Bait & Switch
Aug 27th, 2005 at 7:43 am by Susie
It’s all so sadly familiar:
A program supposed to monitor the health of thousands of federal workers who answered the call of 9/11 has been lost for more than two years, the Daily News has learned. “We seem to have inherited our own Loch Ness monster in terms of being able to find this monitoring,” said Jon Adler, vice president of the Federal Law Enforcement Officers’ Association.
Programs were developed to check on the health of every other group that rushed to Ground Zero during and after the Sept. 11 attacks, primarily the World Trade Center Medical Screening Program run by the Mount Sinai Medical Center. Officials involved told The News the feds barred their workers from that program because they were setting up their own.
Unfortunately, that program vanished during the bureaucratic shuffle creating the Department of Homeland Security.
After trying for months to find out what happened, Manhattan Rep. Carolyn Maloney’s office was able to uncover only that a branch of the Department of Health and Human Services got $3.7 million for the work. But it started and stopped in 2003, seeing fewer than 600 people.
“I was told there was a ‘lull,’” said Maloney, who fired off a letter to HHS yesterday seeking explanations. “This is unacceptable, these men and women are certainly not experiencing a lull in the health effects they are suffering from exposure to toxins at Ground Zero.”



