People Harmed by Radiation Exposure Can Forget About Any Federal Compensation

Speaker Mike Johnson killed a proposal to provide benefits to victims of America’s nuclear program.

“It’s really tough to have people say, ‘Nope, sorry that’s too expensive. It wasn’t too expensive to poison you, but it’s too expensive to fix what we did and you aren’t worth it.'”

By , Mother Jones | August 21, 2024 motherjones.com

Photo collage featuring Republican Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson in front of green and black warning signs for a radiation area.
Mother Jones illustration; Scott Sady/AP, Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/AP

It wasn’t a difficult choice for Linda Evers, after graduating high school in 1976, to take a job crushing dirt for the Kerr McGee uranium mill, just north of her hometown Grants, New Mexico. Most gigs in town paid $1.75 an hour. This one offered $9 an hour.

She spent seven years working in New Mexico’s uranium mines and mills, driving a truck and loading the ore crusher for much of the late 1970s and early ’80s, including through her pregnancies with each of her children. “When I told them I was pregnant,” Evers, now 66, recalled, “they told me it was okay, I could work until my belly wouldn’t let me reach the conveyor belts anymore.”

Both children were born with health defects—her son with a muscle wrapped around the bottom of his stomach and her daughter without hips. Today, Evers herself suffers from scarring lungs, a degenerative bone and joint disease, and multiple skin rashes. All of which doctors have attributed to radiation exposure.

“We never learned about uranium exposure or any of that. They were killing us. And they knew they were killing us.”

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