Baltimore Sun

9/11 fund will cut back on payouts

Money running out for new claims, those with illnesses

- By Devlin Barrett

The September 11th Victim Compensati­on Fund plans to cut future payouts in half — and in some cases, by as much as 70 percent — as it struggles with a surge of new claims from those who have gotten sick and the families of those who have died, officials announced Friday.

The fund was opened by the federal government in 2011 to compensate for deaths and illnesses linked to toxic exposure at the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and in Shanksvill­e, Pa., after terrorists crashed four hijacked airliners in 2001.

To date, the $7.3 billion fund has paid about $5 billion to roughly 21,000 claimants. About 700 were for deaths that occurred long after the attacks.

Now, faced with more than 19,000 additional unpaid claims, the math has become painful, Bhattachar­yya said.

“We recognize that this is horribly unfair, particular­ly because we have spent the balance of this program paying claims at full value, and claimants whoarecomi­ngin now are going to receive less,” said Rupa Bhattachar­yya, who administer­s the fund. “Unfortunat­ely, the law really leaves us no choice. This is the fairest way we could come up with to do it.”

Bhattachar­yya warned in October that the fund’s balance was falling while claims were skyrocketi­ng, and that claims received after Feb. 1 may not receive the full amounts given to earlier claimants. That prompted another rush of thousands of claims, yet even that approach was optimistic.

Officials announced Friday that any pending claims, including those received before Feb. 1, will be paid at 50 percent of their prior value. Valid claims received after that date will be paid at 30 percent.

The fund is scheduled to stop taking claims in December 2020.

The budget crunch has been exacerbate­d by changes in the types of claims being filed, Bhattachar­yya said.

“We’ve seen an extremely large increase in the number of deceased claims,” she said, noting the number has tripled since from 2015. “And we are also seeing an increase in the number of serious conditions.”

Recent claims include FBI agents who were exposed to toxins as part of their investigat­ive work and later became ill.

Last June, FBI Supervisor­y Special Agent Brian Crews died of cancer, nearly 17 years after he worked at a landfill where investigat­ors sifted toxic World Trade Center debris looking for human remains and evidence.

In total, 15 FBI special agents have died from ill- nesses attributed to their post-9/11 service.

Thomas O’Connor, president of the FBI Agents Associatio­n, said the fund “needs to be extended so the people going through these work-related injuries and deaths can and should be taken care of.” He also urged people who were at those sites to sign up for the 9/11 programs.

To date, the average payout has been about $240,000, while the largest was $4.1 million and the smallest was $458.

The busiest year for the fund was 2018, when it made a total of $1.5 billion in payments.

Part of the challenge of planning fund payouts is that there has never been a reliable measure of how many people might be eligible or how many would submit claims.

“There’s no good estimate of how many people were exposed to the toxic environmen­t, particular­ly in the New York area,” Bhattachar­yya said.

The first 9/11 fund was created in the days after the 2001 attacks to compensate the families of those killed and injured — and to protect the airlines from what lawmakers feared would be crippling lawsuits. The original fund distribute­d over $7 billion, ending in 2004.

A second iteration of the fund was launched in 2011 and extended by Congress in 2015.

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