President Donald Trump signed the Blue Water Navy Vietnam
Veterans Act into law late Tuesday, a move that will fast-track disability
compensation for personnel with medical conditions related to the chemical
herbicide Agent Orange.
The enactment follows a decades-long fight by sailors,
Marines and others who served off the coast of Vietnam. The law means they will
now get the same presumption as ground troops that certain diseases are
connected to Agent Orange exposure.
According to Congress and the Department of Veterans
Affairs, an estimated 90,000 veterans may be eligible for benefits under the
law.
The legislation, H.R. 299, extends disability compensation
to personnel who served off the coast of the Republic of Vietnam between Jan.
9, 1962, and May 7, 1975, within 12 nautical miles of the coast of Vietnam and
Cambodia, along a line of demarcation spelled out in the law.
Those eligible include veterans with one or more of the
presumptive diseases whose claims were previously denied. It also includes
those with new claims.
The bill also covers veterans who served in the Korean
Demilitarized Zone between Sept. 1, 1967, and Aug. 31, 1971, as well as
children with spina bifida born to veterans who served in Thailand between
January 1962 and May 1975.
While most veterans service organizations, including
Veterans of Foreign Wars, Disabled American Veterans and Vietnam Veterans of
America, supported the bill, another group objected.
Military-Veterans Advocacy, a group that brought a lawsuit
against the federal government for denying benefits to Blue Water veterans,
said Wednesday that the law's wording may negatively affect up to 55,000 of the
90,000 veterans who served offshore.
John Wells, a retired Navy commander with Military-Veterans
Advocacy, said the area noted in the bill may exclude some sailors whose ships
were offshore, but outside the territorial seas.
"This includes a number of carrier sailors who were
exposed [to Agent Orange runoff] by the surging waters of the Mekong River that
discharged into the South China Sea," Wells said in a statement released
Wednesday.
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