Vietnam Veterans Lobby for Compensation Ca. 1984Vietnam Veterans Lobby for Compensation Ca. 1984
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Downloadable Video, 1984
Current format, Downloadable Video, 1984, , All copies in use.
Downloadable Video, 1984
Current format, Downloadable Video, 1984, , All copies in use. Offered in 0 more formats
In 1979, Vietnam veterans who had been exposed to Agent Orange began lobbying Congress to pass legislation that would grant them compensation for their injuries, which they claimed were the fault of the U.S. government, who had ordered the use of the potent herbicide to destroy foliage in the jungles of Vietnam. Five years later, the House of Representatives began debating a bill sponsored by Tom Daschle (D, SD). In October 1984, Congress passed the Veterans' Dioxin and Radiation Exposure Compensation Standards Act (Public Law 98-542), which enabled some veterans who had developed soft-tissue sarcoma as a result of exposure to Agent Orange to receive financial assistance.
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