After three months of negotiations, the insurer for the city of New York, WTC Captive Insurance, has agreed to up payments to about 10,000 ground zero workers to $712.5 million. The New York Times reports that city employees negotiated a new deal that has lawyers for the plaintiffs reducing their fees, and the city insurer paying out more money.
Previous deals listed sums between $575 million and $657.5 million.
The plaintiffs’ lawyers have agreed to reduce their maximum fees from 33 percent to 25 percent of the settlement, allowing their clients to keep an extra $50 million.
The workers sued the city over health problems they say were caused by inadequate supervision and a lack of protective equipment at ground zero.
A prior settlement proposal was blocked in March by U.S. District Judge Alvin K. Hellerstein, who said an earlier settlement was rejected in March, when a federal judge decided plaintiffs were not being adequately compensated, and lawyer fees were too high.
The judge praised the new agreement at a hearing on Thursday. The deal must be approved by 95 percent of plaintiffs by Sept. 30 to take effect, The Times reports.


