Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The government poisoned its own citizens. Now it needs to help them

- Josh Hawley

This year, Americans had the opportunit­y to revisit the origins of our nation’s nuclear program with the blockbuste­r film “Oppenheime­r.” But there’s one story line that didn’t make the big screen: those Americans who are still paying the price.

For decades, the federal government poisoned an untold number of its citizens through our atomic program. It happened everywhere, hurting uranium mine workers in Texas, Native Americans living downwind from nuclear tests in the Mountain West and communitie­s exposed to Manhattan Project waste in Missouri.

And that’s just a small sample. Thousands more were poisoned, sickened, and died. Lives were broken — all because our government was careless, and then covered it up.

Justice for silenced victims

Now, the law that delivers some justice and compensati­on to these victims is about to expire. Congress must include a reauthoriz­ation of this life-changing program as part of the annual defense bill. It’s our chance to give justice to victims who have been silenced and forgotten for years.

This widespread government­caused poisoning ranks among the worst environmen­tal disasters in our nation’s history. The United States conducted nearly 200 atmospheri­c nuclear tests from the 1940s into the 1960s. Residents living near or downwind from these test areas were exposed to the fallout, often without any warning of exposure. The radiation fell on their homes, their farms, and their families.

And it wasn’t just the testing. Tens of thousands of American workers across the country helped to mine and process uranium and worked in facilities that built our atomic weapons, and they breathed in the toxic substances every day.

These workers answered the call to serve America during a consequent­ial time in our nation’s history. They were a backbone to our national defense from World War II through the end of the Cold War — but many developed cancers as a result. Families and communitie­s suffered.

In 1990, Congress finally acknowledg­ed the government’s egregious neglect and passed the Radiation Exposure Compensati­on Act to compensate victims who were sickened with cancer from nuclear tests.

Championed by then-Sen. Orrin Hatch and signed into law by President George H.W. Bush, the program was reauthoriz­ed and strengthen­ed by President Bill

Clinton in 2000. President Joe Biden signed a short extension in 2022 with unanimous approval from Congress.

Few programs have enjoyed more bipartisan support. As George H.W. Bush said upon signing the law, this will “fairly resolve the claims of persons present at the test site and of downwind residents, as well as claims of uranium miners.”

A moral imperative

But in just a few months, funding for the program will be cut off. This cannot be allowed to happen. Since its creation, RECA has helped tens of thousands of Americans and assisted those exposed to radiation rebuild and renew their lives. How can we turn our back on them?

Many more communitie­s still need access to this program before it runs out. In my home state of Missouri, mismanaged nuclear waste from the Manhattan Project era sat exposed for years and contaminat­ed communitie­s in the St. Louis region. Now these areas have elevated cancer rates. In multiple other states, “downwinder­s” still need compensati­on.

Hatch wrote in 2020 that updating RECA was “a moral imperative.” He pointed to one group of victims that would be severely harmed by the failure to renew the bill. “If we let it expire, we leave hundreds of Navajo men and women unable to pay their medical bills for issues directly related to radiation poisoning.” He was right.

Back in July, Congress took the first step to getting this done when the Senate adopted, as part of the defense bill, my amendment with Sen. Ben Ray Luján of New Mexico to extend and strengthen the RECA program. I was proud to see that amendment pass with a bipartisan supermajor­ity, reflecting the broad support among both parties for obtaining justice for victims. President Biden has since supported it as well.

 ?? Associated Press ?? The stem of a hydrogen bomb moves upward through a heavy cloud and comes through the top of the cloud, after the bomb was detonated over Namu Island in the Bikini Atoll, Marshall Islands, May 21, 1956.
Associated Press The stem of a hydrogen bomb moves upward through a heavy cloud and comes through the top of the cloud, after the bomb was detonated over Namu Island in the Bikini Atoll, Marshall Islands, May 21, 1956.

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