Hartford Courant (Sunday)

‘Burn pits’ bill stalls in Senate

Connecticu­t veterans awaiting benefits as GOP prevents passage

- By Lisa Hagen

Veterans were planning to celebrate the passage of a bipartisan bill to expand benefits for those exposed to burn pits and toxins when they served. But a delay prompted by Senate Republican­s is indefinite­ly stalling that access for veterans in Connecticu­t and across the country.

The Honoring Our PACT Act was expected to clear a procedural hurdle on Wednesday evening and then pass the full Senate in the next few days so President Joe Biden could sign it into law. But more than two dozen Republican­s who initially supported the legislatio­n switched their votes and prevented it from quickly moving forward.

It was a developmen­t that was met with a chorus of criticism from Democrats and veterans groups, since it initially had overwhelmi­ng support in both chambers of Congress.

The Senate voted 84-14 for the bill in June, but after some technical correction­s were made, the legislatio­n needed to pass again. The measure removes the burden on veterans of the Iraq and Afghanista­n wars to prove an illness is related to exposure to toxins.

But this time, the legislatio­n got support from only 55 senators, failing to reach the 60-vote threshold to advance bills and overcome filibuster­s. In the month since the PACT Act first passed the Senate, 25 Republican­s flipped their votes and prevented the bill from moving forward. Republican­s said they took issue with the funding and want to make a change to the bill before passing it.

U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., who serves on the Veterans’ Affairs Committee, said he was “dismayed” to see

Republican­s block Wednesday’s procedural vote. He said he is talking with his GOP colleagues who switched their votes since June.

“I think there’s broad bipartisan support for providing this care and benefits that veterans exposed to burn pits and other toxic poisons need and deserve urgently,” Blumenthal said. “We’ve worked very hard on the veterans committee to move it, and I think the failure to do so would be a colossal tragedy.”

The PACT Act seeks to expand benefits for veterans and service members by establishi­ng a “presumptio­n of service connection” for 23 illnesses that may have developed from their time of service due to burn pit smoke and other toxins. Burn pits were used by the military in Afghanista­n and Iraq to dispose of trash and other waste.

According to the group Iraq and Afghanista­n Veterans of America, there are an estimated 3.5 million veterans in the U.S. who have been exposed to burn pits and toxic exposure.

The number of veterans from Connecticu­t who’ve been exposed is unclear, though a registry run through the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs gives some indication.

Eligible veterans are able to opt into a registry that allows them to detail any exposures to burn pits and airborne hazards, though the numbers aren’t comprehens­ive since the online questionna­ire is voluntary.

Between June 2014 and September 2021, a total of 260,992 U.S. veterans and service members have completed the questionna­ire. In Connecticu­t, 1,262 have completed it.

As of March 2021, there were 167,521 Connecticu­t veterans, which is about 6% of the state’s adult population. Of those, 28% have served since 1990, according to the CT Data Collaborat­ive, which used data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2019 American Community Survey.

Blumenthal, as well as U.S. Rep. Jahana Hayes, D-5, worked on parts of the legislatio­n that broadened which veterans are eligible for benefits and compensati­on, including those who were exposed to the 1966 nuclear accident in Palomares, Spain. The bill would change the law to include the cleanup at the site as a “radiation risk activity.”

There was some speculatio­n that Republican­s voted against the bill as a response to an announceme­nt from Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., that they secured a deal on major health care and climate change legislatio­n. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., suggested that could be the “less charitable reason” so many Republican­s flipped.

But other Democrats dismissed that theory. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., who held a press conference on Thursday with veterans and lawmakers, said the issues from Republican­s existed before the deal emerged. Blumenthal similarly said he would “hesitate to draw that conclusion”

since it is possible Republican­s were unaware of it when the vote occurred. Democrats announced their agreement minutes before the vote on the PACT Act opened.

Republican­s say they don’t oppose the substance of the bill. After the failed procedural vote on Wednesday, Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., again raised concerns over the way billions of dollars can be spent, calling it a “budgetary gimmick.” He argued that the issue could be easily resolved through amending the bill so that the spending can go from mandatory back to discretion­ary, which means it is subjected to the annual appropriat­ions process.

That didn’t quell rising tensions among veterans who rallied outside the U.S. Capitol on Thursday morning. Dozens of veterans fumed over the ongoing delay of legislatio­n that they’ve been pushing for decades. The bill was named after Sgt. First Class Heath Robinson, who was exposed to toxins during his service and died in 2020. His mother-in-law Susan Zeier attended the press

conference and emotionall­y recounted the care that Robinson was denied by the VA.

At the press conference with Democratic lawmakers, the veterans pleaded with Congress to complete action on the PACT Act before the month-long August recess or stay in session until it gets done. They were also joined by former Daily Show host Jon Stewart, who has been a longtime advocate for veterans’ legislatio­n.

The immediate next steps are uncertain, especially with the Senate scheduled to leave for recess at the end of next week. Republican­s want to include an amendment that will fix how the bill is funded. Any changes to the bill would also require the Senate to send it back to the House for another vote before it could go to Biden’s desk, which would further delay passage.

Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kansas, who serves as the ranking member on the Veterans’ Affairs Committee, said he hopes the bill gets passed “sooner rather than later” but acknowledg­ed his GOP colleagues’ concerns.

“I don’t know what motivated everybody” on how they voted on Wednesday, Moran said. “Sen. Toomey’s position has merit and people see that, as far as the funding of the bill. … I will accept whatever solution is necessary to get it done.”

But it’s not immediatel­y clear what Democrats will accept. Gillibrand said she would keep bringing up the bill through a unanimous consent request until the bill passes, though it only takes one senator to object and block it.

 ?? SIMON KLINGERT/AP ?? Smoke rises from a fire in a trash burn pit in the Helmand province south of Kabul, Afghanista­n, in 2011. In the month since the PACT Act first passed the Senate, 25 Republican­s flipped their votes and prevented the bill from moving forward. Republican­s said they took issue with the funding and want to make a change to the bill before passing it.
SIMON KLINGERT/AP Smoke rises from a fire in a trash burn pit in the Helmand province south of Kabul, Afghanista­n, in 2011. In the month since the PACT Act first passed the Senate, 25 Republican­s flipped their votes and prevented the bill from moving forward. Republican­s said they took issue with the funding and want to make a change to the bill before passing it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States