FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 7, 2007
New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health (NYCOSH)
Press Release
Contact:
Jonathan Bennett
New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health
212-227-6440 x 14
Time is running out for people to register to preserve the
right to file for 9/11-related workers’ compensation.
Only 100 days remain until the final registration deadline
of August 14, 2007.
At least 100,000 workers and volunteers who performed any
rescue, recovery or cleanup work in the vicinity of the World
Trade Center are eligible to register with the New York State
Workers’ Compensation Board. But fewer than 14,000 have
done so.
According to New York City’s official estimate, more
than 21,000 people who worked for pay or volunteered after
9/11 have developed physical or mental disorders as a result
of their exposure to toxic substances and psychologically
traumatic experiences in the aftermath of the World Trade
Center’s collapse. Right now, hundreds more are experiencing
new-onset 9/11-related symptoms each month. No one knows how
many more who are now healthy will become sick, or when they
will first develop symptoms.
Workers and volunteers who do not register by August 14
will not be eligible to file a claim even if they develop
a 9/11-related physical or mental illness in the future.
Any eligible person who registers will have the right to
file a 9/11-related workers’ compensation at any time
in the future, no matter when 9/11-related symptoms occur.
When a claim for a 9/11-related disorder is established, workers’
compensation pays 100 percent of the cost of treatment, including
prescriptions and hospitalization.
The majority of people who performed any rescue, recovery
or cleanup work after 9/11 are living scattered across the
state. Many of them are unaware that they are at risk of developing
9/11-related disorders. Many are also unaware that by registering
before August 14, they can protect their right to free healthcare
if they ever develop a 9/11-related illness.
There is no residency or citizenship requirement to register
with the New York Workers’ Compensation Board for 9/11-related
compensation. If a worker or volunteer is eligible, it does
not matter where he or she now lives. Immigration status—whether
documented or not—does not affect a person’s eligibility
status. If people continue to register at the current rate—approximately
one thousand per month—tens of thousands of eligible
people will miss the opportunity. NYCOSH established a hotline
and a website to promote registration. People can go to www.nycosh.org
to learn about the eligibility requirements and registration
procedure. They can also call the toll-free, 24-hour hotline,
1-866-WTC-2556.
The law applies to most people who performed any rescue,
recovery or cleanup work, no matter how briefly, either paid
or unpaid, in lower Manhattan south of Canal or Pike Streets
between Sept. 11, 2001 and Sept. 12, 2002. It also applies
to those who worked at the Staten Island landfill, the barge
operation between Manhattan and Staten Island or the New York
City morgue (or any of the temporary morgues set up during
that period).
To request an interview with a worker or volunteer who developed
an illness as a result of 9/11-related exposures, contact
Jonathan Bennett, from NYCOSH, at 212-227-6440 x 14.
"Thousands worked in the toxic brew of the World Trade
Center’s dust and fumes," said Joel Shufro, the
executive director of the New York Committee for Occupational
Safety and Health. "Now, these same people are scattered
across the state, unaware that they may qualify for 9/11-related
workers’ compensation. They must register, and they
need to help let others know."
The New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health
(NYCOSH) is a non-profit educational advocacy organization,
dedicated to every workers right to a safe and healthful workplace.
NYCOSH is conducting a campaign to notify thousands of workers
and volunteers who will miss the registration deadline because
they do not know they are at risk and that they have an opportunity
to register.
For more information about NYCOSH, visit http://www.nycosh.org.

|