Albuquerque Journal

Western governors call on Congress to expand downwinder compensati­on

Western Governors’ Associatio­n support comes as lawmakers consider two RECA bills

- BY KYLE DUNPHEY

A letter signed by Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham is garnering more support from several other Western governors calling on Congress to expand the Radiation Exposure Compensati­on Act, or RECA, which would widen eligibilit­y for people poisoned by radiation from Cold War-era nuclear weapons testing and manufactur­ing, known as downwinder­s.

Utah Gov. Spencer Cox on Tuesday joined the call penned by the Western Governors’ Associatio­n to leadership in the U.S. House of Representa­tives on May 1. Lujan Grisham is the vice chair of the associatio­n.

Cox’s support comes as lawmakers in Washington, D.C., are considerin­g two RECA bills.

One proposal would extend the deadline for compensati­on, which is set to expire this June. It is sponsored by Sen. Mike Lee in the Senate and Rep. Celeste Maloy in the House, both Republican­s from Utah.

The other, sponsored by Missouri Republican Sen. Josh Hawley, would increase compensati­on, expand eligibilit­y for certain uranium workers, and widen the current definition of an “affected area” to include all of Utah, Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico and Guam.

It would also include parts of Hawley’s district near St. Louis, where creek water was contaminat­ed by radiation during nuclear weapons developmen­t.

As of Tuesday evening, Congress has

14 days to pass an expansion or extension before compensati­on expires on June 10.

Cox told Utah News Dispatch in a statement that he wants to see the program expanded.

“We support efforts to expand compensati­on for those affected by the nuclear testing that occurred throughout the West,” Cox said in the statement. “It’s the right thing to do.”

The statement comes on the heels of a similar push from Western governors urging members of Congress to support Hawley’s bill. On May 1, Republican Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon, chair of the Western Governors’ Associatio­n, and Lujan Grisham, a Democrat, sent letters to several lawmakers asking them to schedule a vote.

“The bill acknowledg­es that nuclear weapons production and testing has had much broader effects than currently recognized by statute, and Western Governors encourage you to expeditiou­sly schedule the legislatio­n for considerat­ion by the full House,” reads a letter sent to House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, and Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, a New York Democrat. RECA was enacted in 1990.

Lee and Maloy’s bill would extend the same program that’s been in place since 1990. But activists have long claimed the program was too narrow, pointing to ample evidence that all of Utah and other states in the West were downwind from nuclear weapons testing.

RECA also excludes people who had kidney cancer, certain kinds of leukemia, autoimmune disorders or other diseases that are linked to radiation. And Utahns who worked but didn’t reside in eligible counties or lived just across an eligible county line cannot receive compensati­on.

Hawley’s bill, which passed the Senate in March after a bipartisan 69-30 vote, would increase some payouts up to $150,000, while covering people who worked in uranium mines and mills up until 1990, extending the current timeframe by nearly 20 years. Uranium core drillers and remediatio­n workers would also be eligible.

Hawley has said he hopes the expansion will be added to a bill expanding child tax credits.

 ?? JESSICA BACA/JOURNAL ?? Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and other Western governors are calling to expand compensati­on for downwinder­s. The Radiation Exposure Compensati­on Act is set to expire in June.
JESSICA BACA/JOURNAL Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and other Western governors are calling to expand compensati­on for downwinder­s. The Radiation Exposure Compensati­on Act is set to expire in June.

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