The Commercial Appeal

Payments from 9/11 health fund moving slowly

- By David B. Caruso Associated Press

NEW YORK — The federal fund for people with illnesses related to the Sept. 11 attacks said Friday it has been able to issue compensati­on decisions to only 112 people out of nearly 55,000 who have applied so far — a performanc­e one advocacy group called unacceptab­le.

In her second annual report, Sept. 11th Victim Compensati­on Fund special master Sheila Birnbaum said her staff had spent much of the year resolving bureaucrat­ic problems and dealing with a huge surge in applicatio­ns that arrived as people exposed to dust at the World Trade Center raced to beat an October filing deadline.

The fund has been able to award only $27.2 million of the $2.78 billion appropriat­ed by Congress.

Little of that money has actually reached people, because of a decision to hold back 90 percent of the cash until administra­tors know whether they will have enough in the fund to pay all claims.

The slow pace has upset some advocates for the sick.

It also raises questions about whether the fund has the resources to handle the mountain of applicatio­ns from police officers, firefighte­rs, constructi­on workers, and other people who were caught in the dust cloud when the twin towers collapsed, or who worked on the burning debris pile.

“I wouldn’t say it was a struggle. I would call it a learning experience,” Birnbaum said in a phone interview Friday.

Birnbaum said she was optimistic that the process will shift into gear in the coming months.

The fund recently boosted staff numbers to relieve the bottleneck. It now employs 75 people, up from 31 a year ago, and Birnbaum said she would probably add more people in the coming months.

9/11 Health Watch, an advocacy group, said in a statement that the small number of awards issued to date is “unacceptab­le.”

“It was bad enough that responders, survivors, and their families had to wait a decade for the legislatio­n creating the VCF to be passed,” the groups said.

“Now, they are forced to wait for many months for final determinat­ions from the fund; this is time they literally cannot afford.”

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