Section 1. Short title
This Act may be cited as the Vieques Recovery and Redevelopment Act.
Section 2. Findings
The Congress finds the following:
(1) Vieques is an island municipality of Puerto Rico, measuring approximately 21 miles long by 4 miles wide, and located approximately 8 miles east of the main island of Puerto Rico.
(2) Prior to Hurricane Maria, residents of Vieques were served by an urgent medical care facility, the Susana Centeno Family Health Center, and residents had to travel off-island to obtain medical services, including most types of emergency care because the facility did not have the basic use of x-ray machines, CT machines, EKG machines, ultrasounds, or PET scans.
(3) The predominant means of transporting passengers and goods between Vieques and the main island of Puerto Rico is by ferry boat service, and over the years, the efficiency of this service has frequently been disrupted, unreliable, and difficult for cancer patients to endure to receive treatment. Each trip to Ceiba, Puerto Rico, for the cancer patient is an additional out-of-pocket expense ranging from $120 to $200.
(4) The United States Military maintained a presence on the eastern and western portions of Vieques for close to 60 years, and used parts of the island as a training range during those years, dropping over 80 million tons of ordnance and other weaponry available to the United States military since World War II.
(5) The unintended, unknown, and unavoidable consequences of these exercises were to expose Americans living on the islands to the residue of that weaponry which includes heavy metals and many other chemicals now known to harm human health.
(6) According to Government and independent documentation, the island of Vieques has high levels of heavy metals and has been exposed to chemical weapons and toxic chemicals. Since the military activity in Vieques, island residents have suffered from the health impacts from long-term exposure to environmental contamination as a result of 62 years of military operations, and have experienced higher rates of certain diseases among residents, including cancer, cirrhosis, hypertension, diabetes, heavy metal diseases, along with many unnamed and uncategorized illnesses. These toxic residues have caused the American residents of Vieques to develop illnesses due to ongoing exposure.
(7) In 2017, Vieques was hit by Hurricane Maria, an unusually destructive storm that devastated Puerto Rico and intensified the existing humanitarian crisis on the island by destroying existing medical facilities.
(8) The medical systems in place prior to Hurricane Maria were unable to properly handle the health crisis that existed due to the toxic residue left on the island by the military’s activities.
(9) After Maria, the medical facility was closed due to damage and continues to be unable to perform even the few basic services that it did provide. Vieques needs a medical facility that can treat and address the critical and urgent need to get lifesaving medical services to its residents. Due to legal restrictions, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (in this Act referred to as FEMA) is unable to provide a hospital where its capabilities exceed the abilities of the facility that existed prior to Maria; therefore, Vieques needs assistance to build a facility to manage the vast health needs of its residents.
(10) Every American has benefitted from the sacrifices of those Americans who have lived and are living on Vieques and it is our intent to acknowledge that sacrifice and to treat those Americans with the same respect and appreciation that other Americans enjoy.
(11) In 2012, the residents of Vieques were denied the ability to address their needs in Court due to sovereign immunity, Sanchez v. United States, No. 3:09-cv–01260–DRD (D.P.R.). However, the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit referred the issue to Congress and urged it to address the humanitarian crisis. This bill attempts to satisfy that request such that Americans living on Vieques have a remedy for the suffering they have endured.
(a) In general
An individual claimant who has resided on the island of Vieques, Puerto Rico, for not less than 5 years before the date of enactment of this Act and files a claim for compensation under this section with the Special Master, appointed pursuant to subsection (c), shall be awarded monetary compensation as described in subsection (b) if—
(1) the Special Master determines that the claimant is or was a resident or an immediate heir (as determined by the laws of Puerto Rico) of a deceased claimant on the island of Vieques, Puerto Rico, during or after the United States Government used the island of Vieques, Puerto Rico, for military readiness;
(2) the claimant previously filed a lawsuit or an administrative claim, or files a claim not later than 120 days after the date of the enactment of this Act against the United States Government for personal injury, including illness or death arising from use by the United States Government of the island of Vieques for military readiness; and
(3) the claimant submits to the Special Master written medical documentation that indicates that it is more likely than not the claimant contracted a chronic, life-threatening, or physical disease or illness limited to cancer, hypertension, cirrhosis, kidney disease, diabetes, or a heavy metal poisoning as a result the United States Government used the island of Vieques, Puerto Rico, for military readiness.
(1) In general
A claimant who meets the requirements of subsection (a) shall be awarded compensation as follows:
(A) $50,000 for 1 disease described in subsection (a)(3).
(B) $80,000 for 2 diseases described in subsection (a)(3).
(C) $110,000 for 3 or more diseases described in subsection (a)(3).
(2) Increase in award
In the case that an individual receiving an award under paragraph (1) of this subsection contracts another disease under subsection (a)(3) and files a new claim with the Special Master for an additional award not later than 10 years after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Special Master may award the individual an amount that is equal to the difference between—
(A) the amount that the individual would have been eligible to receive had the disease been contracted before the individual filed an initial claim under subsection (a); and
(B) the amount received by the individual pursuant to paragraph (1).
(3) Deceased claimants
In the case of an individual who dies before making a claim under this section or a claimant who dies before receiving an award under this section, any immediate heir to the individual or claimant, as determined by the laws of Puerto Rico, shall be eligible for one of the following awards:
(A) Compensation in accordance with paragraph (1), divided among any such heir.
(B) Compensation based on the age of the deceased if the claimant shows that it is more likely than not that the United States Military activity caused the death of the individual as follows:
(i) In the case of an individual or claimant who dies before attaining 20 years of age, $110,000, divided among any such heir.
(ii) In the case of an individual or claimant who dies before attaining 40 years of age, $80,000, divided among any such heir.
(iii) In the case of an individual or claimant who dies before attaining 60 years of age, $50,000, divided among any such heir.
(1) In general
The Attorney General shall appoint a Special Master not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act to consider claims by individuals and the municipality.
(2) Qualifications
The Attorney General shall consider the following in choosing the Special Master:
(A) The individual’s experience in the processing of victims’ claims in relation to foreign or domestic governments.
(B) The individual’s balance of experience in representing the interests of the United States and individual claimants.
(C) The individual’s experience in matters of national security.
(D) The individual’s demonstrated abilities in investigation and fact findings in complex factual matters.
(E) Any experience the individual has had advising the United States Government.
(e) Action on claims
The Special Master shall make a determination on any claim filed under the procedures established under this section not later than 150 days after the date on which the claim is filed.
(f) Payment in full settlement of claims by individuals and the Municipality of Vieques against the United States
The acceptance by an individual or the Municipality of Vieques of a payment of an award under this section shall—
(1) be final and conclusive;
(2) be deemed to be in full satisfaction of all claims under chapter 171 of title 28, United States Code; and
(3) constitute a complete release by the individual or municipality of such claim against the United States and against any employee of the United States acting in the scope of employment who is involved in the matter giving rise to the claim.
(g) Certification of treatment of payments under other laws
Amounts paid to an individual under this section—
(1) shall be treated for purposes of the laws of the United States as damages for human suffering; and
(2) may not be included as income or resources for purposes of determining eligibility to receive benefits described in section 3803(c)(2)(C) of title 31, United States Code, or the amount of such benefits.
(h) Limitation on claims
A claim to which this section applies shall be barred unless the claim is filed within 15 years after the date of the enactment of this Act.
(i) Attorney’s fees
Notwithstanding any contract, a representative of an individual may not receive, for services rendered in connection with a claim of the individual under this Act, more than 20 percent of a payment made under this Act.