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Showing posts with label HR 982. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HR 982. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

House should defeat "delay till they die" act


Alliance for Justice President Nan Aron issued the following statement today concerning the vote by the House Judiciary Committee in favor of the so-called Furthering Asbestos Claim Transparency Act.

With their penchant for Orwellian language, Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee have reported to the full House legislation they call the Furthering Asbestos Claim Transparency (FACT) Act.  But were there a truth-in-labeling requirement for legislation, it would be called the “delay till they die act” – because the real intent of this bill is to delay justice for asbestos victims until even more of them die.

As AFJ and other organizations explain in a letter released this week, since at least the 1930s asbestos companies and their insurers have been denying responsibility for the millions of deaths and injuries knowingly caused by this deadly product.  The companies hid the dangers posed by asbestos exposure, lied about what they knew, fought against liability for the harms caused, tried to change the laws that held them responsible, and to this day, they still fight against banning asbestos in the U.S.

In the 1990s, Congress passed legislation designed to ensure at least some compensation to victims even when companies reorganized under the bankruptcy code to free themselves of their asbestos liability.  It established trust funds to compensate victims while those companies reorganized.  This bill would make it more difficult for victims to get compensation by forcing the trusts to use their limited resources to respond to asbestos defense lawyers’ fishing expeditions, and by delaying chronically ill victims’ day in court during those fishing expeditions.

The asbestos industry is not interested in transparency. The bill places lengthy and burdensome new reporting requirements on victims seeking compensation for asbestos-related illnesses, but it has no comparable requirements for the asbestos companies who were responsible for the harm.  The legislation is one-sided, unfair and unnecessary.  It should be defeated.

Read the letter
Read our previous post on this bill
Read more about access to justice

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Democrats demand Republicans hear from asbestos victims before trying to curb their rights


By Christopher Doi
AFJ Intern

On March 13, the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Regulatory Reform, Commercial, and Antitrust Law held a hearing to discuss H.R. 982, the so-called Furthering Asbestos Claim Transparency Act of 2013. The bill would impose unnecessary and burdensome new requirements on victims harmed by asbestos exposure. It would make it harder for asbestos victims to receive fair compensation from trust funds.

Asbestos is a carcinogen that has killed hundreds of thousands of people. In the 1990s, Congress passed legislation designed to ensure at least some compensation to victims even when companies went bankrupt. It established trust funds to compensate victims while those companies reorganized under bankruptcy law. Since most victims were exposed to asbestos from multiple companies, they can recover damages from every entity that caused the harm. If a firm has gone bankrupt they can file a claim with a trust. They also can go to court, if the company remained solvent.

Trusts receive tens of thousands of claims. Though there is no evidence that these claims have been mishandled, the bill would require the trusts to file quarterly reports to the bankruptcy court describing each and every one of them. They’d also have to explain the basis for payment for each claim. Furthermore, the bill compels trusts to expose information of any payment or demand for payment made by claimants to any party involved in asbestos-related litigation. Critics call this a “delay ‘till they die” strategy. They say the real purpose of all this is to drain the trust funds of money that should go to victims and stall the process so more victims die before they can be compensated. As Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.) noted, the bill is essentially a “solution in search of a problem,” which serves only to potentially deny asbestos victims full compensation for the harm they suffered as a result of asbestos manufacturers’ malfeasance.

Elihu Inselbuch, representing the law firm of Caplin & Drysdale, exposed the double-standard that Republicans are seeking to apply to asbestos victims; the “transparency” sought by the  bill is entirely one-sided.  The proposal puts no burden on the companies that knowingly caused massive harm while actively hiding health risks from the public. Rep. Cohen added that the bill would shift costs from corporate defendants to the victims of asbestos exposure, by requiring they spend money on disclosing information that defendants can already receive through subpoenas.

Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.)
Although Inselbuch was allowed to speak against the bill, not one actual victim of asbestos or family member of a victim was invited to testify at this hearing. Nevertheless, one week later, on March 20, the subcommittee scheduled a meeting to try to rush the bill through. Several asbestos victims and their family members objected. One of them is the widow of the late Rep. Bruce Vento – who died from asbestos expose

When Rep. Cohen pressed Subcommittee Chairman Spencer Bachus (R-Ala.) about this, the Chairman’s first proposal was to reopen the record to allow victims to submit testimony without delaying the Subcommittee’s vote on the Act.  In other words, after the Subcommittee voted, members who were so inclined could read what the victims had to say.

Rep. Cohen denounced the move as an insult to the victims and a mockery of due process. Freshman Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D – N.Y.) said the proceedings should be “for the victims, not the asbestos industrial complex. If we are acting on behalf of the victims then we should hear from the victims” before the vote. After being pressed by his Democratic colleagues, Bachus was forced to delay the vote for thirty days, until the subcommittee had an opportunity to hear testimony from the victims.

The subcommittee’s decision to postpone the vote was a small win for the rights of asbestos victims. True victory will come only if Congress actually listens to the asbestos victims and their families and rejects H.R. 982.

Christopher Doi is a student at American University Washington College of Law