The House is set to consider next week a bill to renew a compensation program for Americans exposed to radiation during nuclear weapons testing or uranium mining. The legislation, which passed in the Senate, is being criticized because it does not contain a hoped-for expansion of compensation to states where uranium was mined and processed for the construction of nuclear weapons.
The move came under fire specifically from Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), who called House Speaker Mike Johnson’s (R-La.) choice of a narrower bill a “total dereliction.”
The Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA) was passed in 1990 to provide funds for residents of areas contaminated by fallout from nuclear tests performed from 1945 to 1962 and for workers mining radioactive materials for weapons production. It was extended in 2022 but is set to expire again on June 10.
Some lawmakers were hoping to not only renew RECA, but to expand its benefits to other areas and groups such as the “downwinders,” residents living downwind of testing sites.
A broader renewal bill includes an expansion that covers the states of Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Arizona, Nevada, and New Mexico, as well as the U.S. territory of Guam. Regions in states such as Missouri and Alaska would be covered as well. It also extends the timeframe for uranium workers to 1990 and expands the list of eligible diseases.
Mr. Hawley sponsored a successful renewal-and-expansion bill in the Senate, which passed in March with 69 votes. Mr. Johnson has instead chosen to advance a smaller, less expensive bill introduced by Utah Republican Sens. Mike Lee and Mitt Romney, which would extend compensation for two years but with no expansions.
Would Kill Legislation if Missouri Excluded
Missouri lawmakers are standing firm that the smaller version of the bill will not advance. “RECA without Missouri is dead on arrival,” Ms. Wagner wrote on X, urging lawmakers to take up the Senate-passed version of the bill.
Ms. Bush highlighted the bipartisan urgency of the expansion and renewal at a press conference on May 16.
“When you have Cori Bush and Josh Hawley on the same side fighting for the same thing for our Missourians, you need to listen,” she said.
With the renewal deadline fast approaching, the program’s future remains uncertain. The proposed expansion is estimated to cost as much as $60 billion.
Rep. Melanie Stansbury (D-N.M), who represents the district containing the Trinity Site, where the World War II-era Manhattan Project testing took place, told Epoch Times on May 16 that she thought the cost might be an obstacle to expansion. But she said the expansion was “crucial so that those families can get help because they’re still dealing with the impacts of it.”
The Epoch Times has reached out to Speaker Johnson’s office for comment.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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