Sept. 11 responders’ insurance fund under fire
Two senators want to know why a $1 billion Sept. 11 insurance fund appropriated by Congress to help ailing ground zero workers has not been used to compensate those exposed to harmful substances.
Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., and the committee’s ranking Republican, Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, said in a letter to the insurance company overseeing the Sept. 11 health-related claims that they are considering convening a hearing in September.
“Reports that the World Trade Center Captive Insurance Co. has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on salaries on administrators and over $45 million to private law firms are troubling,” the letter said.
The two also said they have concerns about the $74 million that reportedly has been spent on overhead costs and legal bills.
Michael A. Cardozo, New York City’s corporation counsel, said in a statement that Captive Insurance Co. is an insurance company, not a compensation fund. He said the city has urged Congress to create a compensation fund for injured workers. “Instead, Congress created an insurance company, and the Captive Insurance Co. is obligated to defend all claims that have a reasonable and valid defense,” Cardozo said. “We would strongly welcome Congress, as we have repeatedly urged, to allocate funds for compensation without the need for litigation.”
Attorneys representing thousands who became ill after working to clean up the site have gone to court to demand the insurance company spend money on their health care.
- State Farm VP Apologizes to Homeowner While Allstate Gets Grilled at Senate Hearing
- Dangerous-Dog Owners in Florida Must Now Get $100,000 in Liability Insurance
- ‘Big Beautiful’ Tax Breaks for Insurance Agents in Bill Passed by House, Says Big I
- Corporate Nuclear Verdicts Surged to New Record High in 2024, Report Says