Posted on Dec 17, 2015
MSgt Curtis Ellis
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"McDonald's proposal would also expand benefits eligibility to Reserve and National Guard personnel who served at Camp Lejeune for any length of time from Aug. 1, 1953, through Dec. 31, 1987 -- making them eligible for VA disability compensation and medical care for the aforementioned conditions, and their surviving dependents eligible for dependency and indemnity compensation and burial benefits, the department said."
Dec 17, 2015 | by Brendan McGarry

The Veterans Affairs Department on Thursday announced plans to expand disability coverage for veterans exposed to contaminated water at Marine Corps Camp Lejeune in North Carolina.
For more than three decades, from 1953 to 1987, groundwater sources at the base were contaminated with industrial solvents leaking from underground storage tanks, according to the VA.
The pollutants included the dry-cleaning solvent perchloroethylene, degreaser trichloroethylene , petrochemical benzene, as well as vinyl chloride and dozens of other contaminants, the department said. Exposure to the solvents is linked to numerous health problems, from cancer to Parkinson's disease, it said.
"The water at Camp Lejeune was a hidden hazard, and it is only years later that we know how dangerous it was," Secretary Bob McDonald said in the release.
Navy and Marine Corps officials have downplayed the issue for years.
Speaking at a Sept. 14 event in Cleveland, Navy Secretary Ray Mabus said water at the installation has long been safe to drink and blamed the original problem on a nearby dry cleaner, according to an article by Patricia Kime, a reporter for Military Times.
Mabus acknowledged "allegations that there is a higher incidence of illness with people who had gone through as Marines," but said studies conducted by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry "can find no correlation," according to the article.
Interestingly, the VA said its decision came about as a result of discussions between environmental health experts at this agency, which is part of the Department of Health and Human Services, and the Veterans Health Administration.
Lawmakers welcomed the VA's proposal.
"For decades, tens of thousands of service members and their families were potentially exposed to chemicals now connected to deadly cancers and other serious illnesses," Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat from Connecticut and the ranking member of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee, said in a statement.
"Today's announcement that this exposure will qualify as service-connected is a critical first step toward providing disability compensation for men and women harmed in the line of duty," he added. "Generations of Marines, sailors and their families lived and worked at Camp Lejeune, and now the VA and Secretary McDonald must do everything in their power to expedite this regulation and conduct aggressive outreach to potentially-affected veterans."
Almost a million veterans, civilian employees, and their families were exposed to toxic drinking water at Lejeune, Blumenthal said. As of February, the VA had received 9,636 toxic water disability claims from Camp Lejeune veterans, denying 8,909 and granting 778, he said.
The VA currently provides benefits to veterans who served at Lejeune for 30 days or more between those 34 years, and were diagnosed with one or more of 15 health conditions, from esophageal cancer to renal toxicity to miscarriage.
McDonald proposed expanding coverage by creating "a presumption of service connection" for several conditions, including kidney cancer, liver cancer, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, leukemia, multiple myeloma, scleroderma, Parkinson's disease, aplastic anemia and myelodysplastic syndromes, the VA said.
McDonald's proposal would also expand benefits eligibility to Reserve and National Guard personnel who served at Camp Lejeune for any length of time from Aug. 1, 1953, through Dec. 31, 1987 -- making them eligible for VA disability compensation and medical care for the aforementioned conditions, and their surviving dependents eligible for dependency and indemnity compensation and burial benefits, the department said.
The VA won't grant any benefit claims based on the proposed presumption of service-connected disabilities until issuing final regulations at a later date. Even so, veterans who served at Lejeune during those years and who developed any of the conditions are urged to file a disability compensation claim by filling out Form 10-10EZ and submitting it online or at any VA medical center or clinic.

http://www.military.com/daily-news/2015/12/17/va-expand-coverage-for-vets-exposed-polluted-water-lejeune.html?ESRC=todayinmil.sm
Edited 9 y ago
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Responses: 19
1stSgt Eugene Harless
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1987... almost 19 years have passed. Thousands of Marines, Sailors, Dependents and Base Workers were exposed. The vast majority will never even know about this study and there will be people who have died or are terminally ill who were never taken care of or will never get care or compensation.
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LCpl Donald Hall
LCpl Donald Hall
9 y
Well 1st Sgt;Sir lets spread the word cause its all real and true, i know
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MSG Mechanic 2nd
MSG (Join to see)
9 y
i have extremity tremors served 85 -87
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Maj David Moser
3
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The longer they wait the fewer they will have to pay for. I don't think it is a conspiracy by the Federal Government, it's just the normal incompetence of the Federal Government.
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Cpl Steve Eaton
Cpl Steve Eaton
9 y
I( went to ITR for3 mos. in 1971. We had a pvt die from eating something in a can/ of c-rats ? Spinal meningitis ! Never forget it.I was @ new river til I went to Nam in late 72. Returned to New River and out in late 74. Drank and showered in lots of that poisined water. YES, New river is covered as well as Camp Geiger too.Proudly served 1970 to 76.
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LCpl Donald Hall
LCpl Donald Hall
9 y
BIG 10/4 on incompetence,maj Sir
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Sgt Gary Steuer
2
2
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Does this affect anyone who spent 30 days + at Camp Geiger for ITR after Parris Island in the year 1964?
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Sgt Gary Steuer
Sgt Gary Steuer
9 y
Thank you very much !
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LCpl Donald Hall
LCpl Donald Hall
9 y
??? i say BIG YES,they don't know,go file and get tested ???
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PFC Joseph Russo
PFC Joseph Russo
>1 y
Yes they say 30 days or more.
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