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Asbestos Bill Remains $20 Billion Corporate Bailout for Asbestos
Companies That Knowingly Poisoned People
(Friday, June 2, 2006 -Washington DC) In response to
the re-introduction of the asbestos bailout bill in the U.S. Senate,
Ken Suggs, President of the Association of Trial Lawyers of America
(ATLA), issued the following statement:
This is the same fundamentally flawed asbestos bailout bill
that the Senate wisely blocked in February. Once again, this legislation
fails to treat victims fairly while making taxpayers, not the wrongdoers,
foot the bill.
It provides the asbestos industry with a $20 billion, taxpayer-guaranteed
bailout after it knowingly poisoned people, while leaving numerous
victims with nothing and others facing impossible bureaucratic hurdles.
The basic flaws in the bill that caused it to be opposed by
a bipartisan coalition of Senators, every major asbestos victims
organization in the country, labor, the insurance industry, taxpayer
rights organizations, and a large number of affected companies
remain unchanged.
If anything, the changes to the bill have made it worse for
victims by effectively eliminating a sunset provision that would allow
them to regain their rights in the civil justice system when the fund
goes bankrupt an outcome every independent analysis of the
bill says is inevitable.
Perhaps worst of all, bill supporters are giving false hope
to asbestos victims poisoned on 9/11 or after Hurricane Katrina
they have the same negligible rights under the new version of the
bill as the old one, and still will be left with nothing when the
fund collapses under its own weight and flawed design.
The Facts about the Asbestos Bailout Bill
The asbestos bailout bill, S. 3274, is unfair to victims, under-funded,
and unworkable. Every independent analysis of the proposed trust fund
it would create predicts it is destined to fail, leaving victims and
taxpayers worse off. The flaws that caused the previous version of
the bill, S. 852, to be opposed by every major asbestos victims' organization,
organized labor, the insurance industry, and a large portion of the
business community remain unchanged. This bill is still being pushed
by a small group of large, politically-connected corporations that
stand to get a $20 billion bailout.
Not All Victims Will Be Covered by the Bill
Not All Asbestos Victims Covered Under the Asbestos Bill (S.3274).
Victims of neighborhood exposure and from asbestos in consumer products
ranging from attic insulation to automobile brakes are
excluded from any compensation in the asbestos bill. Those who cant
prove they were exposed to asbestos on the job are forced into a system
that is rigged not to help them cope with their asbestos disease.
- While victims in Libby, Montana, where the asbestos was mined,
are covered under the bill, the people living near asbestos hot
spots where the asbestos was shipped all over the country
are left out of the program
- People exposed and sickened by asbestos in homes and schools
(asbestos insulation is in 35 million homes and thousands of schools)
are excluded from the fund.
- First responders, rescue workers, and residents of lower Manhattan
who were exposed to asbestos in the World Trade Center collapse
on Sept. 11, 2001 and in the months that followed are excluded from
the fund. Though bill proponents have claimed the new bill includes
these victims, they actually they have the same negligible rights
under the new version of the bill as the old one.
- Residents of New Orleans exposed to asbestos during the cleanup
after Hurricane Katrina are left out of the program. Like 9/11 victims,
they have the same negligible rights under the new bill as the old.
- Asbestos victims with lung cancer who do not also have non-malignant
asbestos-related disease are excluded despite the medical
consensus that people with heavy asbestos exposure are at a substantially
increased risk of cancer, regardless of whether they also have asbestosis
or pleural disease.
Those Victims Who are Covered by Bill Will Face Long Delays
CBO Analysis Concluded That Those Covered by Asbestos Bill Would
Experience Long Delays. For those asbestos victims who are covered
by the bill, there will be significant delays in receiving compensation.
The Congressional Budget Office concluded that the trust fund would
not be fully operational until at least a year following enactment
of the legislation. While the fund is being established, all
pending claims not already in court would be dismissed, and victims
would have to petition the trust. However, the American Lung Association
has reported that the survival rate for Mesothelioma victims is about
four to 12 months from the onset of symptoms. [Congressional Budget
Office cost estimate for S. 852, 8/25/05, p.6; Mesothelioma Fact Sheet,
American Lung Association, http://www.lungusa.org/site/pp.asp?c=dvLUK9O0E&b=35096]
Under Current System, Victims Have Their Cases Heard in Less Than
a Year. The vast majority of Mesothelioma victims, and those with
other very serious asbestos-related cancers, have their cases heard
in a year or less. At least 22 states, or jurisdictions within those
states, have established clear procedures to handle these exigent
cases as priority matters. That means that these cases are being heard
in California and Colorado within 120 days; in New York, Washington
State and West Virginia within 6 months; and generally within one
year in Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana,
Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio, Oregon,
New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island. There is also a growing
trend for the state courts and legislatures to establish systems to
preserve the rights of the less ill, while freeing up court resources
to handle the more serious cases.
The Bill is a Bailout Package for Asbestos Companies
Asbestos Bill Would Bail Out the Companies Who Knowingly Exposed
their Employees; Bill Nets Corporations More than $20 Billion. According
to a recent Public Citizen report, the asbestos bill would create
a compensation system that would have the effect of reducing the asbestos
liabilities of the very companies that knowingly exposed their employees
to asbestos. The report concluded the bill would reduce the liability
of the 10 large asbestos companies by more than $20 billion: The
total contributions on behalf of asbestos victims paid [into the trust
fund] by 10 large asbestos firms, were they to complete their bankruptcy
proceedings under current law, would drop from an estimated $25.9
billion to $5.6 billion if S. 852 becomes law. This represents a savings
of $20.3 billion, or 78.5 percent, expressed in todays dollars.
On an individual basis, asbestos companies would effectively see their
total payments over the life of the fund decline by margins ranging
from 40.5 percent to 100 percent. [Federal Asbestos Legislation:
And the Winners are
, Public Citizen, p.3, http://www.citizen.org/documents/master%20report.pdf]
The Asbestos Trust Fund Created by the bill is Critically Flawed
Bates White Analysis Found that the Trust Fund Could Cost as Much
as $695 Billion. An independent analysis by the Bates White consulting
firm of the proposed $140 billion trust fund shows it will fail in
its first three years. The study predicts that the proposed fund will
be deluged by a minimum of claims totaling $300 billion. After the
fund fails in the first three years, it will add $45 billion to the
public debt. This is using a conservative estimate of claims. If higher
levels of victims with lung and other cancers are compensated, if
all of the other categories described above are not excluded, and
more realistic claims estimates are used, the fund would total as
high as $695 billion. [Bates White analysis of S. 852, 10/17/05, http://www.bateswhite.com/
news/pdf/2005_Bates_White_study_on _FAIR_Act.pdf]
Senators Gregg and Conrad Raised Concerns About the Bills
Potentially Serious Costs to Federal Taxpayers. In
a November 14, 2005 letter to Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist and
Democratic Leader Harry Reid, Senators Judd Gregg and Kent Conrad
raised concerns about how the trust fund would impact taxpayers: There
are potentially serious costs to federal taxpayers from this legislation.
S. 852 would create a national trust fund to compensate victims of
asbestos exposures in lieu of those victims pursuing compensation
through the tort system. The legislation was reported by the Senate
Judiciary Committee on May 26, 2005. There remain, however, major
unresolved questions about the budgetary impact of the bill.
The fundamental budget problems in S. 852 remain in S. 3274. [Gregg/Conrad
letter, 11/14/05, http://www.asbestostruth.org/news/2005-11-16_Gregg_Conrad.pdf]
GAO Report Highlights Serious Problems With Existing Federal Compensation
Programs. A new Government Accountability Office (GAO) report
on existing federal compensation programs finds major problems in
funding shortfalls and delays for victims that will likely befall
the proposed asbestos trust fund. The GAO report warned that, Policymakers
must carefully consider the cost and precedent-setting implications
of establishing any new federal compensation programs, particularly
in light of the current federal deficit. The GAO surveyed the
claims and financial history of four compensation programs through
the end of fiscal year 2004. The programs reviewed were the Black
Lung Program, the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (VICP), the
Radiation Exposure Compensation Program (RECP), and the Energy Employees
Occupational Illness Compensation Program (EEOICP). The GAO concluded
that in all four programs:
- There have been far more claims than originally estimated for
each program. In fact the Black Lung program has cost U.S. taxpayers
at least $38 billion more than expected.
- Significant delays in completing claims for victims occurred in
all four programs.
- It took at least two years for all four programs to become fully
operational once enabling legislation was enacted.
- Programs have been expanded to provide eligibility to additional
categories of claimants, cover more medical conditions, or provide
additional benefits. [Federal Compensation Programs;
Perspectives on Four Programs, The Government Accountability
Office, November 2005]
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As the world's largest trial bar, ATLA
promotes justice and fairness for injured persons, defends the constitutional
right to trial by jury, and strengthens the civil justice system through
education and disclosure of information critical to public health
and safety. With 60,000 members worldwide, ATLA provides lawyers with
the information and professional assistance they need to serve clients
successfully and protect the democratic values of the civil justice
system.
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