http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/05/nyregion/05cnd-health.html?hp&ex=1157515200&en=8d2171aa38effb04&ei=5094&partner=homepage<snip>
Dr. John Howard, who was appointed by the Bush administration in February to coordinate the federal government’s 9/11 health efforts, readily admits that costly delays and missed opportunities may have shattered responders’ trust in the government.
“I can understand the frustration and the anger, and most importantly, the concern about their future,” Dr. Howard said in an interview.
“I can’t blame them for thinking, ‘Where were you when we needed you?’ ” A review of recent federal initiatives reveals a pattern of the government’s not fully delivering what was promised. Dr. Howard’s office, for example, has no full-time staff members assigned to 9/11 health issues. For the first time, money for treatment — $52 million — has been included in the federal budget, but even the officials responsible concede that it is not nearly enough. And only last week did New York City release clinical guidelines that could help doctors properly diagnose 9/11-related illnesses.
“They seem to be running from the people who are sick, not standing with them and helping them,” said Representative Carolyn B. Maloney, a Democrat who represents parts of Manhattan and Queens and has been critical of federal efforts at ground zero. “And that is just plain wrong.”