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Senate passes $10B 9/11 Victim Compensation Fund, 97 to 2, only Rand Paul and Mike Lee voted against it

  • Kelsey Alvarez, daughter of Det. Luis Alvarez, speaks during his...

    Richard Drew/AP

    Kelsey Alvarez, daughter of Det. Luis Alvarez, speaks during his funeral mass at Immaculate Conception Church in Astoria, Queens on July 3, 2019. Alvarez, 53, died on June 29 after a three-year battle with colorectal cancer.

  • An NYPD musician attends the funeral of 9/11 first responder...

    Danielle Hyams/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

    An NYPD musician attends the funeral of 9/11 first responder Det. Luis Alvarez in Astoria, Queens on July 3, 2019.

  • Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez greets a mourner at the funeral for...

    Danielle Hyams/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

    Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez greets a mourner at the funeral for 9/11 first responder Det. Luis Alvarez in Astoria, Queens on July 3, 2019.

  • Lainie, the wife of 9/11 first responder Det. Luis Alvarez,...

    Danielle Hyams/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

    Lainie, the wife of 9/11 first responder Det. Luis Alvarez, holds the American flag folded for her alongside his son David (l.) at his funeral in Astoria, Queens on July 3, 2019.

  • Former talkshow host and advocate John Stewart at the funeral...

    Danielle Hyams/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

    Former talkshow host and advocate John Stewart at the funeral of 9/11 first responder Det. Luis Alvarez in Queens, New York on July 3, 2019.

  • Lainie, the wife of 9/11 first responder Det. Luis Alvarez,...

    Danielle Hyams/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

    Lainie, the wife of 9/11 first responder Det. Luis Alvarez, and his son David (l.) stand together at his funeral in Astoria, Queens on July 3, 2019.

  • Former talk show host John Stewart (l.), who appeared with...

    Danielle Hyams/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

    Former talk show host John Stewart (l.), who appeared with Alvarez during his June meeting with Congress, and Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney, speak at the funeral of 9/11 first responder's funeral on July 3, 2019.

  • Police officers, family members and mourners gather outside of the...

    Danielle Hyams/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

    Police officers, family members and mourners gather outside of the Immaculate Conception Church in Astoria, Queens for the funeral of 9/11 first responder Det. Luis Alvarez on July 3, 2019. The revered detective lost his battle with a 9/11-related cancer on June 29.

  • Det. Luis Alvarez's casket is carried out of Immaculate Conception...

    Danielle Hyams/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

    Det. Luis Alvarez's casket is carried out of Immaculate Conception Church in Astoria, Queens on July 3, 2019 following his funeral.

  • Family members of 9/11 first responder Det. Luis Alvarez exit...

    Danielle Hyams/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

    Family members of 9/11 first responder Det. Luis Alvarez exit the Immaculate Conception Church in Astoria, Queens following his funeral on July 3, 2019.

  • Police Commissioner James O'Neill attends the funeral of 9/11 first...

    Danielle Hyams/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

    Police Commissioner James O'Neill attends the funeral of 9/11 first responder Luis Alvarez in Astoria, Queens on July 3, 2019.

  • WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 23: Jon Stewart (2R) hugs 911...

    Mark Wilson/Getty Images

    WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 23: Jon Stewart (2R) hugs 911 first responders John Feal (2R) as Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY) (L) stands nearby after the U.S. Senate voted to renew permanent authorization of September 11th Victim Compensation Fund, on Capitol Hill July 23, 2019 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images) ** OUTS - ELSENT, FPG, CM - OUTS * NM, PH, VA if sourced by CT, LA or MoD **

  • Det. Luis Alvarez's casket is carried out of Immaculate Conception...

    Danielle Hyams/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

    Det. Luis Alvarez's casket is carried out of Immaculate Conception Church in Astoria, Queens following his funeral service in Astoria, Queens on July 3, 2019. Less than one month ago on June 11, Alvarez sat before members of Congress to call for compensation to be given to those like him who risked their lives surveying Ground Zero following 9/11 in the early 2000s.

  • Mourners cry during Det. Luis Alvarez's funeral at the Immaculate...

    Danielle Hyams/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

    Mourners cry during Det. Luis Alvarez's funeral at the Immaculate Conception Church in Astoria, Queens on July 3, 2019.

  • Police officers fold the American flag for Alvarez's widow Lanie...

    Danielle Hyams/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

    Police officers fold the American flag for Alvarez's widow Lanie during his funeral service on July 3, 2019.

  • Rev. John P. Harrington blesses the casket during the funeral...

    Richard Drew/AP

    Rev. John P. Harrington blesses the casket during the funeral ceremony for Det. Luis Alvarez, at Immaculate Conception Church in Astoria, Queens on July 3, 2019.

  • 9/11 first responder and FealGood Foundation co-founder John Feal speaks...

    Mark Wilson/Getty Images

    9/11 first responder and FealGood Foundation co-founder John Feal speaks after the U.S. Senate voted to renew permanent authorization of September 11th Victim Compensation Fund, on Capitol Hill Tuesday.

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Congress can never do anything about the growing numbers of people still dying from 9/11, but the Senate voted Tuesday to ensure the words “Never Forget” will never be just a slogan for the cops, firefighters and everyone else who ran towards the twin towers after the worst terrorist attack in U.S. history.

The Senate voted 97 to 2, to pass the “Never Forget the Heroes: James Zadroga, Ray Pfeifer and Luis Alvarez Permanent Authorization of the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund Act,” and send it to President Trump whom is expected to sign it into law Friday.

Only Republican Senators Rand Paul and Mike Lee voted against it.

Sitting in the Senate gallery for the passage was Alvarez’s son, David, Pfeifer’s widow Caryn, and Zadroga’s father, Joe.

Both said the passage would never fill the void left by the two men, who both died of 9/11 -linked cancer after battling to win passage of 9/11 legislation.

“It’s bittersweet. Today is finally the day that we can put this thing to rest,” said Caryn Pfeifer. “We’re going to the White House, and then all the heroes can rest in peace. Their families will be taken cared of, they can get through their treatments and not worry.”

9/11 first responder and FealGood Foundation co-founder John Feal speaks after the U.S. Senate voted to renew permanent authorization of September 11th Victim Compensation Fund, on Capitol Hill Tuesday.
9/11 first responder and FealGood Foundation co-founder John Feal speaks after the U.S. Senate voted to renew permanent authorization of September 11th Victim Compensation Fund, on Capitol Hill Tuesday.

The bill will enshrine in law the federal government’s ability to ease the economic losses and pain still being inflicted on people who spent days and months breathing the fumes and toxins unleashed after the South and North Towers of the trade center imploded, and smoldered for months.

The new bill would cost at least $10.2 billion over the first 10 years, but would be open-ended to deal with whatever the need turns out to be until 2092.

Pfeifer died in 2017, after helping in the push to renew 9/11 legislation in 2015. That bill made healthcare permanent, but funded only five more years of the Victim Compensation Fund.

The Department of Justice administrator slashed its payouts by more than half in February, saying most of the money was gone.

Soon afterwards, Alvarez made his first visit to D.C. with dozens of others from the FealGood Foundation advocacy group. He explained at the time that he was taken care of, but wanted to make sure others were as well.

He returned in June with Jon Stewart, weaker and gaunt, to deliver his denunciation of Congress for making responders come to Washington again and again. He and Stewart’s following testimony galvanized attention, and a month and a half later, the bill is about to become law.

It means hundreds of ailing survivors and responders who have seen their compensation slashed will be made whole, financially.

David Alvarez said he was proud of his father, and glad the bill named for him passed. But it will never make the Alvarez family whole.

“It’s difficult to be here without my father,” Alvarez said. “I’m at peace knowing that he’s at rest and at peace knowing that this is passed, and his name will live on with it. But having to go through many more milestones without him in my life will be very difficult.”

The bill had to overcome two hurdles at the last minute. GOP Sen. Rand Paul (Kentucky) tried to pay for the bill by cutting most other federal programs. Utah Republican Sen. Mike Lee tried to cap the fund at $10.2 billion. Both failed by wide margins.

Paul defended his vote all the way.

“While I support our heroic first responders, I can’t in good conscience vote for legislation which to my dismay remains unfunded,” the Kentucky senator said. “We have a nearly trillion dollar deficit and $22 trillion in debt. Spending is out of control. As I have done on countless issues, including disaster relief and wall funding, I will always take a stand against borrowing more money to pay for programs rather than setting priorities and cutting waste.”

Bill supporters feared that Lee’s amendment could leave future victims and responders going hat in hand to Congress yet again, especially younger ones who were in school in lower Manhattan in 2001.

Lila Nordstrom, who attended Stuyvesant High School at the time, watched the bill’s progress with a sense of disbelief.

“I honestly thought that I’d have to come here every five years for the rest of my life. That’s what my whole adult life has been basically,” said Nordstrom, who started lobbying for new 9/11 legislation 13 years ago as she saw friends and acquaintances getting sick.

“I really assumed that because survivors get a lot less of the discussion, that us younger survivors might really lose out, that they might decide this doesn’t need to be extended this long,” she said. “So I’m actually thrilled and very excited not to feel the obligation to threaten to come back again.”

The battle to build both a permanent health care program and a compensation program that will last as long as responders has been slow and hard.

It began after the original Sept. 11 aid packages ended on 2004, and picked up a little bit of momentum when the death of NYPD Det. James Zadroga was ruled to be because of the poisons he breathed at Ground Zero.

“It took his death for it to come to light that people were sick,” Zadroga said.

The first 9/11 health and compensation bill was named after him, but didn’t pass until 2010. If faced stiff opposition from Republicans and apathy from many Democrats, including then President Barack Obama.

One dying firefighter, John McNamara, had left his wife Jennifer a list of dying wishes. One was to give Obama his FDNY badge to urge the president to support the bill.

But Jennifer McNamara never did. The Obama White House never made the pledge John McNamara sought. The bill passed just days before Christmas, with many lawmakers already out of town. It had been drastically reduced, and saddled with restrictions. One Florida Republican forced the inclusion of a rule that barred any responder from joining the treatment program unless they were run through the terrorism watch list. The prohibition remained.

In 2015, Senate and House leaders agreed they would pass the renewal, but fought over how to do it, trying to used it as leverage for other measures. It was eventually attached to a budget bill, with the compensation program capped at five years.

With the money running out, responders came back, along with Stewart. After Alvarez’s dramatic testimony, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell agreed to meet with responders, led by FealGood Foundation founder John Feal. Alvarez was in hospice by then, and couldn’t make the trip. He sent his detective shield. This time, the badge had its intended effect.

McConnell agreed to advance the bill. “It was my honor to receive it. It was my honor to reiterate that the Senate’s ironclad commitment to getting this done was never in doubt,” McConnell said.

The advocates had not been certain, though they praised McConnell afterwards.

Despite the ill-feelings from the past, John Feal thanked McConnell after the bill passed. “He kept his word to me,” Feal said. “Everything he said, he did.”

Feal singled out the only two opponents, and mocked their overwhelming loss.

“As for Rand Paul and Mike Lee — told you so. We whipped your ass. 97 to 2. When does the Senate ever get that?”

The question that plagued all of the bill’s supporters was why it took so long.

“This should never have been a fight, it should never have taken this long to pass this bill and make it permanent. It should never have been a question,” said Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), the lead sponsor in the Senate.

Asked about why, Stewart didn’t really have an answer to the question, either.

“I wish it could have been answered 15 years ago,” he said shortly before the vote. “It would have saved an awful lot of time and energy and effort and heartache, especially those who are suffering and sick and dying who had to come down.”

The former host of “The Daily Show” has become one of the responders most eloquent advocates, and grew close to many, especially Pfeifer. He was it wasn’t so much joy that he would be feeling, but something closer to relief and admiration for what the responders did, then and now.

“We’ll spend some time today thinking about the friends that we lost, who gave their last moments, really, to come down to Washington fighting for their brothers and sisters that they felt should get what they deserved, and have that burden eased on them,” Stewart said.

It reminded him of why those people were so valued in the first place.

“In that moment of chaos and destruction, there was a group of men and women that ran towards it, and they rebuilt that foundation, by hand, literally bucket to bucket, for months,”” he said. “They responded in seconds and they didn’t leave for years. Unfortunately, they continue to pay a price for that heroism and sacrifice. But these are the types of men and women that we have to stand up for, who stand up for us.”

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) summed up a sense of release and relief that many of the survivors and relatives of the dead felt.

“Righteousness sometimes, sometimes, in this mangled town, sometimes prevails,” Schumer said. “And thank God: today it did.”