Andy Brack, Commentary

BRACK: Congress must help Lejeune toxic water victims

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Partain on the day he was born with his mother. Note the water bottle in the bottom left. Photo provided.

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher  |  They drank the water.  And it’s been killing them.

Retired Navy Chaplain Bruce Hill (see video) of Lakeland, Fla., had five years of treatment before his leukemia went into remission.  His wife died of breast cancer.  His daughter suffers from an inflammatory bowel disease that compromises her body’s immune system. They all drank the water. 

Hill and his late wife.

On the day that Mike Partain of Winter Haven, Fla., was born in a base hospital at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, he, too, drank the water.  You can see a baby bottle half-filled with water in the foreground of a picture in my office that shows Mike’s mother holding him hours after he was born.

“If it hadn’t been for a fortunate hug, I’d probably be dead now,” Mike said earlier this year (see video). “I had breast cancer.  I’m one of 125 men who had the unique commonality of exposure to the contaminated water at the base and male breast cancer. 

“I do not drink.  I do not have the BRCA 1 and 2 mutations for breast cancer…. I don’t do drugs.  There’s no history of breast cancer in my family.  But yet, I get a rare disease but it’s tied to these chemicals.”

Partain

From 1953 to 1987, more than 900,000 Marines, their families and civilian employees at Camp Lejeune drank water contaminated by toxic chemicals like gasoline and jet fuel that leaked into wells around the base. Across the country, 273,433 people have registered with the Marine Corps to receive notifications about the poisonous drinking water at Camp Lejeune.  More than 7,600 live in South Carolina. 

In the 1960s and 1970s at the base, “levels of certain cancer-causing chemicals were among the highest ever recorded in a public drinking water supply,” according to a 2013 Associated Press story. 

People like Bruce and Mike got sick.  Too many died from diseases like leukemia and cancer — rectal cancer, breast cancer, cervical cancer, ovarian cancer, brain cancer, kidney cancer.  Often, it took years for devastating diseases to manifest.

What makes the whole mess even sadder is that the military knew about it for years, but did nothing.  All the while, Marines protecting their country had no idea they were battling an invisible enemy — an enemy in the water underneath the homes in which they lived, the offices where they worked, the fields in which they trained.   

By 2012, Congress passed a measure to provide limited health care relief for Camp Lejeune veterans, but the law didn’t provide substantial and equitable relief or reimbursement for military dependents and civilian employees who suffered from drinking the polluted water.  In other words, some health treatments were covered, but not claims for other damages from victims. Why? Because of a quirk in North Carolina’s law that courts said must be applied before cases could be brought.  That limitation has kept those affected by the water from having their day in court.

The only way that’s left to deal with this aberration in North Carolina’s law is for Congress to pass a special bill, the Camp Lejeune Justice Act. If passed, the measure would allow Marines, their families and civilian workers at Camp Lejeune who either consumed or bathed in toxic water for at least 30 days between August 1953 and December 1987 to seek damages and, if denied, to file a lawsuit. 

More than 50 members of Congress currently co-sponsor the legislation, but it’s been crawling at a snail’s pace.  

Congress, now is the time to get the job done.  No more messing around.  No more political side steps. Victims and families have suffered for too long.  More are dying without relief.  Honor the Marines and other sickened victims of this tragic poisoning now by doing the right thing and letting them seek the recovery and peace they deserve.  

They protected us.  Now let’s do the right thing for them to rectify the toxic wrongs done to them.

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12 Comments

  1. Susanne j Roberts

    AMEN

  2. Yeah, those of us still here do vote religiously.

  3. Randall Tirrell

    Thank you.I was stationed there from 79-83.Its always on my mind.

  4. Denny Tuttle

    Its to the point its almost to late. Around 500 thousand Marines have died , that whole time they were siting on their hands, congress knew about the toxic water and did nothing to help. I would say there are still Marines and their family’s dying every day that still do not know about the poison water .Our government has been trying for years to keep it low key to stop us from doing anything. At the rate we are dying we all will be gone in a few years while congress thinks about helping us.

  5. Deborah Paul

    Thank you sincerely for your efforts to help get the justice Camp Lejeune victims all deserve. The debacle has continued far too long & those with the ability to change the course, MUST RIGHT THESE WRONGS! Respectfully, Deborah Paul, widow of USMC CPL Robert D. Paul, Jr. , Tulsa, Oklahoma

  6. Steven Torrao

    I was at Camp Lejune from 1976 to 1980 and had a triple bypass aortic valve replacement kidney disease nerve damage and a diabetic which none of my family has why is my question thank you

  7. Thank you Mr. Brack for doing this story. My father was a U.S. Marine . He was stationed at Camp Lejeune from 1961-1978. Our mother died of brain cancer just 3 years after our father’s 20 years f service and retired. She never smoked or drank. I was shattered, I never prepared for her death at 47. I had prepare for the possible death of my father. He was a Marine and went to Vietnam twice. So I knew at a young age daddy was in great danger everyday. He came home safe to us. He passed away in 2010 at age 74. Last April I lost my little brother from cancer also. I was notified of the toxic water at Camp Lejeune in 2012. We had never been notified prior to that date. Soon after I filed a federal tort claim SF-95 for our mother’s death in 1981. This is a overwhelming form, you are required to put a $ dollar amount for the life of your loved one on it. Our mother was priceless. This is one the saddest and hardest things I have ever had to do in my life. I found that invisible tears can’t ever be wiped away. And the pain remains the same.

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