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Public
Employee Press Hillary
helps win funds for 9/11 heroes
The heroes of 9/11 rescue and recovery employees
and volunteers, area workers and residents, including many DC 37 members
got some good news from Washington late last year. On Dec. 26, the omnibus appropriations
bill passed by Congress became law. The bill includes $108 million in federal
funding for the health needs of people who were exposed to the environmental hazards
released in lower Manhattan Sept. 11, 2001.
I am so proud that this
critically-needed funding is finally on the way to those who need it, said
Sen. Hillary Clinton, who played a leading role in winning the appropriation.
Thousands
of responders, residents, workers and others continue to suffer the devastating
health effects of 9/11. This funding will help sustain the 9/11 health programs
while we work on a bipartisan, long-term solution, she said.
U.S.
Sen. Charles Schumer, Frank Lautenberg and Robert Menendez, along with Reps. Carolyn
Maloney, Jerrold Nadler and Vito Fossella joined Sen. Clinton in the push to pass
the bill in Congress.
I am glad the president has finally approved
the health care funding for first responders exposed to toxins at Ground Zero,
said Congress member Maloney. For the first time, funding can go to help
lower Manhattan residents, workers, and students.
The new funding
will go toward monitoring and treatment programs administered by the National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. Current programs include the centers
in the Mount Sinai Consortium and the program run by the Fire Dept. The Occupational
& Environmental Medicine Clinic at Bellevue Hospital is a participating clinical
center in the Mount Sinai Medical Monitoring Program and will get a portion of
the new funds.
We still need more money, said DC 37 Safety
and Health Director Lee Clarke. We need legislation to guarantee long-term
funding for this monitoring and treatment program.
The money in the
omnibus appropriations bill builds on the $50 million that was provided in the
Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act that was signed into law last year,
bringing the total to $158 million. | |