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RADIATION EXPOSURE COMPENSATION: BILL REDMOND
Statement of the Honorable Bill Redmond October 7, 1998 Hearing on Amending
the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act of 1990 Senate Judiciary Committee
Thank you Mr. Chairman for holding this hearing on the possibility of amending
the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act of 1990. As you may know, on March
24, 1998 I introduced H.R. 3539, the Radiation Workers Justice Act of 1998,
in the House of Representatives to address the injustices endured by the
uranium workers in the Four Comers area of New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, and
Colorado. Nearly three months later, I was happy to see my fellow New Mexican,
Senator Jeff Bingaman, introduce companion legislation in the Senate.
I became intimately involved in this issue in November of 1997 when Mr. Paul
Hicks, whose written testimony you have here today, passionately informed
me of the dire circumstances many of the miners and millers, and the survivors
of deceased miners and millers, face today because of our government's neglect
of their pleas for justice.
After many meetings, conversations, and phone calls with the miners and millers
of the Four Comers region, including a town hall meeting attended by 1500
affected parties, legislation was drafted to confront the glaring inadequacies
of the 1990 legislation, the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA).
Prior to Mr. Hick's information, I had no real knowledge of this issue. But
as I talked with Mr. Hicks and other miners and millers and villagers, on
and off the Navajo reservation and the Acoma and Laguna Pueblos, I became
shocked at what I was being told.
As Governor Roland Johnson, Governor of the Pueblo of Laguna, stated in his
June 25, 1998, testimony before the House Judiciary Subcommittee of Immigration
and Claims, " . . . radioactive dust pervaded the environment of the inhabitants
of Paguate Village, spreading over the water supply, clothes drying outdoors,
and food which was being dried in the sun in the traditional manner." When
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) , at the Governor's request, conducted
a study of uranium mining's effect on the area they found that the Rio Paguate
was being contaminated by runoff and the water was no longer fit for domestic,
livestock or irrigation use.
In the statement of the Navajo Nation on June 25, they cited a 1997 National
Cancer Institute report on radioactive fallout that said, "Navajo children
in the path of the fallout from the 1950's atmospheric testing would have
received thyroid doses of 200 rads or more, due to the fact that the children
mostly drank goat milk, not cow milk, and that goat milk results in thyroid
exposures of 10 times or more the radiation dose that would result from drinking
cow's milk."
I was appalled and ashamed to find out that these American citizens were
not told that they were being studied by our government as they mined uranium
for weapons manufacturing in the interest of national security. I was appalled
and ashamed to find out that our government failed to act to require the
reduction of the uranium hazard, both from mining and fallout of weapons
testing, when it could have easily been accomplished. I was appalled and
ashamed to find out that medical studies failed to take into account simple
lifestyle differences of the tribal people who made up a huge portion of
the miners, millers and villagers affected by the radiation exposure. I was
appalled and ashamed to find out that on top of ALL OF THIS, the U.S. Government
did nothing to warn the miners and millers of the potentially disastrous
affect their jobs could have on their health.
50 years later, these miners, millers, villagers, and their descendants have
still not been properly compensated for their injuries. At least several
hundred of them have lost their lives to the hideous diseases that result
from radiation exposure that they endured, unwittingly, in service to their
country. After learning all of this, you can see that I had no choice but
to introduce legislation to right the wrongs our government incurred.
H.R. 3539, represents input from virtually every impacted party in the Four
Corners region including: the Acoma and Laguna Pueblos; the Navajo Nation;
most of the counties and cities in the Four Corners Region of New Mexico,
Arizona, Utah, and Colorado; and all of the miners and millers advocacy groups
in the area.
If this bill passes Congress ALL uranium miners, including above- ground
miners, and uranium millers will be eligible for compensation under RECA.
Coverage will be extended to any miner or miller who worked in the mines
and mills between the years 1942 and 1990. Currently, only individuals employed
at the mines between 1947 and 1971 are eligible.
H.R. 3539 will expand current compensation coverage, which is presently limited
to lung cancer and nonmalignant respiratory diseases, to include compensation
for all medical conditions associated with uranium mining and milling. The
compensation award would increase from $ 100,000 to as much as $200,000,
and will reduce the radiation exposure requirement for claimants to 40 Working
Level Months from its present 200 Working Level Months requirement. It will
also expand the geographical area identified under RECA as eligible for fallout
compensation coverage to include the Navajo Reservation.
H.R. 3539 calls for implementation of the RECA compensation claims process
for Native American claimants to be consistent with Native American law,
tradition, and custom. The current statute does not recognize the right of
our native tribes to have their customs and traditions respected in the American
Court of Law, as well as on the reservations.
Finally, and perhaps most fundamentally, H.R. 3539 will provide compensation
to uranium miners and millers, whose constitutional rights were violated
as a result of the mining, regardless of whether he or she suffers a
radiation-related medical condition. The President's Advisory Committee on
Human Radiation Experiments fully acknowledged that "[t]he grave injustice
that the government did to the uranium miners, by failing to take action
to control the hazard and by failing to warn the miners of the hazard, should
not be compounded by unreasonable barriers to receiving the compensation
the miners deserve for the wrongs and harms inflicted upon them as they served
their country."
I now ask this committee and my colleagues elsewhere in Congress to accept
this challenge and move towards the appropriate amendment of RECA, by ultimately
passing H.R. 3539. In the words of Reginald Pasqual, Governor of the Acoma
Pueblo, "In the end it is a simple matter of Justice."
Thank you again, Mr. Chairman and members of this committee.
Author not available, RADIATION EXPOSURE COMPENSATION:BILL REDMOND. ,
Congressional Testimony, 10-07-1998. |
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