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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Michael McAuliff

Feds to restore millions they took from NY firefighters who became sick after 9/11

Fred Harschak, a retired firefighter with 35 years duty on the Bridgeport Fire Department, holds the Flag of Honor at Connecticut's 19th annual 9/11 Memorial Ceremony at Sherwood Island State Park on September 10, 2020. The Flag of Honor's stripes are comprised of all the names of fallen Americans in the attacks on 9/11/01. (Brad Horrigan/Hartford Courant/TNS)

WASHINGTON — The Trump administration will finally pay back millions the federal government took from the FDNY's 9/11 treatment program over the last four years.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention notified Rep. Pete King, R-N.Y., late Friday that a number of federal agencies — including the Treasury Department — will return $3.3 million that was docked from the program that cares for firefighters, paramedics and emergency medical technicians sickened by exposure to the toxic rubble of the Twin Towers.

"It's a great victory for really deserving people," King told the Daily News Saturday. "I mean this just never should have happened, but we fought hard, we got it done."

The slashing of the critical funding was reported exclusively by The News last month, on the eve of 19th anniversary of the terror attacks.

Federal officials dithered for weeks trying to figure out how to account for the galling deductions, how much money was missing, who was to blame, and whether to return the cash.

The funds were apparently taken to offset still-unexplained disputes over Medicare debts the city has with the feds.

The FDNY's chief medical officer, Dr. David Prezant, noticed growing gaps in the payouts, and asked for answers. For well over a year, he got nowhere.

But after he brought it to King's office, the Treasury Department offered a partial accounting in March, though it gave no real explanation or solution to the problem.

"It has taken too long for this fix to be implemented, for a problem that never should have occurred in the first place," said Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y . "I'm relieved that the program will be made whole and that any future disputes with NYC over possible debts will not involve holding 9/11 heroes' health care hostage."

There are still bureaucratic details to iron out, but now Prezant can start to fill 21 jobs left vacant at the treatment program because he couldn't pay doctors, nurses and support staff.

"This takes care of one very important issue that will allow us to provide the exceptional care that our firefighters and EMS workers deserve after being exposed to 9/11," Prezant said. "Once this money is actually transferred and officially recorded, then we have to work on getting these people hired."

For King, the entire experience is baffling.

"Even just the optics of it should have been enough, apart from the morality and apart from the lack of decency here, just the optics of it where you're talking about 9/11 FDNY victims who were the face of 9/11 — to be putting their health at risk over a bookkeeping issue, which didn't even involve them," King said.

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