In a ruling against Washington state, the U.S. Supreme Court has held that a 2018 law — allowing for workers’ compensation for federal contract workers at a decommissioned nuclear facility — is unconstitutional.
that a 2018 law — allowing for workers’ compensation for federal contract workers at a decommissioned nuclear facility — is unconstitutional.workers to sue the federal government for compensation benefits over illnesses associated with radioactive waste generated at the nuclear facility — one of the first full-scale plutonium production reactors in the world, used in the Manhattan Project to develop the atomic bomb.
, the law in question, was updated in 2022 to preempt a ruling against Washington state, and the Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson argues that Tuesday’s ruling “has little practical impact” on Washington workers.dates back to a 2018 Trump administration challenge.
“Hanford workers, and all others working with dangerous radioactive waste, remain protected. The federal government has not challenged this new law. If they do, we will defend these protections all the way back up to the Supreme Court again if we have to.” “The United States asserts that, if we rule in its favor, it will either recoup or avoid paying between $17 million and $37 million in workers’ compensation claims that lower courts have awarded under the earlier law,” Breyer wrote, referencing at least $17 million already paid out by the federal government to Hanford workers
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