| POLS WANT
REGULATION OF IRAQ BURN PITS
"Disturbing reports are coming to
light everyday about these burn pits and the toll they are taking
on the health of many of our service men and women."
NOTE from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... What's wrong with this story? What's wrong with these
politicians? They want to "regulate" the toxic burn pits in
Iraq. This is a joke! Is DoD going to hire someone to
stand at each pit to tell people what they can throw in and what
they can't? There should be NO open burn pits. Go to
this page to find out more about
Iraq War Toxins,
including the burn pits and hexavalent chromium.
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Lawmakers Blast Use of 'Deadly' Burn Pits at U.S. Bases in Iraq
and Afghanistan
Two members of Congress are pushing
for legislation to regulate the use of "burn pits" at U.S.
military bases across Iraq and Afghanistan.
FOXNews.com
Open-air "burn pits" that incinerate toxic waste materials at
military bases in Iraq and Afghanistan are responsible for a
growing number of illnesses affecting soldiers coming home to the
U.S., some lawmakers charged Thursday.
Rep. Tim Bishop, D-N.Y., said the plumes of back smoke from the
burn pits have exposed Iraqis and American troops and contractors
to a deadly cocktail of cancer-causing toxins. He is pushing for
legislation to regulate their use.
The Department of Defense has dismissed any long-term health risks
posed by the pits, but Bishop and Rep. Carol Shea-Porter, D-N.H.,
charged Thursday that hundreds of tons of war-zone waste --
including dioxin, benzene and other carcinogens -- are leading to
serious health problems among veterans.
Bishop and Shea-Porter are pushing for passage of the Military
Personnel War Zone Toxic Exposure Prevention Act, which would
require the secretary of defense to establish a "medical
surveillance system" to identify all military personnel at risk
and to launch a full investigation into the effects of burn pits.
The bill calls for the U.S. military to "prohibit the disposal of
waste by the Armed Forces in a manner that would produce dangerous
levels of toxins."
"Disturbing reports are coming to light everyday about these burn
pits and the toll they are taking on the health of many of our
service men and women," Bishop said Thursday at a press conference
with Shea-Porter and several veterans and scientists.
"Our troops should be free to focus on fighting the enemy without
worrying how their lives may be further endangered by the actions
of private contractors operating under different rules," he said.
A
spokesman from Central Command said health care for troops is a
critical mission for the Pentagon, but did not offer details about
any complaints relating to burn pits.
"Care of our service members and civilian workers is an issue we
take very seriously and is always a top priority," Central Command
spokesman Major John Redfield told FOXNews.com Thursday. "We
monitor and, when necessary, work to improve the living conditions
for our people."
Potentially dangerous waste disposal at bases overseas has long
been a controversial issue for the U.S. military. While the
Defense Department has installed clean-burning incinerators at
certain U.S. bases, military burn-pit disposal is still widespread
in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The waste pit at the 15-square-mile Joint Base Balad in Iraq has
burned unexploded ordnance, petroleum products, plastics, rubber,
paint and solvents, and medical waste, including amputated limbs,
according to a 2006 memo from a top U.S. military official.
Air Force Lt. Col. Darrin Curtis, the former bioenvironmental
flight commander at Joint Base Balad, wrote that troops had been
exposed to highly poisonous contaminants like benzene -- an
aircraft fuel that causes leukemia -- arsenic, carbon monoxide,
formaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide.
Bishop's spokesman, Will Jenkins, told FOXNews.com that the use of
burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan continues a deadly pattern of
toxic waste disposal -- one that began in Vietnam when troops were
exposed to "Agent Orange," a chemical defoliant. And veterans from
the 1991 Gulf War have complained of various ailments -- including
auto immune disorders and cancer -- due to exposure to dangerous
fumes, Jenkins said.
Bishop is also pushing for greater health benefits for U.S.
veterans exposed to toxic fumes.
"If it's more dangerous than they're saying, we should curtail the
use," Jenkins said.
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
burn pits, Iraq, toxins |