From Vietnam Veterans Against the War, http://www.vvaw.org/veteran/article/?id=1841&hilite=

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Achieving Justice for Vietnamese and US Agent Orange Victims

By Marty Webster

Victims of Agent Orange Relief Act of 2011, H.R. 2634 Introduced in Congress

Fifty years after the US first sprayed Agent Orange in Vietnam, it continues to kill and maim Vietnamese and Americans. Legislation has just been introduced into the House that, for the first time, addresses the ongoing health problems of Vietnamese, children of US veterans, and Vietnamese Americans. The bill, H.R. 2634, Victims of Agent Orange Relief Act of 2011, was introduced on July 25 by Ranking Member of the House Veterans' Affairs Committee, Bob Filner, and was referred to the Veterans' Affairs Subcommittee on Health, Foreign Affairs, and Energy and Commerce Committees. The bill is summarized below. The full text can be found at: http://thomas.loc.gov. Search for H.R. 2634.

This bill recognizes the common interest of Vietnamese and US victims of Agent Orange in addressing their common pain, once and for all! It provides comprehensive assistance for Vietnamese victims of Agent Orange and clean-up of the toxic hot spots in Vietnam where dioxin remains in the soil. It addresses the health care needs of the second and third generation of Agent Orange victims in the US, the children and grandchildren of veterans, who are suffering from birth defects and illnesses as a result of their fathers' exposure to Agent Orange. Vietnamese Americans who served, alongside US soldiers in Vietnam and their children and grandchildren are similarly affected by Agent Orange and the bill will provide health services to them.

Now, real help for these victims of Agent Orange is within our reach, but it will require focused work on the part of those of us who support it to motivate Congress to pass the bill. Our FIRST task is to obtain as many co-sponsors in the House of Representatives as possible — Democratic, Republican and Independent.

There are a number of things we can do as individuals and as members of VVAW:

We will provide you upon request with as many Agent Orange constituent cards as you need to be signed by as many people as possible. Please collect the signed cards and return them to VAORRC. We will sort them by congressional district and once we have significant numbers of cards in a district we will work with supporters in the district to present the cards to their representative in person.

To become involved or for further information please contact Marty Webster at 773-569-3520 or email mw.vvaw@gmail.com.


Summary of H.R. 2634
The Victims of Agent Orange Relief Act of 2011

A. In Vietnam:

  1. Provide resources for services for the disabled in areas where Agent Orange victims are concentrated. Provide medical services and nursing services for those harmed by Agent Orange. Develop community support organizations, including health care and educational and chronic care services and medical equipment to care for Vietnamese people harmed, including additional services as they are identified.
  2. Fund the development of community support organizations, including health care assessment centers, educational, vocational, and physical rehabilitation centers, custodial care and daycare services and medical equipment.
  3. Provide assistance in the repair and rebuilding of substandard homes for Agent Orange exposed families.
  4. Provide micro grants and loans to enable Agent Orange affected victims to feed their families and escape from extreme poverty.
  5. Provide the above resources by funding Vietnamese non-governmental organizations including the Vietnam Association for Victims of Agent Orange/Dioxin to engage in these activities.
  6. Provide funding for remediation for areas in Vietnam that continue to contain high levels of dioxin.

B. In Vietnam and the US:

  1. Provide support for research and active involvement of schools of public health and medicine for the study of the health consequences of the Vietnam War on all people affected by Agent Orange.

C. In the United States:

  1. Extend the reopened National Vietnam Veterans Readjustment Study to a mortality and morbidity study to track all health outcomes in Vietnam veterans.
  2. Establish multiple regional hospital, therapy, and research centers to provide specialists in environmental illnesses, state-of-the art diagnostic equipment, medicine, rehabilitative medicine, etc. to focus on the medical and emotional needs of the ill progeny of Vietnam veterans with childhood cancers, birth defects, and developmental disabilities. These centers are to be linked to existing medical and university-based medical centers. Transportation and housing support shall be provided for these families to travel to the centers for diagnostic evaluations and treatment.

D. For Vietnamese Americans:

  1. Provide funds to public health and Vietnamese American organizations to conduct a broad health assessment of Vietnamese-Americans who may have been exposed to Agent Orange and their children, to determine the effects to their health from exposure to Agent Orange.
  2. Develop centers in areas where Vietnamese Americans are concentrated to provide assessment, counseling, and treatment for Agent Orange related health conditions.

Marty Webster is a VVAW National Coordinator and a core member of the Vietnam Agent Orange Relief & Responsibility Campaign (VAORRC).

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