INDIANAPOLIS — U.S. Sen. Evan Bayh said Tuesday he would reintroduce legislation to create a medical registry for military personnel exposed to toxic chemicals following reports that Indiana National Guard troops were exposed to a toxin in Iraq.
The legislation would establish a registry to track military service members exposed to industrial toxins during wartime service, guaranteeing them access to priority care at Veterans Administration hospitals.
It would also authorize a scientific review of evidence linking exposure to adverse health effects.
Bayh said in a prepared statement that he would reintroduce the legislation when Congress reconvenes in January.
“Our government has a responsibility to remove needless obstacles to care for soldiers exposed to potentially lethal quantities of toxic chemicals in service of their country,” Bayh said. “We should be guided by our governments response to Agent Orange in Vietnam, when we changed our VA claims system so veterans placed at risk did not bear the burden of proof if health conditions developed later in life.”
Bayh’s statement followed a report Monday on CBS on Indiana National Guard troops that were assigned to guard the Qarmat Ali water pumping plant in Basrah, Iraq shortly after the U.S. invasion in 2003. Sixteen soldiers from the 1st Battalion, 152nd Infantry filed a federal lawsuit this month against defense contractor KBR Inc., saying its employees knowingly allowed them to be exposed to sodium dichromate, a known carcinogen, while guarding the water plant.
The chemical, used to remove pipe corrosion, is especially dangerous because it contains hexavalent chromium, which is known to cause birth defects and cancer, particularly lung cancer, according to the suit. The cancer can take years to develop.
KBR has said it notified the Army Corps of Engineers after finding the chemical at the site and the Corps concluded the company’s efforts to remediate the situation were effective.
Bayh’s statement said the Army had expressed “low” to “medium” confidence in its own environmental testing at Qarmat Ali, which was conducted after KBR had remediated the site.
“I think the burden of proof at this point is on the company to come forward and very forthrightly explain what happened, why we should trust them, and why the health and well-being of our soldiers should continue to be in their hands,” Bayh said in the statement.
The Associated Press left a phone message seeking comment Tuesday from KBR.
KBR used to be a subsidiary within Halliburton Co., the oilfield services conglomerate whose chief executive from 1995 to 2000 was Vice President Dick Cheney. KBR became a separate public company last year.
State News
Bayh bill to help soldiers exposed to toxins
- State News
-
-
Unions expect right-to-work will cost them members
After losing their fight against right-to-work legislation, labor organizers are making a desperate bid on shop room floors and at union halls to persuade members to keep paying their union dues and avoid crippling labor's influence in Indiana.
-
Indiana judge dismisses charges against ex-Pitt coach
An Indiana judge has dismissed a domestic battery charge against former Notre Dame offensive coordinator Michael Haywood, who served briefly as Pittsburgh's head football coach before the case led to his firing.
-
Many Indiana House Democrats calling it quits
More than quarter of the Indiana House Democrats who unsuccessfully fought passage of the state's new right-to-work law won't try for re-election this year, further boosting the chances of Republicans strengthening their hold on the chamber.
-
GOP's Santorum, Wallace set for statewide ballot
Republican presidential contender Rick Santorum and Republican gubernatorial candidate Jim Wallace are set to make it on the state ballot unless they are challenged.
-
Advocates want no weakening of Indiana smoking ban
Anti-smoking advocates aren't happy about an 18-month exemption for bars that's included in a bill for a statewide smoking ban, and said Thursday they are aiming to prevent the proposal from being watered down any more as it moves through the Indiana Legislature.
-
Notre Dame tuition to increase by 3.8 percent
The University of Notre Dame is raising tuition 3.8 percent for undergraduates for 2012-13.
-
Wind turbine maker bringing jobs to southern Indiana
A manufacturer of small, "micro-wind" turbines has moved into a warehouse that had been unoccupied since one of southern Indiana's largest employers moved out more than a decade ago.
-
NCLB loses grip on Indiana
Indiana is one of the first 10 states in the nation to receive a waiver from President Barack Obama’s administration for certain requirements within No Child Left Behind. That spells change for local districts.
- Dist. 5 candidate Brooks touts job training
-
Emergency exercise preceded Ind. fair disaster
High winds. Lightning. Hail. A severe thunderstorm warning. A huge crowd waits for country duo Sugarland to take the stage.
That exact scenario ahead of last summer's deadly stage collapse at the Indiana State Fair was eerily foreshadowed just a month earlier during an emergency exercise that involved the fair's director and numerous city and state officials.
- More State News Headlines
-
Unions expect right-to-work will cost them members





