Veterans who worked as 9/11 first responders can’t access WTC health program due to technicality

Due to a technicality, many military personnel who responded to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 cannot receive health care or benefits through the World Trade Center Health Program.

Michael McAuliff of the New York Daily News spoke with Nate Coward, a veteran who spent weeks at the Pentagon in the aftermath of the attacks with the Army’s 3rd Infantry Regiment. He now suffers from a number of diseases covered by the WTC health program, but cannot access care.

When the legislation was written, Congress neglected to mention military as eligible for the program. This omission affects most people who served at the Pentagon during the recovery. It is important as the World Trade Center Health Program’s doctors are experts in issues concerning which toxins recovery workers were exposed to and which diseases to screen for — something doctors without specialized knowledge do not understand.

Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld helped carry the injured from the Pentagon on 9/11. He died of multiple myeloma, a WTC covered condition, but was ineligible for care under the program.

Congress must rectify this.

 

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Man accused of killing 8 people with truck in NYC terror attack will go to trial in October

The man accused of killing eight people on a bike path in Lower Manhattan by ramming them with with a truck will face trial in October, almost exactly five years after the terrorist attack.

Sayfullo Saipov is accused of smashing a truck into cyclists on October 31, 2017, hoping to impress and join the ISIS terrorist group.

Prosecutors seek the death penalty and will present evidence that he planned a further attack on the Brooklyn Bridge, reports WABC New York.

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Death of 9/11 mastermind won’t bring closure for family of Pentagon victim Antoinette Sherman

Eloise and Charles Clarke, parents of Antoinette Sherman, 36, who was killed in the 9/11 terrorist attack on the Pentagon, reacted to the death yesterday in a drone strike of al Qaida leader al-Zawahiri, one of the masterminds of the attack.

“Hopefully, it’s closure for the United States. For us being family members suffering that loss, we’re never going to have closure,” Eloise Clarke told reporter Matthew Torres of WUSA 9. “Every morning when I wake up, I think about my daughter, the loss, how much I miss her and what she would be doing today,” Clarke said. “She lived life, she loved life and she enjoyed it.”

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