Friday, March 25, 2022 - Toxic chemicals leach into the local water table and find their way into the tap water that military families drink, bathe, and play in. Military veterans and their families have developed a variety of types of PFAS cancer and neurological disorders years or sometimes decades after starting to drink the water. PFAS cancer lawsuits against the Federal government accuse the Department of Defense of failing to honor their duty to keep service members and their families safe. Toxic forever PFAS chemicals were released into the water table from firefighting foam sprayed at least once per month to extinguish burn pit fires used to dispose of toxic materials like scrap metals, batteries, computer monitors, televisions, etc. Burn pits not only leached toxic forever chemicals into the water but also contaminated the air and land with toxic fumes from the burn. It is the burn pits that are the focus of the Honor Our Pact Act that has recently passed through the US House of Representatives and will now be decided upon by the Senate. Experts think that more than 3.5 million veterans and their families, including unborn babies and young children, were exposed to the carcinogenic daily from burn pits and firefighting foam. Burn Pits 360 Veterans Organization has scheduled a rally for today, Friday, March 25, to draw attention to the military's misconduct and the terminal illnesses the vets and their families now suffer from. According to WKYC Studios, "The rally is set to be held in support of the Honor Our Pact Act, which would give veterans presumptive benefits, which includes at least 24 illnesses related to toxic exposure. The Department of Defense has stated previously that there are at least 3.5 million veterans that suffer from toxic exposure." Another interesting aspect of the protest is to force Senator Rob Portman to change his vote supporting the Veterans Burn Pits Exposure Recognition Act which only covers 911 veterans who retired less than ten years ago. The Honor Our Pact Act, on the other hand, is all-inclusive for veterans from the Vietnam era to the present day according to WKYC. The name Burn Pits 360 references all military personnel, veterans, and their families to be represented by the legislation.
Firefighting foam is still required by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) as a means to extinguish petroleum-based fires like jet fuel fires. The Intercept wrote about the life-saving substance which also has the deadly unintended consequences of causing cancer through water supply contamination. "Known as aqueous film-forming foam, or AFFF, it was created to put out jet fuel fires. AFFF is flame-resistant by design and contains PFAS chemicals, such as PFOA and PFOS, which cause a wide range of health problems and last indefinitely in the environment," The Intercept wrote. The Department of Defense (DOD) has recognized that the tap water supplies to more than 400 on and off-base installations scattered throughout the United States have tested positive for toxic PFAS forever chemicals.
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