Senate passes extension of RECA
The United States Senate unanimously passed Senator Mike Lee’s (R-UT) two-year extension of the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA) on April 28.
The act passed in the US House of Representatives on May 11.
The extenssion ensurs that Americans harmed by the nation’s early nuclear program can be compensated. Of the extension, Lee said, “Downwinders, uranium miners, uranium millers, and ore transporters were harmed by the federal government and deserve compensation.
I am encouraged that my colleagues agreed with this important extension and passed the bill unanimously.” Among the bills co-sponsors included seven of the eight Senators from the four corners states. In 1990, RECA became law, providing a one-time cash benefit to certain persons who participated in atomic weapons testing or lived near nuclear test sites during periods of above-ground atomic weapons testing between 1951 and 1992.
To date, RECA has awarded over $2.4 billion in benefits to more than 38,000 claimants in Nevada, Utah, and elsewhere. It was previously scheduled to sunset in July of this year.
This bill pushes the expiration to 2024.
This extension comes as a part of legislative negotiation on his more comprehensive Downwinders Act which would expand eligibility for compensation to new geographic areas and extend application eligibility by another ten years.