| PENTAGON, TROOPS
DIFFER ON DANGER OF BURN PIT SMOKE
DoD's official position: "only minor,
temporary effects have been identified with the burn pit smoke."
NOTE from Larry Scott, VA
Watchdog dot Org ... For more about the burn pits and chemical
exposures ... visit our Iraq War Toxins page ... here ...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/iraqwartoxins.htm
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Families, DOD spar over dangers
of burn pit smoke
By Leo Shane III, Stars and
Stripes
http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=65885
WASHINGTON — In 2004, Staff Sgt. Steven Ochs regularly inhaled
toxic fumes from burn pits beside his base in Balad, Iraq. So did
a colleague, Staff Sgt. Matt Bumpus.
In 2006, Ochs developed a rare, aggressive form of leukemia. So
did Bumpus.
In 2008, Ochs died from the cancer. So did Bumpus, 22 days later.

Defense and Veterans Affairs officials say that’s a coincidence.
Pentagon health experts insist that burn pits overseas — used to
dispose of trash, broken furniture, and even some excess combat
equipment — do not pose a serious health risk to troops.
Bumpus’ widow calls that “a slap in the face” to the families who
have seen the effects firsthand. Family members say hundreds of
other soldiers,
some
who served with Bumpus or Ochs and some who simply were stationed
in other areas with burn pits, have developed rare cancers and
chromosome mutations, all ailments linked to chemical exposures.
“We know there are still kids being exposed over in Iraq and
Afghanistan,” said Laura Bumpus. “And we know they’re going to
come home and have serious health problems.”
Veterans groups for months have lobbied the White House to
investigate the potential chemical exposures from burn pits,
noting that troops in Iraq and Afghanistan may still be exposed to
toxic carcinogens on a daily basis.
On Friday, the Senate Democratic Policy Committee will hold a
hearing on the issue, the latest in a chain of congressional
investigations since this spring on bad allergies, persistent
respiratory problems and fatal illnesses believed to be linked to
the acrid smoke.
So far 22 class-action lawsuits related to burn pit illnesses have
been filed in federal courts, covering both contractors and
soldiers exposed to particulate matter from the pits. But in an
emailed response to questions on Thursday, Dr. Craig Postlewaite,
director of the Pentagon’s health protection programs, reiterated
the Defense Department’s position that “only minor, temporary
effects have been identified with the burn pit smoke.”
Pentagon physicians see no connection between the pits and more
serious illnesses such as leukemia. Veterans Affairs officials do
not recognize burn pit exposure as a presumed combat-connected
illness.
But in August, President Barack Obama promised the issue would not
become another “Agent Orange,” the name for herbicides used
heavily during the Vietnam War and that were later linked to
serious health problems in civilians and U.S. troops. Veterans
groups have fought with military agencies for years over health
benefits related to that chemical exposure.
“I don’t want us hiding the ball if there’s a real problem there,”
the president said.
Yet on Oct. 21, Defense Secretary Robert Gates, in response to a
town hall question about burn pits, said he had first heard of the
issue “just a couple of weeks ago” and “I have just started to get
educated myself on it.”
Dr. Anthony Szema, an allergist and lead researcher on several
studies related to the health effects of the World Trade Center
collapse in 2001, has been tracking veterans respiratory illnesses
for years, and challenged the Pentagon’s assertion that there are
no long-term effects.
He said many serious cancers and lung deformities don’t manifest
for up to five years after chemical exposure, less time than the
Defense Department has been monitoring many of the pits. And
Postlewaite admitted to lawmakers that they’ve collected 17,500
environmental samples in Iraq, Afghanistan and Kuwait, covering
just a fraction of the population exposed to the burn pit fumes.
Szema said in his work with New York Veterans Affairs clinics,
about 10 percent of recently returned vets are showing signs of
serious asthma problems, nearly twice the rate of nondeployed
veterans.
“The bottom line is that even normal household trash — bleached
toilet paper, magazines, number three plastics — if they’re burned
they will generate toxins that are not healthy,” Szema said. “And
when you breathe that in, you increase the risk of respiratory
mortality.”
Postlewaite said that since no serious health problems have been
linked with burn pit smoke, troops do not receive any specific
warnings about them before deploying. All troops do receive a
general briefing about the potential health effects of harsh
environments and chemical exposure before deploying.
Laura Bumpus, whose family received no military or veterans
benefits related to Matt’s death, said that’s not enough, since
thousands more are still being put in harm’s way.
“There’s no question in my mind that [the pits] were to blame in
this,” she said. “We feel that our husbands and brothers have died
in the line of duty. That’s an important thing for me to be able
to tell our children.”
Ochs’ sister, Stacy Pennington, said both her brother and Bumpus
served around Balad in 2004. Both were in the middle of a yearlong
deployment with their respective units, and neither had a history
of cancer in their families.
Family members say both men worked near the base’s open-air burn
pit, one of the largest in Iraq at the time and a site that the
Air Force’s former bioenvironmental engineering flight commander
called “an acute health hazard” in a 2006 memo.
“There is also the possibility for chronic health hazards
associated with the smoke,” Lt. Col. Darrin Curtis wrote. “I am
writing this memo to translate what I see is an operational health
risk to those that have been, are now and will be deployed to
Balad.”
Pennington said neither soldier was warned of any potential
dangers. When her brother was diagnosed with leukemia a few years
later, physicians told her that the illness had clear connections
to toxic chemical exposure.
“Steven knew that he and hundreds of other guys had been exposed
to something over there,” she said. “And he died knowing that’s
what killed him.”
After his death, Pennington met Laura Bumpus while researching
burn pits, and saw striking similarities in the two men’s stories.
Since then, the pair have drawn connections to hundreds of others
with similar tales. They say that points to an obvious conclusion:
Burn pit smoke causes cancer.
Postlewaite said officials are conducting a health records review
of all troops stationed at Joint Base Balad to research any
evidence of recurring, serious health problems, and is sharing
those results with veterans benefits officials in case any
connection is found.
Meanwhile, Congress is considering legislation which would mandate
alternatives to burn pits in combat zones and prohibit their use
for medical and hazardous waste. But little movement has occurred
on the measure since the summer.
“These guys go over there, risk their lives and then think they’ve
come home safe,” Laura Bumpus said. “They start to live the rest
of their life and suddenly it’s robbed from them.”
For more on Bumpus’ story, visit
http://gulfwarchemicals.com
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
burn pits, Iraq, Afghanistan, DoD |