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April 18, 2005
Senator’s Name
Re: Preserve Our Civil Rights,
Hold Mass Polluters Accountable, Vote NO on unFAIR Asbestos Bail Out Bill
Dear Senator ______:
[ Introduce yourself, your medical
condition, and your family situation. For example: I (or my
husband/dad/friend) have malignant mesothelioma, a cancer caused by
asbestos. I worked around asbestos for many years while working as a
___________. I have been told by my doctor that I have a limited life
span and that my treatment options are sadly limited. The treatments
available are very expensive and could surpass several hundred thousand
dollars, money which my family does not have. I will ask a jury to award
damages for my current and future medical bills. The trust fund bill
won’t allow me to do that, instead it offers a “one size fits all” number,
like humans were as interchangeable as sheep.]
The trust fund bill will help the companies,
who poisoned me, but it won=t
help me or my family survive and it won=t
adequately compensate me for my loss. I have filed a civil lawsuit. The
bill would wipe out my lawsuit. It would wipe out unpaid settlements. It
would void all the work done on my case and confiscate unpaid
settlements. It would abolish the legal system to shield indicted
companies like W. R. Grace from accountability. It would create a massive
federal bureaucracy that is empowered to limit pay outs, restrict
eligibility criteria and delay compensation if the trust runs dry, which
it will. I don=t
expect the corporate-sponsored bureaucracy to be very friendly to asbestos
victims. The more money they pay out, the sooner the trust will go
insolvent, and they will be out of a job.
The bill pretends to care about mesothelioma
patients, but it doesn’t. Theoretically, after the government takes away
my case, after nine months, if I am alive, I can re-file my case, and
start all over again. The average survival for mesothelioma patients is
nine months. What does the bill do to help me survive long enough to
resolve my claim? Out of a $140 billion trust fund, it requires the mass
poisoners to spend only about $10 million a year on medical research and
treatment. This is a cruel slap in the face. The companies who poisoned
me will save billions of dollars but they won’t have to plow any of that
windfall blood money into cleaning up their mess. More will die and
suffer as the guilty celebrate their government bail out.
I can go on. The trust fund will not have
enough money from the get go. It will take at least two years for the new
federal agency to get up to speed. Many of the insurance companies and
manufacturers are already saying they are unwilling to pay. Instead of
compensating victims, they=ll
hire their lawyers to hold up the trust, just as they did with the
superfund law, which made lots of defense lawyers rich, but didn’t clean
up many toxic waste dumps. The bill doesn’t=t
spell out who has to contribute and how much. Foreign insurance companies
likely will balk over their bill, and we won=t
have any recourse.
To delay the inevitable insolvency, the bill
imposes a burden of proof that is far more stringent than the civil courts
require. The bill caps the fee for our attorneys (but does nothing to cap
the runaway hourly fees the defense lawyers charge), which will discourage
us from appealing bad bureaucratic decisions. The Administrator will be
like a dictator with totalitarian authority to stiffen medical criteria,
reduce awards and take his sweet time in declaring the fund insolvent.
The bill forces victims to fight each other for the scraps. The folks in
Libby, Montana will get $400,000 for asbestosis claims, while a person
with the same disease will only get $25,000. This is patently unequal
treatment. The sad truth is there are hundreds of horribly contaminated
shipyard, steel mill, refinery and asbestos mining/factory towns where
death and disease are rampant (for example, Manville, New Jersey). And
the exposure criteria discriminate against those who were exposed to
asbestos after 1976 while remodeling homes, repairing brakes, going to
contaminated schools or living next to an asbestos industrial site.
Who in Washington D.C. decided that the life
of every mesothelioma patient was worth $1.1 million? The government
compensated the victims of 911 on average about $1.7 million. We have
enormous medical and hospital bills, but the proposed law does nothing to
account for these special damages. Sadly, the bill allows the
administrator to give a little bit more to some claimants (if they are
younger than 51 years old), if he can take away money from the older
patients (age 65 and up), to make up the difference. The corporate
sinners get to cleanse themselves with token pay-offs and their government
accomplices end up compounding the crime by robbing Peter to pay Paul.
Please honor your commitment as a U.S. Senator
to serve all of the people and uphold our Constitution.
Most courts do have procedures for expediting the resolution of claims by
mesothelioma patients. [In California, the courts are required to set for
trial within four months the case of anyone with a poor prognosis, such as
a mesothelioma patient]. If there are problems with the tort system, let's
fix those problems, and not use the few abuses as an excuse to abolish our
civil jury system. A medical criteria bill should be considered, not a
bill that rewards the perpetrators of the worse toxic poisoning this
country has ever seen.
Sincerely,
NAME
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