UK: It has been claimed that victims of asbestos poisoning in the west of England have been 'betrayed' after the government quietly dumped plans for a compensation fund. According to the Union of Construction, Allied Trades and Technicians (UCATT), a proposal for a fund of up to Euro456m that was intended to help former workers who are unable to trace the employers that exposed them to asbestos dust has been dropped. UCATT also claims that a separate plan for a national research centre for mesothelioma and other asbestos-related diseases has also been abandoned. Both proposals were put forward in a consultation that finished in May 2010, but ministers have said nothing since.
Jim Kennedy, the political officer of the UCATT union of construction workers, said, "The Government is betraying people with mesothelioma. There is a deafening silence about this. Ministers won't formally say that this scheme has bitten the dust but we are confident it has." A Department for Work and Pensions spokeswoman has denied that the 'fund of last resort' had been scrapped.
Cancer-causing asbestos fibres were used extensively in the past in building and industrial insulation. The industry is still subject to frequent claims from workers with conditions that they claim to be caused by the material.