Wednesday, 6 April 2011

Mesothelioma Law.Mesothelioma Awereness

Mesothelioma law falls into two categories: regulatory statutes, which specify what steps industry must now take to protect employees; and personal injury law (known in legal terms as tort), allowing victims to take action against institutions responsible for their asbestos exposure as well as the manufacturers of the substance.


The Fairness in Asbestos Resolution Act (SB 852) was introduced by Senator Arlen Specter (R-PA) in April of 2005. This bill would have deprived citizens of the right to file suit against corporations for injuries related to asbestos. Instead, the federal government would have established a private trust fund, financed by insurance companies and responsible corporations, from which malignant mesothelioma and other asbestos victims would be compensated.

The bill's proponents claimed it would speed up the recovery mesothelioma  process for claimants. However, such claimants would receive only a fraction of their deserved compensation, while the corporations who willfully and negligently exposed workers and their families to a  mesothelioma substance they knew to be toxic would be absolved from any and all liability.

The bill died in the Senate in February, 2006, but was re-introduced by Specter in May of that year as SB 3274. The Senate Judiciary Committee held a hearing on the bill ten days later, but no action has been on it taken since.

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