dozens of studies and raw medical data covering an estimated 600,000 workers at 14 nuclear weapons sites. While the panel said the evidence did not in all cases show a direct causal link between workplace exposures and specific illnesses, it found that workers at the plants suffered higher than normal rates of a wide range of cancers and that they clearly were exposed to cancer-causing radiation and chemicals in the workplace. The studies examined health records and other data covering three decades of the Cold War, and officials emphasized the findings do not relate to working conditions at the plants Wednesday. The report said elevated rates of 22 categories of cancer were found among workers at 14 facilities in the department's atomic weapons complex. They included leukemia, Hodgkin's lymphoma and cancers of the prostate, kidney, salivary gland and lung. President Clinton ordered the review after the Energy Department concluded the government should compensate workers who had developed an incurable lung disease because of exposure to beryllium, a material used in nuclear weapons production. and the White House wanted to determine if other nuclear weapons plant workers likewise should be compensated because of exposure to plutonium, uranium and a variety of radioactive or highly toxic substances. The interagency group reviewed dozens of epidemiological studies, raw health data and other documents, many of which in the past have been dismissed by the government. The report's findings included workers at plutonium production facilities at Savannah River in South Carolina and Hanford in Washington state; the Rocky Flats plant near Denver, where plutonium was molded into weapons components; uranium enrichment and processing plants at the Oak Ridge, Tenn., complex; the Fernald uranium processing plant near Cincinnati; and the Lawrence Livermore and Los Alamos national laboratories in California and New Mexico, respectively. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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