Exposed to Burn Pits, Iraq Veteran Fights for Disability Benefits

Air Force veteran Tim Wymore has three lesions on his brain, a blood disorder, a damaged esophagus and other health problems, which he believes stem from his exposure to toxins at open-air burn pits where he was stationed in Balad, Iraq.

Wymore, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports, is battling the Department of Veterans Affairs to receive permanent disability benefits. The VA says his condition may improve and, as a result, it hasn’t provided such disability benefits as medical insurance for Wymore’s wife or college aid for their three sons.

Wymore worries that if he dies, his wife will have to go through a painful process of proving his death was military-related to win survivor’s benefits.

“I took the oath and did what was asked of me,” said Wymore. “Now, I feel it’s time for the military to do their part. I’m tired of fighting them.”

Wymore is one of hundreds of veterans in 42 states suing the military contractor that operated many of the burn pits, Kellogg Brown & Root. The lawsuit contends that the veterans’ illnesses were caused by the mixture of fumes from plastics, solvents, medical waste and other trash burned at the pits. A federal judge ruled last week that the case could proceed. The contractor has said it was following the military’s instructions and bears no legal responsibility.

Wymore said his health declined since he returned from Iraq in 2005. At the base in Balad, Wymore made several trips each week to dump waste at the base burn pit, which he said was five football fields long, 300 feet deep and belched thick black smoke continuously. Wymore said the fumes lingered over the entire base.

When he returned home, he was hospitalized for a stomach infection, had part of his colon removed and began blacking out at work. VA doctors determined he had post-traumatic stress, but provided no conclusions about his physical problems. The VA has told the couple they will review Wymore’s disability rating in 2012 to see whether his health has improved.

The VA told its employees earlier this year that burn pits should be considered in veterans’ health claims. The National Academy of Science’s Institute of Medicine is expected to complete a study of the long-term health effects from exposure to the pits in May 2011.

Related:

Veterans’ Suit Claims Trash Fires Caused Cancer, Respiratory Problems

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One comment to “Exposed to Burn Pits, Iraq Veteran Fights for Disability Benefits”

  1. NFL Tickets

    I can understand how Tim suffered due too these health problem.

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