| To: |
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Mesothelioma and Asbestos Cancer Patients/Families/Friends
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| Fr: |
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Roger
G. Worthington |
| Dt: |
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April
11, 2005 |
| Re: |
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Asbestos Bail Out Bill is Back (and ugly as ever) |
The rights of asbestos victims are again on
the chopping block. The asbestos companies and their corporate sponsors
in the U.S. Senate want to sacrifice your right to seek redress in the
civil court system so that the companies who poisoned millions of workers,
schoolchildren and US Navy veterans can safely put profit predictability
over moral accountability.
The bill is expected to be introduced
tomorrow in the U.S. Senate. We have learned that several Democratic
Senators may co-sponsor the bill, including Sen. Patrick Leahy (Vt.), Tom
Carper (Del.), Herb Kohl (Wis.) and Dianne Feinstein (Ca.).
We can stop the sell-out if we take a few
minutes to call, write and fax our U.S. Senators. In the next few
days, I will be providing you with form letters to fax, e-mail and regular
mail to your senators. I understand the "new"
bill will not be significantly different from last year's
bill, which had been voted out of committee but never reached a floor
vote. When we've analyzed the new bill, we will
provide you with a summary, as well as a suggest form letter, which you
and your family can use.
For now, here are a few points to consider,
based on my review of the last known version of the bail out bill.
- The trust fund inadequately compensates
victims. Awards will be capped at arbitrarily chosen numbers that do
not account for age, life expectancy, lost wages, dependents, medical
bills and special hardships. The numbers will not reflect average jury
or settlement values on a regional basis.
- The trust fund will rely on
contributions from business and insurance, who will likely litigate what
their "fair share"
is for years to come. As with the Superfund toxic waste clean up
effort, corporate America would rather delay than pay.
- The Bail Out Bill will create another
massive federal bureaucracy. It will take years for the agency to
"get up to speed."
Meanwhile, the federal government will confiscate all unpaid settlements
and dismiss all pending lawsuits, even if your case is in trial. You
will forever lose your right to seek redress in the civil court system
for your loss, even if the trust fund runs out of money.
- The new federal agency will be beholden
to its corporate sponsors. Think it's tough
getting any service from your government now? Wait until you try to
collect compensation for asbestos cancer. Agencies by nature put their
own survival as their top priority. If bureaucrats are faced with
deciding to pay or not to pay, they will likely side with industry, as
the more money in the trust fund, the better chance the agency will meet
it's own payroll. Administrative expedience
will trump civil justice.
- At least 10,000 people in the United
States will die each year of asbestos disease over the next 20 years.
At least 2,500 Americans are diagnosed with mesothelioma each year.
Neither industry nor the National Institute of Health has seriously
invested in medical research for early detection, prevention, treatment
or a cure. The bill largely ignores the pressing need for more research
dollars and essentially writes off mesothelioma patients as beyond
help. Two years ago MARF
proposed a $140 million per year research and treatment program. The
bill would dole out a mere $10 million a year for 5 years. This is a
drop in the bucket and a slap in the face.
- The EPA has determined that as many as
35 million homes, schools and businesses are currently contaminated with
asbestos-containing Zonolite insulation. Millions of children are still
being exposed to asbestos in schools. The Bill does not ban the use of
continued use of all forms of asbestos.
- The proposed figure of $140 billion to
fund the asbestos trust was not arrived at through consideration of how
many people may develop asbestos disease, or how much compensation they
may deserve, but by asking industry and its insurers how much they would
be willing to pay to eliminate their liability forever. The settlement
values are fixed and cannot be appealed. Claimants cannot ?opt out? of
the trust fund to pursue their constitutional rights to a jury trial.
- Windfall Savings for Hurting/Killing on
A Massive Scale. Halliburton would save $3.7 billion by going into the
Fund, rather than meeting its obligation under the bankruptcy trust.
Honeywell would save $1.5 billion. W.R Grace would save $1.7 billion.
In all, asbestos corporations with pending settlements would a receive
$12.6 billion windfall by no longer having to compensate victims the
amount they have already agreed to pay.
- The asbestos bail out bill excuses and
reduces corporate liability, opening the door for more egregious
corporate behavior and is not in the best interest of the average
working American.
- The asbestos bail out bill will result
in delays and reduces and denies compensation to asbestos victims and
their families.
- The medical criteria requirements
established in the bill, which were drafted by corporate sponsors and
their lobbyists, do not comport with medical science. They are geared
towards limiting the number of eligible claimants and shirking their
duty to compensate.
- It is foreseeable that the Fund will
never be properly funded, yet the law would prevent claimants from
returning to the civil court system to seek compensation. The bill
rewards big corporations who commit mass atrocities by letting them off
the hook. This is bad for our country, undermines our civil liberties,
and puts companies who obey the law at an economic disadvantage next to
the anything-goes scofflaws.
Even several large insurance companies
agree the bill is unfair and contains numerous problems that are
"unfixable." We agree
that if the Federal Government really wants to fix a problem, it should
fund medical research to fix the public health crisis and pass a
legitimate medical criteria bill that preserves the right of the seriously
ill, such as mesothelioma and lung cancer patients, to expedite their
claims against the guilty parties.
Several rabid senators have proposed
eliminating claims by those who are stricken with colon cancer, laryngeal
and stomach cancers, despite the overwhelming weight of medical authority
that such cancers can be caused by heavy asbestos exposure.
Here are the members of the U.S. Senate
Judiciary Committee.
Biden,
Joseph - (D - DE)
201 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-5042 fax: (202) 224-0139
E-mail:
http://senator@biden.senate.gov
Brownback, Sam - (R - KS)
303 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-6521 fax: (202) 228-1265
Web Form:
http://brownback.senate.gov/
Carper,
Thomas - (D - DE)
513 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-2441 fax: (202) 228-2190
Web Form:
http://carper.senate.gov/email-form.html
Coburn, Tom - (R - OK)
172 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-5754 fax: (202) 224-6008
Web Form:
http://www.senate.gov/pagelayout/senators/one_item_and_teasers/coburn.htm
Cornyn,
John - (R - TX)
517 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-2934 fax: (202) 228-2856
Web Form:
http://cornyn.senate.gov/contact/index.html
DeWine,
Mike - (R - OH)
140 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-2315 fax: 202) 224-6519
Web Form:
http://dewine.senate.gov
Durbin,
Richard - (D - IL)
332 Dirksen Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-2152 fax: (202) 228-0400
Web Form:
http://durbin.senate.gov/
Feingold, Russell - (D - WI)
506 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-5323 fax: (202) 224-2725
E-mail:
http://russell_feingold@feingold.senate.gov
Feinstein, Dianne - (D - CA)
331 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-3841 fax: (202) 228-3954
Web Form:
http://feinstein.senate.gov/email.html
Graham, Lindsey - (R - SC)
290 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-5972 fax: (202) 224-1189
Web Form:
http://lgraham.senate.gov/index.cfm?mode=contact
Grassley, Chuck - (R - IA)
135 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-3744 fax: (202) 224-6020
Web Form:
http://grassley.senate.gov/webform.htm
Hatch,
Orrin - (R - UT)
104 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
(202) 224-5251 fax: (202) 224-6331
Web Form:
http://hatch.senate.gov/index.cfm?Fuseaction=Offices.Contact
Kennedy, Edward - (D - MA)
317 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-4543 fax: (202) 224-2417
Web Form:
http://kennedy.senate.gov/
Kohl,
Herb - (D - WI)
330 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-5653 fax: (202) 224-9787
Web Form:
http://kohl.senate.gov/gen_contact.html
Kyl, Jon
- (R - AZ)
730 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-4521 fax: (202) 224-2207
Web Form:
http://kyl.senate.gov/contact.cfm
Leahy,
Patrick - (D - VT)
433 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-4242 fax: (202) 224-3479
E-mail:
http://senator_leahy@leahy.senate.gov
Schumer, Charles - (D - NY)
313 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-6542 fax: (202) 228-3027
Web Form:
http://schumer.senate.gov
Sessions, Jeff - (R - AL)
335 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-4124 fax: (202) 224-3149
Web Form:
http://sessions.senate.gov/contact.htm#form
Specter, Arlen - (R - PA)
711 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington DC 20510
tel: (202) 224-4254 fax: (202) 228-1229
E-mail:
http://arlen_specter@specter.senate.gov
Please be prepared to ask your Senator to
vote against the Asbestos Bail Out Bill.
RGW
4/11/05
***
POSTED APRIL 11, 2005 *** |