IMMEDIATE RELEASE
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April 14, 2015
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Senators Moran and Blumenthal,
Representatives Benishek and Honda Introduce
New Toxic Exposure Research Act of 2015
(Washington, DC)
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“It’s bad enough that veterans have had to bear the cross of exposure
to toxic agents during our military service,” said Vietnam Veterans of
America National
President John Rowan. “It is worse to see our children and
grandchildren afflicted with health conditions we suspect have derived
from our exposure, and to think we are the cause of their hurt and pain.
Today, however, we see real light at the end of a long,
grim tunnel with the introduction of the ‘Toxic Exposure Research Act
of 2015.’ This legislation, when enacted, will establish within the
Department of Veterans Affairs a national center for research on the
diagnosis and treatment of health conditions of the
descendants of veterans exposed to toxic substances during their
service,” Rowan said
“VVA
is gratified that this is a bipartisan effort in both houses of
Congress,” Rowan emphasized. “We applaud Senators Jerry Moran (R-KS)
and Dick Blumenthal (D-CT), and
Representatives Dan Benishek (R-MI) and Mike Honda (D-CA) – and their
energetic and committed staffs
– for introducing S. 901 and H.R. 1769. We
will pull out all the stops to work with them in seeking additional
co-sponsors for this very necessary legislation. And we will work with
our fellow veterans service organizations,
military organizations and associations, and others to move these bills
through the legislative process and into black-letter law.”
“This
bill isn’t only about the herbicide Agent Orange and other chemicals
used in South Vietnam,” Rowan pointed out, “It’s about exposures to
chemical agents for all who
have served in our Armed Forces, including those exposed to the toxic
fumes released by the
U.S. Demolition Operations at the Khamisiyah Pit and those exposed to the
toxic fires from burn pits across Afghanistan and Iraq during Operations Enduring Freedom, Iraqi Freedom and New Dawn.”
Rowan
noted that a key part of this legislation is the establishment of an
advisory board that will oversee and assess the work of the center, to
determine health conditions
in a veteran’s offspring that likely result from the veteran’s
exposure, and to study and evaluate cases of exposure.
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