9/11 health program cuts to cause 'life and death' delays, fired worker says
NEW YORK ‒ Just before his confirmation as secretary of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. pledged to help 9/11 responders and survivors, two U.S. senators from New York said Tuesday. But a day after he got the job, the Trump administration and Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency cut jobs at the World Trade Center Health Program.
Democratic Sens. Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand are now demanding Kennedy reverse "the rash and counterproductive terminations" and ensure ongoing healthcare for "those who answered the call on 9/11 and are now sick with respiratory ailments, cancer and other conditions."
Up to 20% of staff at the WTC Health Program were impacted by cuts of probationary workers and buyouts. HHS oversees the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which houses the WTC program.
The impact is exacerbated, elected officials and fired workers say, by DOGE cuts to scientific research and last year's scrapping of permanent funding for the WTC program by Congress.
"These cuts are going to impact member care directly," said Anthony Gardner, one of the WTC program staff who was notified via email on Saturday, that he'd lost his job. "For some of these members these delays are going to be life and death."
HHS and CDC did not immediately return requests for comment. Paste BN has also reached out to the White House requesting comment.
U.S. Rep. Mike Lawler, whose Hudson Valley district is home to many 9/11 responders, said on Monday he was talking with the Trump administration about the cuts.
"I am aware of the serious concerns pertaining to the WTC (Health Program) and have been working through the weekend with the White House to reverse the decision and ensure there are no impacts on providing care to our brave 9/11 heroes," said Lawler, a Republican whose 17th District includes New York City's suburbs in the lower Hudson Valley. "There is nothing more important to me than fighting for our first responders and I won't stop until this is rectified."
The health program was established as part of the 2011 James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act. Dozens of health impacts have been found among those exposed to the toxic swirl around ground zero on and in the months after Sept. 11, 2001.
The union representing approximately 20,000 active and retired New York City firefighters cite statements by Musk and the Trump administration that if mistakes happen during the DOGE cuts, they’ll correct them.
“This is a mistake that needs to be corrected, and corrected quickly,” Andrew Ansbro, president of the Uniformed Firefighters Association of Greater New York, told Paste BN. “No one has ever accused the World Trade Center Health Program of being run inefficiently, and no one has ever questioned the need for America to fund the health care program that helps the first responders, rescue workers and civilians.”
New York City Fire Commissioner Robert Tucker said the program has been a lifeline to 9/11 responders who later became ill. Cuts to grant funding will limit the ability to prove new conditions are related to the World Trade Center attacks and should be added to covered conditions in the program, he said in a statement.
“This will hinder our efforts to provide treatment coverage for new conditions, which is a tragedy for all Americans who swore they would never forget,” Tucker said.
Rupa Bhattacharyya, former special master of the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund, said WTC Health provides support for people in all 50 states. WTC program cuts mean "that the heroes of 9/11 will face longer wait times, reduced services, and delays in receiving their compensation" through the VCF, which depends on certifications from WTC Health Program doctors. "It is unconscionable."
Bhattacharyya now serves of the boards of 9/11 Health Watch and Citizens for the Extension of the Zadroga Act.
New York Attorney General Letitia James, a Democrat, said the cuts need to be reversed, calling them reckless and "flat-out cruel."
“Thousands of New Yorkers made heroic sacrifices to save others during this attack and are experiencing lifelong health impacts as a result," she said in a statement. "These heroes deserve the utmost respect and care from their government.”
Related CDC cuts: How will the World Trade Center Health Program be impacted?
Helping 9/11 responders in memory of a lost brother
Gardner found out he had been terminated from his job at the World Trade Center Health Program on Saturday night, via a work email.
The elimination of jobs for his co-workers, including some who process claims and review treatments, will lead to delays he said. There are currently 130,000 WTC program members who are monitored, getting treatment, or both.
Gardner has already submitted a rebuttal letter to his firing. But he wants more.
"No matter what happens, I’m really hoping that President Trump takes a closer look, especially to the cuts to these programs, how catastrophic they can be," he said. "I can’t believe that’s an intended consequence."
He noted that DOGE purports to fight fraud and abuse of federal funds. The WTC program is charged with preventing fraud and abuse by overseeing contracted providers and screening program applicants. "We make sure they meet criteria laid out by the Zadroga Act."
Gardner has been with the WTC program for four years, originally as a contractor. About a year and a half ago, he was brought on as the public affairs specialist.
His experience was beyond the "probationary" level, not only in this job but in practically his entire professional career. Gardner is a former senior vice president of government and community affairs for the 9/11 Memorial & Museum and the September 11th Victims Compensation Fund. He's volunteered with the 9/11 responder community.
"The mission is very important to me," Gardner said.
It's also deeply personal.
Harvey Gardner, Anthony's older brother by 10 years, was working for General Telecom on the 83rd floor in the north tower during the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
Harvey Gardner and his IT General Telecom co-workers were above the impact zone of the first plane. They were trying to get to a stairwell, Harvey told their brother, Mark, in a phone call during the search.
"Harvey was trying to comfort his co-workers," Anthony Gardner recalled. "The courage that he showed, the compassion that he showed as he was facing the horror of the end of their lives together, has always inspired me."
A commitment through 2090
The World Trade Center Health Program provides health monitoring and treatment for 9/11-related health conditions.
Responders, including police, firefighters, clean-up workers and others who worked in rescue and recovery efforts around the World Trade Center site can qualify for the health program. So can those who lived, worked or went to school in Lower Manhattan during and in the months after the terrorist attacks. The program also supports people exposed at the Pentagon and in Pennsylvania where other planes involved in the attacks went down.
Other DOGE cuts to research grants also jeopardize ongoing studies that could slow down additional health problems from being included in WTC program coverage.
“Any research that comes out of World Trade Center Health Care Program can be applied to the long-term care of American firefighters,” Ansbro said.
Getting Zadroga passed in 2011 took heavy lobbying; images of first responders, weakened by 9/11 illness, walking the halls of Congress pushed lawmakers to act.
The WTC program is mandated through 2090. But funding shortages are perpetual.
A deal had been struck to fix longstanding funding problems for the WTC program, but it was derailed when Trump and Musk upended the omnibus budget plan in December.
In 2018, Trump's then-Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney tried to terminate the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health, said Benjamin Chevat, executive director at Citizens for Extension of the James Zadroga Act. "But (he) did not seem to understand the extent that NIOSH was a critical part of the WTC Health Program."
"That proposal was stopped then," Chevat said, "and these cuts need to be reversed now.”
Paste BN's Eduardo Cuevas contributed to this report.