Thursday, March 25, 2004
http://murray.senate.gov/news.cfm?id=219617
Video: Watch the press conference
here:
http://www.senate.gov/cgi-bin/nph-dpc2ra.pl?proto=http&file=/%7Emurray/video/040324-asbestos.rm
(You will need the free Real Media player.)
(WASHINGTON, D.C.) U.S. Senator Patty Murray
(D-Wash) joined with Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.), Sen. Mark Dayton (D-Minn),
two doctors, and dozens of asbestos victims and family members to urge
Congress to improve the asbestos-liability bill that will be brought to
the Senate floor next month.
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Senator Murray joined with Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.), Sen. Mark
Dayton (D-Minn), two doctors -
Dr. Bret Williams and
Dr
Harvey Pass, and dozens of asbestos victims and family
members to urge Congress to improve the asbestos-liability bill that
will be brought to the Senate floor next month. |
For the past three years, Murray has led the effort
in Congress to ban asbestos, increase public awareness, and improve
research and treatment for patients with asbestos-related diseases. In May
2003, Murray proposed the Ban Asbestos in America Act, which would:
- Ban asbestos in the United States,
- Educate the public and workers about the risks of
asbestos products,
- Improve research and treatment for asbestos disease
victims,
- Expand EPA s blue ribbon panel to better protect the
public.
Last June, Murray succeeded in getting the ban
portion of her act included in the Judiciary Committee s liability bill.
Today s press conference is part of her effort to get all of her
legislation s provisions included in the pending bill. Murray also wants
to make sure that the resulting bill gives victims the resources they
need.
"I want the federal government to make a promise to
those workers and to the asbestos victims here today that no one else will
have to suffer from asbestos-related diseases. That is why for any
asbestos legislation to have a hope of passing the Senate it must include
all aspects of my Ban Asbestos in America Act", Murray said.
Senator Dayton, one of Murray s cosponsors on the
legislation, said "I am astonished that, after all the documented human
suffering caused from this deadly substance, asbestos has not been
prohibited from our products, allowing it to end up in playgrounds and
workplaces. Why, in heaven's name, are we not banning asbestos
immediately, as dozens of other civilized countries have already done?"
Dr. Bret Williams, a victim of Mesothelioma, said,
"Sadly, the asbestos bill before Congress would save industry many millions
of dollars, but would not divert any of that windfall to research or
prevention. Instead of solving a public health crisis, the thrust of
pending legislation is simply to shield from liability the very
corporations that poisoned me and legions of others."
Dr. Harvey Pass, Head of Thoracic Oncology at the Karmanos Cancer Institute in Detroit, spoke about progress doctors are
making in treating asbestos related diseases and the long road ahead.
"The medical, legal, industrial, and governmental
community must now join as a team to promote programs which will lessen
the anxiety for individuals at high risk for asbestos- related cancers, by
focusing on early detection, prevention strategies, and innovative
treatments, Dr. Pass said."
Senator Murray's Remarks Follow:
Thank you all for being here today.
I am pleased to be joined by Senators Harry Reid and
Mark Dayton, cosponsors of my Ban Asbestos in America Act, Dr. Bret
Williams and Dr. Harvey Pass along with a number of asbestos victims,
their families, experts and advocates.
I know many of you have made real sacrifices and
traveled great distances to be here this morning, including Brian Harvey
who is here from Seattle and Sue Vento from Minnesota. Thank you could all
of the victims and their families please stand up.
I would also like to thank Chris Hahn and the
Mesolthelioma Applied Research Foundation for their invaluable input and
support throughout the last three years. We are all here for one reason --
to prevent more Americans from suffering from exposure to asbestos.
When Congress talks about asbestos legislation, we
hear a lot of statistics and a lot of fancy legal terms. But too often, we
don t hear the real stories of people who are suffering every day because
our government has failed to protect us from a deadly substance.
I'd like to share just one of these many stories
with you today. The photo to my right is from the late 1970s. It's of
Justin and Tim Jorgensen. The boys are shown climbing on waste rock from
the Western Minerals plant in Minneapolis, Minnesota. This plant processed
asbestos contaminated vermiculite from the W.R. Grace plant in Libby,
Montana. The company knew when it bought the mine in 1963 that it was full
of asbestos, but chose not to warn workers or their families. Justin and
Tim's grandparents lived across the street from the Western Minerals
facility. The waste rock that Justin and Tim are climbing on contains up
to 10 percent tremolite asbestos.
Last year I received an email message from Izzi
Jorgensen, who is the mother of the two boys in this picture. I want to
read it to you this morning: " Please eliminate asbestos. Those two boys playing in
the free rock are my sons."
Justin and Tim's father Harris Jorgensen
suffered long and hard with asbestosis and lung cancer. He died June 22,
1991 at age 44. & At this time I wonder - Do my sons have to suffer also?
It may be too late.
I am here today to tell you that it is not too late
to stop the suffering caused by asbestos in this country. But we need to
do something today.
Like many Americans, I thought that asbestos had
already been banned. But, while more than 30 countries have banned
asbestos and protected their citizens, the United States still has not.
Today, people across the country are still being exposed to harmful
amounts of asbestos in vermiculite.
As many as 35 million homes, schools and businesses
may have Zonolite insulation. This may be the case for up to 150,000 homes
in my home state of Washington. Contaminated material from the Libby mine
was shipped to more than 300 sites around the country for processing. EPA
and the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry have determined
that 22 sites are still contaminated today including one in Spokane,
Washington.
As I learned more about Libby, and how asbestos has
ended up in products by accident, I was shocked to learn that asbestos is
still being used in products on purpose. In fact, in 2002 the U.S.
imported $125 million worth of brake linings with asbestos! Asbestos is
still used in products like gaskets, roofing supplies and brakes.
It is unconscionable that so many innocent victims
have died because they were exposed to a product that they were told was
safe. But it is even more disturbing that our government continues to
allow asbestos to be imported into this country and used in everyday
products today.
According to the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration an estimated 1.3 million employees in construction and
general industry still face significant asbestos exposure on the job. Let
me say that again 1.3 million employees are still being exposed to
asbestos on the job.
I want the federal government to make a promise to
those workers and to the asbestos victims here today that no one else will
have to suffer from asbestos-related diseases. That is why -- for any
asbestos legislation to have a hope of passing the Senate -- it must
include all aspects of my Ban Asbestos in America Act.
My legislation does four things. First, the bill
protects the public by requiring the EPA to ban asbestos within two years
I am grateful Senator Hatch has included the ban in his asbestos
litigation reform bill.
Second, the bill requires EPA to conduct a public
education campaign about the risks of asbestos products. We need to warn
people that products in their homes and in their workplaces may still
contain asbestos. The legislation also requires EPA to conduct a survey to
determine which foreign and domestic products consumed in the U.S. today
have been made with asbestos. EPA has estimated that at one time, as many
as 3,000 products were made with asbestos.
Third, the legislation invests in research, tracking
and treatment of asbestos diseases. It requires the creation of a registry
to track Mesothelioma. It also authorizes funding for 10 treatment centers
nationwide to improve treatments for and awareness of this fatal cancer.
Finally, the bill calls for the National Academy of
Sciences, along with the EPA s Blue Ribbon Panel, to study issues beyond
the six regulated forms of asbestos. Over the years, asbestos has taken a
staggering toll. According to a recent report issued by the Environmental
Working Group, some 43,000 thousand Americans have died from exposure to
asbestos over the last twenty years and millions more remain at risk.
I hope that by continuing to work together we will
build additional support for the all of the critical components of the Ban
Asbestos in America Act so that future generations will not just think
that asbestos has been banned, but they can be sure of it. It is time to
end the suffering from this deadly substance.