Military-Veterans Advocacy, a Slidell, Louisiana based
veterans advocacy group, has reacted to a denial of their request for
rulemaking to cover veterans exposed to herbicide on Guam, American Samoa and
Johnston Island.
The letter, signed by
Mr. Paul Lawrence, Under Secretary for Benefits, claimed that herbicides
sprayed on the central pacific islands were commercial rather than tactical
herbicides. In a letter to VA Secretary Wilkie dated June 8, 2020, MVA Chairman
of the Board and Director of Litigation CDR John B. Wells (USN, Ret.) addressed
the reasons for the denial and asked that the Secretary overrule Lawrence and grant
the rulemaking request.
"Lawrence's dismissal of herbicides as commercial
rather than tactical is a distinction without a difference," Wells
wrote. "The Government Accounting
Office (GAO) noted in a 2018 report that both commercial and tactical herbicides
contain the chemicals 2,4,5-T and 2,4-D which combine to make the deadly dioxin
2,3,7,8-TCDD.
"It is not the label assigned," Wells added,
"but the chemical composition of the herbicide that wreaks havoc on the
human body. Veterans exposed to that herbicide
who have manifested a covered disease or disability should be
covered."
Wells said evidence shows herbicide use on Guam from 1958
through 1980. Pertinent documents have
been provided to the VA.
Although Lawrence admitted in his denial that leaking
barrels of Agent Orange herbicide were stored on Johnston Island, he claimed
that coverage should be denied because civilian contractors rather than
military personnel maintained the leaking drums.
In his letter to Wilkie, Wells scoffed at this reasoning
noting that the island was only 241 hectacres or less than one square mile of
area. Wells wrote that "civilians
and military shared common areas including latrine and shower facilities,
recreational facilities, a common laundry, dining hall, chapel etc. In these
close quarters, cross-contamination between civilian and military would have
been rampant."
Wells also submitted an affidavit from Dr. Wayne Dwemychuck,
a noted Canadian environmental scientist and Agent Orange specialist who has
confirmed this analysis.
Wells closed his letter with a request for Wilkie to
overrule Lawrence and a promise to commence litigation by mid-July if this did
not occur.
For the VA denial see:
https://www.militaryveteransadvocacy.org/uploads/3/4/1/0/3410338/va_ltr_denying_rulemaking_2020_05_12.pdf
For the MVA response go to:
https://www.militaryveteransadvocacy.org/uploads/3/4/1/0/3410338/wilkie.guam04.4-620.final.with_attachments.pdf
Media Contact:
Point of contact
CDR John B. Wells, USN (ret)
985-290-6940
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