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November 4, 2008    DOL Home > ESA > OWCP > DEEOIC > Special Exposure Cohort Employees (SEC)   

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OWCP Administers disability compensation programs that provide benefits for certain workers or dependants who experience work-related injury or illness.
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Division of Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation (DEEOIC)

Special Exposure Cohort Employees (SEC)

The Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act established a Special Exposure Cohort (SEC) for certain classes of employees. The statutory SEC classes include employees who have been diagnosed with a specified cancer and who:

  • worked at gaseous diffusion plants in Paducah, Kentucky, Portsmouth, Ohio, or Oak Ridge, Tennessee for a total of at least 250 days before February 1, 1992, and were monitored for radiation exposure with dosimetry badges or had jobs with similar exposures to those monitored.
  • worked before January 1, 1974, on Amchitka Island, Alaska and were exposed to radiation related to the Long Shot, Milrow or Cannikin underground nuclear tests.

The Act also authorizes the Secretary of Health and Human Services to add other classes of employees to the SEC. The following additional classes of employees have been added to the SEC. These include employees who worked for a number of work days aggregating at least 250 work days occurring either solely under one employment class or in combination with work days within the parameters established for one or more other classes of employees in the SEC, and:

  • were monitored or should have been monitored for exposure to ionizing radiation while working at Allied Chemical Corporation Plant in Metropolis, Illinois, from January 1, 1959 through December 31, 1976.
  • worked at the Ames Laboratory in one or more of the following facilities/locations: Chemistry Annex 1 (also known as "the old women’s gymnasium" and "Little Ankeny"), Chemistry Annex 2, Chemistry Building (also known as "Gilman Hall"), Research Building, or the Metallurgical Building (also known as "Harley Wilhelm Hall") from January 1, 1942 through December 31, 1954.
  • Sheet metal workers, physical plant maintenance and associated support staff (including all maintenance shop personnel), and supervisory staff who were monitored or should have been monitored for potential internal radiation exposures associated with the maintenance and renovation activities of the thorium production areas in Wilhelm Hall (a.k.a. the Metallurgy Building or “Old” Metallurgy Building) at the Ames Laboratory from January 1, 1955 through December 31, 1970.
  • worked at the Combustion Engineering site in Windsor, Connecticut from January 1, 1965 through December 31, 1972.
  • were monitored or should have been monitored for exposure to thorium radionuclides while working at the Dow Chemical Company in Madison, Illinois from January 1, 1957 through December 31, 1960.
  • were monitored or should have been monitored for exposure to ionizing radiation while working at the General Atomics facility in La Jolla, California, at the following locations: Science Laboratories A,B, and C (Building 2); Experimental Building (Building 9); Maintenance (Building 10); Service Building (Building 11); Buildings 21 and 22: Hot Cell Facility (Building 23; Waste Yard (Buildings 25 and 26); Experimental Area (Building 27 and 27-1); LINAC Complex (Building 30); HTGR-TCF (Building 31); Fusion Building (Building 33); Fusion Doublet III (Building 34: SV-A (Building 37); SV-B (Building 39); and SV-D (no building number) from January 1, 1960 through December 31, 1969.
  • were monitored or should have been monitored for internal radiological exposures while working at the Hanford Engineer Works in: the 300 Area fuel fabrication and research facilities from October 1, 1943 through August 31, 1946; the 200 Area plutonium separation facilities from November 1, 1944 through August 31, 1946; or the 100 B, D and F reactor areas from September 1, 1944 through August 31, 1946.
  • worked from September 1, 1946 though December 31, 1961 in the 300 area; or January 1, 1949 through December 31, 1968 in the 200 areas (East and West) at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in Richland, Washington.
  • were monitored or should have been monitored while working at the Harshaw Harvard-Denison Plant located at 1000 Harvard Avenue in Cleveland, Ohio from August 14, 1942 through November 30, 1949.
  • worked at the Horizons, Inc. facility from January 1, 1952 through December 31, 1956.
  • worked at the Iowa Ordnance Plant (Iowa Army Ammunition Plant), Line 1, during the period from March 1949 through 1974.
  • worked as radiographers from May 1948 to March 1949 in support of Line 1 operations at the Iowa Army Ammunition Plant.
  • worked at the Kellex/Pierpont facility in Jersey City, New Jersey from January 1, 1943 through December 31, 1953.
  • were monitored for radiation exposure while working at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory from January 1, 1950 through December 31, 1973.
  • worked at the Linde Ceramics Plant from October 1, 1942 through October 31, 1947.
  • were monitored or should have been monitored for exposure to ionizing radiation associated with radioactive lanthanum (RaLa) operations at Technical Area 10 (Bayo Canyon Site), Technical Area 35 (Ten Site), and Buildings H, Sigma, and U (located within Technical Area 1) at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) from September 1, 1944 through July 18, 1963.
  • were monitored or should have been monitored for radiological exposures while working in operational Technical Areas with a history of radioactive material use at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) from March 15, 1943 through December 31, 1975.
  • worked at the Uranium Division of the Mallinckrodt Chemical Works, Destrehan Street Facility during the period from 1942 through 1948.
  • worked in the Uranium Division of the Destrehan Street Facility of Mallinckrodt Chemical Works from 1949 to 1957.
  • were monitored or should have been monitored for exposure to ionizing radiation while working at Monsanto Chemical Company Units I, III, or IV in Dayton, Ohio, from January 1, 1943 through December 31, 1949.
  • worked in any areas at the Mound Plant site from October 1, 1949 through February 28, 1959.
  • worked at the Nevada Test Site from January 27, 1951 through December 31, 1962.
  • worked at the Nuclear Materials and Equipment Corporation (NUMEC) facility in Parks Township, Pennsylvania, from June 1, 1960 through December 31, 1980.
  • were monitored or should have been monitored for exposure to ionizing radiation while working at the NUMEC in Apollo, Pennsylvania from January 1, 1957 through December 31, 1983.
  • were monitored or should have been monitored while working at the Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear Studies Cancer Research Hospital from May 15, 1950 through December 31, 1963.
  • worked at the Pacific Proving Grounds (PPG) from 1946 through 1962.
  • were monitored or should have been monitored for neutron exposures while working at the Rocky Flats Plant in Golden, Colorado, from April 1, 1952 through December 31, 1958 and/or January 1, 1959 through December 31, 1966.
  • worked in the Pupin, Schemerhorn, Havenmeyer, Nash, or Prentiss buildings at SAM (Special Alloyed or Substitute Alloy Materials) Laboratories of Columbia University in New York City, New York, from August 13, 1942 through December 31, 1947.
  • were monitored or should have been monitored while working at the S-50 Oak Ridge Thermal Diffusion Plant during the period from July 9, 1944 through December 31, 1951.
  • were at Spencer Chemical Company/Jayhawk Works near Pittsburg, Kansas, from January 1, 1956 through December 31, 1961.
  • were monitored or should have been monitored for potential exposure to thorium while working in any of the 100 series buildings or Buildings 220, 230, 233, 234, 301 or 310 at the W.R. Grace site at Erwin, Tennessee from January 1, 1958 through December 31, 1970.
  • worked at the Y-12 Plant and were monitored or should have been monitored for:
  • thorium exposures while working in Building 9201-3, 9202, 9204-1, 9204-3, 9206, or 9212 at Y-12 from January 1948 through December 1957; or
  • radionuclide exposures associated with cyclotron operations in Building 9201-2 at Y-12 from January 1948 through December 1957.
  • worked in uranium enrichment operations or other radiological activities at the Y-12 facility in Oak Ridge, Tennessee from March 1943 through December 1947.

These employees, or their survivors, are eligible for benefits if, after beginning covered employment, they contracted one or more of the following specified cancers:

  • bone cancer;
  • renal cancer;
  • leukemia (other than chronic lymphocytic leukemia) provided that the onset of the disease was at least two years after first exposure;
  • lung cancer (other than in situ lung cancer that is discovered during or after a post-mortem exam); or
  • one of the following diseases, provided onset was at least five years after the first exposure:
  • multiple myeloma;
  • lymphomas (other than Hodgkin’s disease); or
  • Primary cancer of the:
  • thyroid
  • male or female breast
  • esophagus
  • stomach
  • pharynx
  • small intestine
  • pancreas
  • bile ducts
  • gall bladder
  • salivary gland
  • urinary bladder
  • brain
  • colon
  • ovary
  • liver (except if cirrhosis or hepatitis B is indicated)

 

 



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