By Louise Radnofsky
Newsday (New York)
Copyright 2007 Newsday, Inc.
WASHINGTON — Mayor Michael Bloomberg yesterday urged a Senate panel to reopen the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund for sick Ground Zero responders and said that New York needed $150 million each year to continue to treat them.
Thousands of the 50,000 rescue and recovery workers are being monitored and treated for serious respiratory illnesses at special clinics in New York City, Long Island and New Jersey.
Bloomberg said that maintaining this care, along with programs for firefighters and lower Manhattan residents, would cost $150 million a year.
He also told the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions committee hearing that treatment costs could rise to $393 million a year as more people became sick.
“We need your help,” wrote responder Ken George, of North Babylon, in testimony submitted for the record. “Working at the World Trade Center site has turned my life upside down. I worry about my future and that of my family.”
Bloomberg asked lawmakers to support a Senate bill sponsored by Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) that would provide grants for Sept. 11-related health care.
“Congress cannot turn its back on those who responded with courage and suffered through this terrible catastrophe,” Bloomberg said. “9/11 wasn’t just a strike against New York or Washington. It was an attack against all of America.”
The September 11th Victim Compensation Fund closed in December 2003. Bloomberg said of the responders, “The mere fact that their injuries and illnesses have been slower to emerge should not disqualify them from getting the help they need.”
He said that more than 8,000 lawsuits had been filed by Ground Zero workers alleging damages to their health, and that their claims could total billions of dollars. A compensation fund could stave off expensive litigation, he said.
George listened at the hearing with his wife and daughter.
In 2001, he was a highway repairer for the City Department of Transportation. He said he was in perfect health, lifting weights regularly.
George said he was ordered to report to Ground Zero on the night of Sept. 11 and worked on search and rescue at the site, often digging through rubble on his hands and knees, until late November.
He had a bad feeling about the air at the site, but his main concern was to try to find victims, he said. He didn’t complain that the filter mask he was given was only good for one hour and no replacement filters were available.
“No, I didn’t raise any objections; it was my job to go down there,” he said. “There’s a lot of people I knew down there.”
George, 43, said he now takes 19 different pills every day to treat lung and chest illnesses, and post-traumatic stress disorder. He has been hospitalized for seizures and a heart attack doctors told him was brought on by a combination of the fumes at the site and the prescription steroids he takes.
He quit his job last July because he could not continue working.
“It’s not that I expect anything, it’s just treat us fair,” he said.
Dr. Jeanne Mager Stellman, a Columbia University professor who studies occupational health, told the panel that at Ground Zero, “we had what can only be characterized as a toxic chemical soup ... maybe a stew.”
She said the rubble contained corrosive cement dust, asbestos and other carcinogens, each considered a serious hazard in its own right.