East Bay Times

Enhanced benefits for vets exposed to burn pits OK'd

- By Kevin Freking

WASHINGTON >> The Senate on Thursday approved a sweeping expansion of health care and disability benefits for Iraq and Afghanista­n veterans in response to concerns about their exposure to toxic burn pits.

Passage of the bill by a vote of 8414 sets a course that could help millions who served after Sept. 11, 2001, and caps years of advocacy work by veterans groups and others who liken burn pits to the Agent Orange herbicide that Vietnam era veterans were exposed to in Southeast Asia.

The bill is projected to increase federal spending by about $283 billion over 10 years and does not include offsetting spending cuts or tax increases to help pay for it. The House in March approved similar legislatio­n that would have cost more than $320 billion over 10 years.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said after Senate passage that the House would “move swiftly” to take up the legislatio­n and send it to President Joe Biden to be signed into law. Biden has encouraged the effort. In a statement after the vote, Biden said the bill “makes good on our sacred obligation to care for veterans, their families, caregivers, and survivors.” He urged the House to act quickly “so I can sign it into law right away.”

The military routinely used open burn pits set ablaze with jet fuel to dispose of tires, batteries, medical waste and other materials during operations in Iraq and Afghanista­n. The bill would expand military veterans' eligibilit­y for medical care through the Department of Veterans Affairs by extending coverage for 10 years after discharge instead of the current five years.

The legislatio­n would also presume that certain respirator­y illnesses and cancers were related to burn pit exposure, allowing the veterans to obtain disability payments to compensate for their injury without having to prove the illness was a result of their service. Currently, more than 70% of disability claims related to burn pit exposure are denied by the VA due to lack of evidence, scientific data and informatio­n from the Defense Department.

The legislatio­n would also benefit many Vietnam War-era veterans by including high blood pressure in the list of conditions presumed to have been caused by exposure to Agent Orange. And, it would extend Agent Orange presumptio­ns to veterans who served in Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Guam and American Samoa.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., described the bill as “the greatest advance in veterans health care in decades.”

A 2020 study from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine found that health studies provided insufficie­nt evidence to determine whether exposure to burn pit emissions is linked to 27 adverse respirator­y conditions such as asthma, chronic bronchitis and lung cancer. The authors of the study said the uncertaint­y doesn't mean that there is no associatio­n — only that there was insufficie­nt data to draw definitive conclusion­s.

But lawmakers said that stories from constituen­ts tell a different and more definitive tale, and they are reluctant to wait for an irrefutabl­e link between veterans' maladies and their exposure to toxic burn pits.

“Whenever you have to make that connection airtight, that's difficult on many things,” said Sen. Mike Braun, R-Ind. “In this case, I think the evidence is such that there's some causal relationsh­ip. I hear from so many that were over there and got the symptoms fairly close after their service was over. That's not now and then. You hear it fairly often.”

Most Republican­s voted for the bill, but some opposed it because of fiscal concerns. All 14 of the “no” votes came from Republican­s.

Sen. Jon Tester, the chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, said the bill was “about righting a wrong that has been ignored too damn long.”

“There's always cost of war,” Tester said, “and that cost is never fully paid when the war ends.”

The bill was “about righting a wrong that has been ignored too damn long. There's always cost of war, and that cost is never fully paid when the war ends.” — Sen. Jon Tester, chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee

 ?? SIMON KLINGERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Smoke rises from a fire in a trash burn pit south of Kabul, Afghanista­n, in 2011. The Senate approved on Thursday a large expansion of health care and disability benefits for veterans of Iraq and Afghanista­n exposed to the toxic burn pits.
SIMON KLINGERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Smoke rises from a fire in a trash burn pit south of Kabul, Afghanista­n, in 2011. The Senate approved on Thursday a large expansion of health care and disability benefits for veterans of Iraq and Afghanista­n exposed to the toxic burn pits.

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