Tuesday, March 22, 2022 - Politicians in the United States are jumping on board in support of the Honor Our Pact Act which includes the Camp Lejeune Justice Act (CLJA). Times Leader.com reports that U.S. Rep. Matt Cartwright, D-Moosic confirms the extent of the problem and the scope of the military's responsibility for contaminating the drinking water supplies for hundreds of thousands of military service members and their families, including unborn and small children. According to TL, "According to information provided by Cartwright's office, over 30 years spanning the 1950s through the 1980s, thousands of Marines, their families, civilian workers, and personnel used government-provided tap water that was contaminated with harmful chemicals, found at levels ranging from 240 to 3,400 times the levels permitted by safety standards. These exposures likely increased the risk of PFAS cancer, such as renal cancer, multiple myeloma, leukemia and more. It also likely raised their risk of adverse birth outcomes, along with other negative health effects."
Military service members, their spouses, and children may have developed cancer or may have died from drinking the local tap water. Thousands of families that lived on or near a military base in the United States are concerned that they may have been poisoned by their local tap water and are seeking answers by filing PFAS cancer lawsuits. The Camp Lejeune Justice Act will overturn local North Carolina statutes of limitations that have prohibited those with drinking water cancer and the survivors of those who have died from filing lawsuits under the Federal Tort Claims Act. Individuals that lived 30 days or longer on or near the Camp Lejeune Marine Base at any time during the last 30 years are encouraged to speak with a Camp Lejeune cancer attorney for help in filing their claim for lump-sum monetary compensation.
Military firefighting training from 1953 until 1987 included spraying firefighting foam which leached directly into the local water table and the faucets of residents. Firefighting foam is made from non-organic chemicals known as per- and polyfluoroalkyl (PFAS), and aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF). Firefighting foam is an extremely useful and life-saving tool used to extinguish petroleum fires by smothering them. The problem is that once sprayed it is left in place to drain into the local water table. People drank, bathed, and played in the water every day, some for many years, and have now been diagnosed with cancer. The types of cancer being reported include testicular cancer, kidney cancer, liver cancer, and pancreatic cancer. Firefighting foam is made from PFAS forever chemicals that bioaccumulate in the cells to cause oxidative stress and eventually cancer. Experts think that the Pentagon's estimate of around 400 military bases' groundwater having been contaminated with carcinogenic chemicals is low and that there could have been tens of thousands of individual incidences of PFAS military base groundwater contamination.
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