(KTTS News/ Edited Press Release) – Yesterday, U.S. Senator Josh Hawley’s (R-Mo.) legislation to compensate victims of government-caused nuclear contamination in the greater St. Louis area was adopted by the U.S. Senate.
The legislation took the form of an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act.
Sen. Hawley’s legislation was co-sponsored by Senators Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.), Eric Schmitt (R-Mo.), and Mike Crapo (R-Idaho).
“For fifty years, fifty years the federal government has put into the water, into the soil, into the air of St. Louis and surrounding regions radioactive nuclear material,” said Sen. Hawley. “They have not told the people of St. Louis. They have not compensated the people of St. Louis. They have not helped the people of St. Louis.”
He continued, “Mr. President, it is time to make this right. The amendment we are about to vote on is a very simple amendment—it is about basic justice—compensating the victims of the federal government’s negligence for what the government itself has done.”
Senator Schmitt said, “It’s unconscionable that this radioactive waste was allowed to be recklessly dumped around the St. Louis area, and the ones paying for it the most are innocent St. Louis families. I grew up in Bridgeton, at the epicenter of this issue, and this is near and dear to my heart. The federal government has an obligation to keep Americans safe, and the pure negligence that has harmed St. Louisans has been brushed aside and covered up for far too long. I’m proud to co-sponsor Senator Hawley’s amendment in order to ensure this disaster is rectified and radiation victims in St. Louis are taken care of.”
Senator Hawley’s legislation will:
- Extend the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA) to cover victims of improperly stored Manhattan Project waste in the St. Louis region.
- Provide RECA compensation to those living in particular geographic areas who suffer from diseases associated with long-term exposure to radiation.
- Help make right a government-caused environmental and health disaster that has impacted Missourians over the last 80 years.
View the full legislative text here.