Living employees who are ill and relatives of deceased employees of Brookhaven National Laboratory who were exposed to unknown levels of radiation from 1947 -1979 and died of certain cancers can now turn to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, (CDC) and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) for help with compensation.
Since 2000, any person who worked at Brookhaven National Laboratories or their contractors or subcontractors from 1980 to the present, by law may be compensated for radiation exposure. Now people who formerly were not covered for cancers caused by their exposures, because they were caused during years when the documents were classified, will also be able to apply for compensation.
People who are eligible for inclusion in the SPECIAL EXPOSURE COHORT (SEC) Class, which took effect on January 9, 2010 are living employees of Brookhaven National Laboratory or their contractors or subcontractors, working during a specified time period who can show they are suffering from specific forms of cancer. Spouses, parents, children, grandchildren and grandparents of deceased employees, who can show that their relative died of one of the qualifying cancers may also be eligible.
SEC Class members have been so designated because it is not feasible to estimate with sufficient accuracy, the radiation dose that the class received and there is reasonable likelihood that such radiation dose may have endangered the health of the members of the class.
In addition to having worked at least 250 aggregate hours from January 1, 1947 through December 31, 1979) at Brookhaven National Laboratory in Upton, Long Island in order to qualify for compensation, a covered employee must have at least one of the following types of cancer:
-Bone Cancer
-Renal Cancer
-Leukemia (other than chronic lymphocytic leukemia) provided the onset of the disease was at least two years after the first exposure
-Lung Cancer (other than in-situ lung cancer that is discovered during or after a post-mortem exam)
The following diseases, provided onset was at least five years after the first exposure:
-Multiple myeloma
-Lymphomas (other than Hodgkin's Disease)
-Primary Cancer of the:
-Bile Ducts
-Brain
-Breast (female)
-Breast (male)
-Colon
-Esophagus
-Gall bladder
-Liver (except if cirrhosis or hepatitis B is indicated)
-Ovary
-Pancreas
-Pharynx
-Salivary Gland
-Small intestine
-Stomach
-Thyroid
-Urinary bladder
The Department of Labor (DOL) is responsible for the administration of the ENERGY EMPLOYEES OCCUPATIONAL ILLNESS COMPENSATION Program (EEOIC), created in the year 2000. The notification to the claimants of their options after a class has been designated also falls under their purview.