0
Radiation Exposure Compensation Reauthorization Act
3/28/2024, 3:48 PM
Summary of Bill S 3853
The bill seeks to expand the eligibility criteria for compensation under RECA to include additional affected individuals, such as those who lived downwind of nuclear test sites or worked in uranium mines. It also proposes increasing the maximum compensation amounts available to eligible individuals.
Additionally, Bill 118 s 3853 includes provisions to streamline the claims process for compensation, making it easier for affected individuals to access the benefits they are entitled to. The bill also seeks to increase public awareness of the availability of compensation under RECA. Overall, the Radiation Exposure Compensation Reauthorization Act aims to provide support and compensation to individuals who have suffered as a result of exposure to radiation during the Cold War era. It is an important piece of legislation that seeks to acknowledge and address the harm caused by nuclear testing and uranium mining activities.
Congressional Summary of S 3853
This bill reauthorizes and expands programs that compensate individuals who were exposed to radiation during certain nuclear testing or uranium mining and who subsequently developed medical conditions, including cancers.
Under current law, compensation is payable to individuals based on requirements including the (1) dates when exposure occurred, (2) duration of exposure, (3) type of exposure, and (4) resulting medical condition.
Among other changes to this program, the bill (1) extends the eligible dates when qualifying atmospheric exposure occurred, (2) authorizes compensation to individuals with combined work histories in uranium mining, (3) adds core drilling as an eligible mining occupation, and (4) increases the amount of compensation awarded to qualifying individuals.
The bill also expands this program to compensate individuals located in specified areas in Alaska, Kentucky, Missouri, and Tennessee associated with waste from the Manhattan Project and who subsequently developed specified types of cancer.
The bill extends until five years after this bill's enactment the statute of limitations for the filing of claims.
The bill also expands eligibility under an existing occupational illness compensation program for former Department of Energy employees.
The bill also establishes a grant program for institutions of higher education to study the epidemiological impacts of uranium mining and milling among individuals without occupational exposure.
The bill directs the Government Accountability Office to study and report to Congress on the unmet medical benefits coverage for individuals who were exposed to radiation in atmospheric nuclear tests conducted by the federal government.





