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9/11 workers struggle to get
workers’ comp By Chris Bragg
http://www.downtownexpress.com/de_195/911workersstruggle.html
Half a dozen doctors testified on his behalf. Experts on
9/11-related diseases confirmed his claims. A picture of him working
on a smoldering pile of rubble at ground zero offered hard evidence.
Still, for Joe Picurro, it wasn’t enough. The New York State
Workers’ Compensation Board ruled he still hadn’t proven his health
problems were due to his 28 days as a volunteer during the 9/11
cleanup. He hadn’t even proven he’d actually worked at the site,
they said, saying the photograph could have been doctored.
It took two years, five hearings, an appeal to the New York State
Supreme Court and several pleading media appearances before he
thought he finally won.
Picurro looks back with anger on the time and effort it took for
what he calls his victory: a check for $67.71 a week. “They throw us
a bone every once in awhile to appease us,” Picurro said a few
months ago. “The cheapest one possible.”
But then more recently the checks stopped coming and he will have
to go back to court.
More than five years after 9/11, many cleanup workers who rushed
to help the city in its time of need say they have developed serious
physical conditions due to that work: 756 cleanup volunteers and
many more paid workers have submitted claims. Many claimants say,
however, the Workers’ Compensation Board has been slow in helping
them get back on their feet.
In seeking a fraction of their income before their illnesses,
workers say they have entered a maze of bureaucracy. They say it’s
difficult to get hearings scheduled, and once they do, proving their
illnesses are related to their 9/11 work is more difficult than in
normal compensation cases.
Joe Picurro at a 2006 Christmas
party held by the Feal Good Foundation. Named for injured 9/11
worker John Feal, the foundation helped the Picurros buy Christmas
presents for their daughter.
Many cases have been pending for years and for some, the
financial strain has grown too great to bear. “We’re numbers,” said
Jeffrey Endean, a 9/11 volunteer and former commander for the Morris
County Sheriff’s Office in New Jersey, “and next to those numbers
are dollar signs that they don’t want to pay off.”
The Workers’ Compensation Board, established in 1914, was a
compromise between workers and employers: New York workers gave up
the right to sue employers for injuries in exchange for timely
compensation and medical care if they were injured on the job.
For employees of companies hired to do 9/11 cleanup work, and for
the unpaid volunteers who worked under government authorized rescue
agencies, the board is the sole means of resolving no-fault claims.
City employees, such as police officers, firefighters and sanitation
workers, go through a separate compensation process.
For most cases that go in front of the board, an employer’s
insurance company is responsible for challenging and ultimately
paying off or settling a claim. Volunteer claims, however, are
compensated out of a $50 million grant created shortly after 9/11 by
Congress, which by special rule is also administered by the board.
For many of the workers, even getting started in the process can
be difficult. They say it can take months just to get a hearing.
Louis Dauerer, president of the Injured Workers Bar Association,
said the board has been “fixated on getting its number of hearings
down” in recent years, adding that it’s difficult for all injured
workers to get hearings these days, not just 9/11 workers. The
number of workers’ compensation hearings in New York State has
decreased from 407,983 in 2001, to 305,722 in 2005, according to the
board’s annual reports.
Board spokesperson Jon Sullivan acknowledged that the board tries
to reduce its number of hearings, but said that’s only because it
wants to be efficient. “It doesn’t make sense to have a hearing if
there’s nothing that moves the case forward,” he said.
Once hearings are scheduled, many 9/11 workers say they aren’t
told what exactly they need to do to prepare, resulting in further
delays in the case. Some say they don’t want to pay for a lawyer to
help, citing New York’s already small maximum weekly compensation of
$400 — a rate that hasn’t seen an increase since 1992.
Linda Carillo, who is 35 and lives in Far Rockaway, was a
construction worker for 18 years before 9/11. Present as a volunteer
in its immediate aftermath, she worked on a human assembly line that
removed rubble from ground zero. She said she now suffers from
serious respiratory problems and post-traumatic stress disorder. To
date, her workers’ compensation case has been open for four years.
She said she’s unable to work and has been forced into foreclosure
on her house.
After waiting months for her first hearing she went to court, but
her claim was denied because the board said she needed a letter
showing she had respiratory problems. She’d had no idea she needed
the letter, and it took her another year to reopen her case.
The Worker’s Compensation Board says 94 percent of its 9/11
related cases are “resolved.” The board does not say how many cases
have been accepted or rejected, however, and worker case files are
sealed.
Workers’ compensation lawyers say the term “resolved” is
misleading.
The board is able to say a large percentage of cases are resolved
because it routinely sends letters to claimants telling them their
case needs “no further action.” According to Vic Fusco, of Fusco,
Brandenstein and Rada in Manhattan, who represents a number of 9/11
workers, this puts the burden on the worker to file a new claim.
“All the issues that board can resolve are resolved,” said
Sullivan, explaining the board’s process. “But we understand a
resolved case today may need to be reworked tomorrow, because new
issues come about.” He added that the length of time it takes to
resolve a case can vary greatly, with complex 9/11 health cases
often taking longer.
After Carillo refiled her claim with a chart from Manhattan’s
Mount Sinai Medical Center showing a significantly decreased lung
function, she faced an even more vexing problem. She was again
denied, this time because there was no “causal relationship of the
medical condition,” according to the letter sent to Carillo by the
board.
It’s a problem for many 9/11 workers. Often, 9/11-related
injuries are more difficult to prove than other workers’
compensation cases. Out of 756 volunteers that have submitted
claims, 61 are currently receiving benefits, Sullivan said.
According to a recently released Mount Sinai study, 69 percent of
9/11 workers studied have developed new or worsened respiratory
problems in the past five years. But the board doesn’t grant
workers’ compensation for many of these types of claims. In 2005, it
granted compensation for over 90,000 physical injuries, particularly
to the back and legs, according to its annual report. In addition,
it granted compensation for 5,000 occupational injuries caused by
long-term physical stress, but half of those were chronic wrist
injuries. Environmental or respiratory type injuries, however, were
not listed.
“9/11-related illnesses are considered illness and not injury,”
said Dr. Jacqueline Moline, director of the World Trade Center
Medical Monitoring Center, which treats Picurro and Carillo. “If a
man falls and twists his ankle, he would be compensated because they
know the time and the date it happens.”
The only way to prove 9/11 cases is to find qualified doctors
willing to testify on a worker’s behalf. The board requires doctors
to have a “reasonable degree of medical certainty” that 9/11 caused
a worker’s injury.
However, many workers go to respiratory specialists who can
diagnose their illness, but cannot point to its cause. One reason is
that until August 2006, the city Department of Health did not
release any guidelines for diagnosing 9/11-related illnesses,
leaving many doctors unaware of their symptoms.
Joe Picurro, 39, a native of Toms River, N.J., was an ironworker
during the 9/11 cleanup, removing twisted metal in an effort to find
bodies buried in the rubble. Now he’s been diagnosed with a number
of serious respiratory diseases and leukemia, which has an uncertain
link to W.T.C. dust and may take many years to establish. When he
was initially hospitalized in the Toms River Community Medical
Center, doctors told him he had the flu as he vomited up small
pieces of his esophagus, according to his wife Laura Picurro.
His doctors were incredulous when she told them she believed 9/11
dust had caused her husband’s illness. “They said they had never
heard of such a thing,” she said. They gave him an antibiotic. Only
after a number of costly visits to different doctors did they
finally learn he had scarring and particles of pulverized glass in
his lungs. Picurro was unemployed at the time he volunteered.
Because he lacked health insurance, the rounds of visits and
hospital stays put the couple heavily in debt.
Often, doctors unfamiliar with 9/11 illnesses will attribute
workers’ respiratory problems to a preexisting condition. Claimants
who are smokers, like Picurro, particularly face this problem,
although that would not have explained the pulverized glass in his
lungs.
“Not many doctors are aware of the nuances because they don’t see
the sheer numbers of people,” said Moline, who said she herself has
been able to testify persuasively in a number of workers’
compensation cases because of her broad experience.
Albany tried recently to address some concerns about the board.
In August, former Gov. George Pataki extended the deadline to apply
for 9/11 related worker’s compensation, which had passed in 2003,
until August 2007. The bill also included several measures intended
to speed up the workers’ compensation process and to provide
speedier access to medical care if a claim is being challenged.
Still, many frustrated workers and volunteers are now looking
beyond the workers’ comp process to get the money they feel they
deserve.
There are 8,000 people who have filed a lawsuit claiming
negligence by the Environmental Protection Agency and the New York
Port Authority, among others, for alleged misleading statements
about the air quality at ground zero. The fate of the suit is still
unclear.
There is also the possibility of reopening the “9/11 Victim
Compensation Fund,” which Congress originally created just weeks
after 9/11.
The original fund provided more than $38 billion to 9/11 victims
and their families, and was paid for largely by the federal
government. But the fund’s Special Master Kenneth Feinberg, who
awarded money to workers who developed symptoms early on, decided
that Congress had not intended the fund to compensate workers with
injuries that would develop over a longer period of time, because
there was no way of knowing the amount each claimant’s illness would
eventually cost.
But now, some New York and New Jersey lawmakers, including
Senator Hillary Clinton, want the fund reopened for those very
workers. In September, they introduced a bill to allow workers to
apply to the fund whose symptoms became apparent after the initial
December 2003 deadline.
The original fund was unusual in several ways. There was no limit
on how much could be spent, and compensation was decided outside the
normal legislative or legal processes.
Francis McGovern, a professor at Duke Law School and an
alternative dispute resolution expert, thinks that Congress as a
whole won’t want to reopen the fund. “If you do this once, you could
say it’s 100 percent unique,” he said. “But if you do it twice,
you’re saying anything else like this gets federal funding to pay
for it. I think the inclination of Congress, except Hillary Clinton,
would be to let the tort system take care of these folks.” McGovern
said a system similar to the asbestos trust recently proposed in
Congress, which would have more financial constraints, would be more
feasible.
Clinton and her New York colleagues in the House and Senate want
$1.9 billion in new spending for continued 9/11-related medical
monitoring, treatment and research for workers and residents
affected by the attack.
Waiting on Congress and the courts, many workers have given up on
their cases, preferring instead to rest and focus on their health
problems, according to case workers and advocates.
Diana Salvador, a psychologist and former director of the 9/11
Family Wellness program, believes the stresses created by trying to
go through the process only makes workers’ health worse. “There’s a
sense of powerlessness,” she said. “Between the trauma and talking
to the board and getting health insurance, it can become more than a
full-time job.”
Carillo, with the bills mounting and having lost her house, said
she’s starting to consider giving up her fight for compensation.
“I’m tired,” she said. “I’m tired of telling my story over and over
and nothing happening
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