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Updated 03/17/2010 08:35 AM

House Committee Approves September 11th Workers' Health Bill

By: NY1 News

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A House of Representatives panel approved a bill Tuesday that would provide long-term health care and compensation for those sickened from the September 11th terrorist attacks.

Passed by a vote of 25-8, the James Zadroga Health and Compensation Act, named for a city police officer who died in 2006 from an illness resulting from his work in Lower Manhattan, would offer continuing health care to the thousands of workers and residents who developed cancers and other illnesses.

House Committee Approves September 11th Workers' Health Bill
Three Republicans voted for the $11 billion bill, which has been languishing for years in Congress.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg said in a statement, "I look forward to passage by the full House and to working with Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, the Senate sponsor, and Senator [Charles] Schumer on moving this bill in the Senate in the near future."

New York politicians have been pushing for the measure as a supplement to the city's $575 million settlement offer, which still needs to be approved by 95 percent of the 10,000 sick workers involved in the suit.

According to a spokesperson for Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney, if someone agrees to take the city’s 9/11 settlement offer, they would not be eligible for compensation if and when the Zadroga Bill becomes law.

Maloney said in a statement that the bill will next be brought up before the full House Energy and Commerce Committee.