Posts Tagged ‘Rocky Flats’

DNFSB: The First Twenty Years

Monday, October 19th, 2009   |   Tags: , ,
Posted in News

Read the Post in Frank Munger’s Atomic City Underground blog»

Rocky Flats Cold War Museum Newsletter

Friday, August 7th, 2009   |   Tags: , , , , ,
Posted in News, News & Events

Our friends at the Rocky Flats Cold War Museum have shared their informative newsletter with us.  There are several regionally important articles in the newsletter, so give it a read!

Read the Rocky Flats newsletter here.

If you or your organization wants to share your newsletter with us, email it to info@coldwarpatriots.org.

CWP at Rocky Flats Picnic

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009   |   Tags: , , , ,
Posted in Events, News, News & Events

The Annual Rocky Flats Picnic was a great success.  Many former workers came and enjoyed the temperate weather, the delicous food and the rockin’ band.  Below are some photos of the event including the the signing of the scroll in support of the National Day of Remembrance.

Cake:

Cake

Chatting:

Chatting

Eating:

Eating

Scroll:

Scroll

Band:

Band

Flats crew garners support of lawmakers

Sunday, May 24th, 2009   |   Tags: , , ,
Posted in News

Read the article in the Denver Post»

$400M paid so far to Colorado nuclear workers

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009   |   Tags: , , , , , , ,
Posted in News

Read the article in the Denver Post»

Looking back on a brush with destruction – Mother’s Day fire at Rocky Flats 40 years ago came close to disaster

Sunday, May 10th, 2009   |   Tags: , , , , , , , ,
Posted in News

Read the article in the Boulder Daily Camera»

Denver’s CBS 4 Covers the Proposed Charlie Wolf Act

Thursday, April 16th, 2009   |   Tags: , , , , ,
Posted in News, News & Events

CBS News 4 provides coverage for the Proposed Charlie Wolf Act to help clean up the red tape for workers across the nation who are applying for compensation for their injuries.  Many worker’s have experienced severe delays, denials and an extensive application processes.

Read the article about the Charlie Wolf Act.

Watch the video interview with Kathy Wolf, the husband of Charlie Wolf:

Rocky Flats Workers Find Hope in New Bill

Monday, April 13th, 2009   |   Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Posted in News

Listen to the program at KUNC radio»

CWP Fully Supports Charlie Wolf Act

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009   |   Tags: , , , , ,
Posted in Contact Your Representative, Legislative, News, News & Events

The Charlie Wolf Act, introduced in both the house and senate on April 1, 2009, is comprehensive reform legislation for the EEOICPA.   The highlights of the bill include:

1. Extending the “special exposure cohort” status to Department of Energy employees, Department of Energy contractor employees, or atomic weapons employees who worked at a nuclear weapons facility prior to January 1, 2006.

2. Presuming that a worker with a covered radiation-linked cancer is eligible for compensation.

3. Expanding the list of cancers for which individuals are eligible to receive compensation.

4. Requiring the Department of Labor to pay a claimant’s estate should a claimant die after filing their claim – but before receiving payment and leaving no survivors.

5. Expanding the duties of the Ombudsman’s Office, providing greater transparency and communication with claimants, and allowing more time to file legal actions should claims be denied.

6. Allowing claimants who were previously denied to re-file their claims.

We at Cold War Patriots, fully support this bill, legislators, advocates and workers who have strived continuously to get workers and their families the justice they deserve. We sincerely hope, that the Charlie Wolf Act is able to aptly reform the law in a way that benefits the Cold War Patriots who sacrificed their health and their lives for the betterment of the United States of America.

Cold War Patriots Calls Upon Its Members:

Please contact your congress men and women and urge them to support this bill!

Write your Representative:
https://writerep.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml

Write your Senators:
http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm

Charlie Wolf Act Press Release

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009   |   Tags: , , , ,
Posted in Legislative, Legislative Updates, News, News & Events

From: Oliver, Leslie
Sent: Tuesday, March 31, 2009 1:01 PM
To: Oliver, Leslie
Subject: NEWS: Perlmutter Bill to Help Sick Nuclear Workers
Importance: High

U.S. Senate

U.S. House of Representatives

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, March 31, 2009

CONTACTS: Tara Trujillo (Udall) – 202-224-5941
Leslie Oliver (Perlmutter) – 202-274-7944
Lara Cottingham (Polis) – 202-225-5693

Udall, Bennet, Perlmutter, Polis, Salazar, and Coffman Introduce Bill to Help Sick Nuclear Workers

Charlie Wolf Nuclear Workers Compensation Act Would Help Cold Warriors from Rocky Flats and Other Weapons Sites get Help for Job-Related Illnesses

Washington, D.C. – This week, U.S. Senators Mark Udall and Michael Bennet, and Reps. Ed Perlmutter, Jared Polis, John Salazar, and Mike Coffman introduced the Charlie Wolf Nuclear Workers Compensation Act to improve a program designed to compensate workers who became ill because of their work at Rocky Flats and other nuclear weapons sites.

Named for Charlie Wolf, a former Rocky Flats employee who developed brain cancer related to his work at the site, the bill would make important changes to reduce the bureaucracy in the program and expand the list of cancers for which individuals are eligible to receive compensation.

While the compensation program was set up to help workers if they developed illnesses from exposure to radiation or other toxins on the job, workers have instead found their cases delayed for years by bureaucratic red tape.  Charlie Wolf and his wife Kathy battled the federal government for help for six years before Charlie died earlier this year – and his case still has not been resolved.  His struggles were documented by the Rocky Mountain News in a series of stories called “Deadly Denial.”

The lawmakers’ bill would fix the system by expanding the category of individuals eligible for compensation, improving the procedures for providing compensation and transparency, and granting the Office of the Ombudsman greater authority to help workers.

“With this bill we’re saying enough is enough.  We simply cannot and should not subject people who put themselves in harm’s way for our nation’s security to the kinds of obstacles and difficulties that they have been through,” Senator Mark Udall said.  “Charlie and workers like him are patriots and veterans of the Cold War.  We have a new Administration and a new focus here in Washington.  And it’s time to do right by these workers and help them get the compensation they have earned.”

“This is about justice.  These workers risked their lives to protect this nation and helped end the Cold War, and they are entitled to receive the proper health care and benefits for this unselfish sacrifice to our country,” said Rep. Ed Perlmutter.  “After years of delays and roadblocks under the prior Administration, we want to work closely with the Obama Administration to make sure these workers or their beneficiaries are granted eligibility for Special Exposure Cohort and promptly receive the medical care and benefits they’ve earned.”

“From engineers to cafeteria cooks, the workers at Rocky Flats and all cold war workers served our country under incredibly dangerous conditions and deserve better treatment from the government that put them in harm’s way,” said Rep. Jared Polis.  “This injustice has been pushed aside for far too long.  I am proud to join Senator Udall in his efforts and hope to use my seat on the Education and Labor Committee to advance these important reforms in the House.”

The Charlie Wolf Nuclear Workers Compensation Act makes significant changes in the current law governing compensation, including:

· Extending the “special exposure cohort” status to Department of Energy employees, Department of Energy contractor employees, or atomic weapons employees who worked at a nuclear weapons facility prior to January 1, 2006.  This will help make it easier for workers to establish that their radiation-linked cancer was the result of working at one of these facilities.

· Presuming that a worker with a covered radiation-linked cancer is eligible for
compensation.  This puts the burden of proof on the agency to show by clear and convincing evidence that a worker’s cancer was not caused by exposure while working at a nuclear weapons facility.

· Expanding the list of cancers for which individuals are eligible to receive compensation.  The current law fails to recognize some cancers that could legitimately be caused by exposure to toxic materials at these sites.

· Requiring the Department of Labor to pay a claimant’s estate should a claimant die after filing their claim – but before receiving payment and leaving no survivors.

· Expanding the duties of the Ombudsman’s Office, providing greater transparency and communication with claimants, and allowing more time to file legal actions should claims be denied.

· Allowing claimants who were previously denied to re-file their claims.

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