Paul Zygielbaum is a 53 year-old
malignant mesothelima survivor who was diagnosed
in early 2004
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(l) Paul S. Zygielbaum,
his wife Michelle and Punch Worthington at the
first ever Mesothelioma Advocacy and
Medical Symposium, held in Las Vegas
on October 14-16, 2004. The symposium
was sponsored by the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation (www.marf.org) |
Dear Senators,
Since the nation as a whole has benefited economically and militarily
from the use of asbestos, fairness demands that the federal government
share in providing compensation to victims of asbestos-related diseases,
rather than placing the burden completely on the companies that profited
from the illness and death of hundreds of thousands. And certainly
attorneys should not be encouraged to abuse the tort system for their own
enrichment, but resolving that issue is not significant in comparison to
making sure that we properly address the health effects of asbestos.
The economics of this problem are not just about the government, the
companies and the attorneys. The interests of asbestos disease patients
are at the heart of this matter. Unfortunately, the expected limits on
awards to patients from the proposed federal trust fund are unjustly low.
Under one proposal, the most that would be awarded to any patient is $1
million. This is hardly just compensation for someone who can expect to
lose 20-50 years of life, to have their earning capability curtailed, and
to face hundreds of thousands of dollars in medical bills, perhaps without
insurance coverage. Nor would it be just compensation to the spouse or
children of a deceased patient. Worse yet, the proposed federal trust fund
can be expected to run out of money long before the needs of patients,
despite the low award limits. This trust fund legislation would again
victimize those who have fallen victim to commercial and government
interests.
We must also recognize the government's nearly complete abstinence from
funding research into treatments and cures for these diseases and from
curtailing their causes. America lost more World War II shipyard workers
to asbestos diseases than we lost in combat in that entire conflict. Yet
the Department of Defense sponsors no research in this area, although it
does so for breast cancer, ovarian cancer, and other diseases only
marginally related to warfare. The little research that is proceeding,
mainly on private funding and small NIH grants, is making progress on
treatment, but we could accelerate the results dramatically with an
appropriate level of federal funding. The legislation under consideration
would make only a token contribution.
Furthermore, efforts to pass a ban on asbestos have languished in
Congress. Some 300,000 Americans suffer with asbestos diseases today, and
that number is growing. Congress has even resisted legislation to
establish an Asbestos Disease Awareness Day. Still, we continue to import
and use asbestos, so we are condemning untold hundreds of thousands more
to pain, debilitation and death.
So, the legislation that is brewing will not really clean up the
asbestos mess. It will only clean up corporate balance sheets and
political agendas. The real dirt will be swept under the rug. Certainly
abuses of tort law should be corrected, but this cause should not provide
an excuse to continue other injustices. The American people deserve a just
and comprehensive solution to all aspects of the asbestos crisis, one that
provides for adequate compensation to those suffering from disease, for an
aggressive research program into treatments and cures, and for a ban on
asbestos in order to protect future generations.
Paul S. Zygielbaum
Santa Rosa, CA
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