According to the Vermont US Navy Veterans Mesothelioma Advocate, We are appealing to a Navy Veteran with mesothelioma anywhere in Vermont to think nationally
Share This Article If you are a Navy Veteran in Florida and you have lung cancer-please call attorney Erik Karst of Karst von Oiste at 800-714-0303 to discuss compensation-if you had navy asbestos exposure.” Florida US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate
TAMPA, FLORIDA, USA, June 3, 2021 /EINPresswire.com/ The Florida US Navy Veterans Lung Cancer Advocate says, If you are a Navy Veteran in Florida and you have just been diagnosed with lung cancer-please call attorney Erik Karst of the law firm of Karst von Oiste at 800-714-0303 to discuss what might be significant financial compensation-if while in the navy you had heavy to extreme exposure to asbestos on a navy ship, submarine or at a shipyard. A financial compensation settlement for a person like this might exceed $100,000 and it does not involve suing the navy. The typical person we are trying to get identified served in the navy prior to 1982-and it does not matter if they smoked cigarettes or not.
Probe of VA hospital worker deaths finds safety violations
DAVE COLLINS, Associated Press
FacebookTwitterEmail
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) A federal investigation of a hot steam accident that killed two workers at a Veterans Affairs hospital in Connecticut found workplace safety violations and concluded the deaths were preventable, according to a report released Wednesday by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
The workers had just finished repairing a steam pipe in a maintenance building on the West Haven VA campus on Nov. 13 when a fixture broke off the pipe, flooding the work area rapidly with steam, OSHA officials said. The accident happened as workers were refilling the pipe with steam, authorities said.
The workers had just finished repairing a steam pipe in a maintenance building on the West Haven VA campus on Nov. 13 when a fixture broke off the pipe, flooding the work area rapidly with steam. Killed were VA maintenance worker Euel Sims, a Navy Veteran, and Joseph O Donnell.