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Daily News: 9/11 World Trade Center Health Program has $3B looming deficit

July 2, 2022

The failure of President Biden’s ambitious Build Back Better funding bill last December also had another casualty — nearly $3 billion meant to plug a looming deficit in the World Trade Center Health Program.

Now lawmakers are searching for a new way to advance legislation to fill that hole after a recent briefing to lawmakers by 9/11 health program staff, the Daily News has learned.

If the Build Back Better legislation had passed, it would have forestalled what could be a grim outlook for the health program and its 117,000 members, and the possibility that the program would have to start considering cuts or limiting access.

When the 9/11 health law was made permanent in 2015, its funding was based on expected future costs. But enrollment in the program surged and illnesses worsened, with some 25,000 cases of cancer among first responders and survivors.

Ahead of Sept. 11 anniversary, Congress scrambles to fully fund World Trade Center Health Program ]

In 2021, the Bipartisan 9/11 Responder and Survivor Health Funding Correction Act was introduced by Reps. Carolyn Maloney and Jerrold Nadler, both New York Democrats, and Rep. Andrew Garbarino (R-N.Y.), and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y) in the Senate. In the original bill, the amount needed to fund the financial shortfall for the health program through 2031 was $2.86 billion. Because of the delay in funding, the amount required to get through 2032 is just over $3 billion.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention declined to comment on specifics, saying analysts are still crunching the numbers. “Because deliberations are still ongoing, the CDC cannot provide an estimate of when action would need to be taken,” spokeswoman Christina Spring said.

Based on current funding, the program would essentially have to bar any new sick responders or victims by October 2024 — and warn people by next year. In short, if someone discovered they had 9/11-linked cancer after that date, they would be on their own, financially speaking.

The continued pain and push for benefits for 9/11 survivors heads back to Congress ]

Long Island Rep. Andrew Garbarino (R-N.Y.) suggested Democrats should have pushed a stand-alone bill through to deal with the problem, such as one he co-sponsored, eliminating the uncertainty.

“Fully funding this program has bipartisan support, and yet Democrats tried to pass it through a highly divisive and partisan reconciliation process which ultimately failed,” Garbarino said. “Since then, the majority has been inexplicably dragging its feet on moving this crucial legislation forward. 9/11 first responders and survivors deserve to have certainty about their continued access to care for 9/11-related health conditions,”...

...“Congressional Democrats should treat this issue with the urgency it deserves and bring legislation to address the funding shortfall for a vote immediately,” Garbarino said.