Burn Pit Bill finally has a good chance of passing

GEAR CHECK: Our readers don't just follow the news - they stay ready. Featured gear from this story is below.

Jamie Goldstein

The Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee’s top two ranking representatives have announced that a bipartisan agreement has been reached over the highly anticipated Honoring our PACT Act, also known as the Burn Pit Bill. If passed into law, millions of veterans suffering from conditions related to burn pit exposure will finally be eligible for the care that they are entitled to.

President Biden would not only call this a professional win, but a personal victory as well. Biden’s son, Beau, a veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom, died from brain cancer in 2015. Biden believes that his cancer may have been related to burn pit exposure during his time deployed to Iraq.

Photo courtesy of Burn Pits 360

Burn Pit Woes

Up to this point, the Veterans Administration has denied up to 72% of all burn pit related claims. If passed, the Burn Pit Bill would force the VA to assume that service members deployed to forward areas have been exposed to burn pits and assess all ailments from there, rather than forcing the service member to prove to the VA that they were exposed.

The bulk of the bill and much of its selling points is geared towards expanding resources and benefits to veterans exposed to burn pits during their time in service. Additionally, and equally important, the bill also mandates investment into the VA as a whole. Health care facilities, personnel, and systems would be fortified through meaningful investments of time and money.

Jon Stewart, who famously advocated for 9/11 first responders and victims, has been equally instrumental in raising awareness on this issue as well as lobbying our government to vote in favor of the bill.

Stewart said: 

“We can’t wait any longer. This delay is unconscionable. The bottom line is our country exposed our own veterans to poison for years, and we knew about it, and we did not act with urgency and appropriateness, and therefore, we’ve lost men and women who served this country. They’ve died out of our inaction.”


<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">I&#39;m standing with NY veterans suffering from illness caused by toxic burn pit exposure who need the health care and benefits provided by the Honoring Our PACT Act.<br><br>This Senate will vote on the <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/PACTAct?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#PACTAct</a> to get our vets the quality health care they deserve. <a href="https://t.co/aXq2MgfHib">pic.twitter.com/aXq2MgfHib</a></p>&mdash; Chuck Schumer (@SenSchumer) <a href="https://twitter.com/SenSchumer/status/1516504489758535687?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 19, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

According to Chuck Schumer, Senate Majority Leader, the Senate will reconvene on the matter after Memorial Day recess, the first week in June.

 

You may also like

Blog

A new report suggests fully autonomous drones may have carried out deadly attacks against human soldiers without direct human control. If confirmed, the incident could mark a historic turning point in warfare, raising major questions about the future role of artificial intelligence on the battlefield.
A Louisiana man's attempt to escape deputies took an unexpected turn when he ran into a swamp and straight into an alligator. Newly released body camera footage captured the bizarre encounter, which ended with the suspect being rescued before he could be taken into custody.
A Ukrainian military brigade is moving toward a future that once sounded like science fiction. Commanders say robots could soon replace up to 30% of infantry roles, marking one of the most ambitious attempts yet to remove soldiers from some of the battlefield's most dangerous missions.
Two U.S. Army soldiers are safe after their AH-64 Apache helicopter crashed into the Strait of Hormuz during a training mission. What followed was a dramatic rescue involving aircraft, naval forces, and for the first time, an unmanned surface vessel helping locate survivors in open water.
Just days after Iran launched missiles toward Israel and as Washington worked to preserve ongoing negotiations with Tehran, President Donald Trump personally urged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu not to retaliate. By the morning of June 8, Israeli aircraft had already struck targets inside Iran, exposing a growing divide between diplomacy and deterrence.

Like This Story? Check Out What Our Community Is Buying

Our best sellers are designed for real-world use - not hype.

View Best Sellers