§ 25. Veterans health screening. 1. As used in this section: a. "Eligible member" means a member of the New York army national guard or the New York air national guard who served in the Persian Gulf War, as defined in 38 USC 101, or in an area designated as a combat zone by the president of the United States during Operation Enduring Freedom or Operation Iraqi Freedom;

Terms Used In N.Y. Veterans' Services Law 25

  • Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
  • department: means the department of veterans' services. See N.Y. Veterans' Services Law 1
  • state commissioner: means the New York state commissioner of veterans' services. See N.Y. Veterans' Services Law 1
  • uniformed services: means the army, navy, marine corps, air force, space force, coast guard, public health commissioned corps, and the national oceanic and atmospheric administration commissioned officer corps of the United States. See N.Y. Veterans' Services Law 1
  • veteran: means a person who served on active duty in the uniformed services of the United States, or in the army national guard, air national guard, or service as a commissioned officer in the public health service, commissioned officer of the national oceanic and atmospheric administration or environmental sciences services administration, cadet at a United States armed forces service academy, and who has been released from such service under other than dishonorable conditions. See N.Y. Veterans' Services Law 1

b. "Veteran" means a person as defined in section one of this article who is a resident of the state;

c. "Military physician" includes a physician who is under contract with the United States department of defense to provide physician services to members of the uniformed services; and

d. "Depleted uranium" means uranium containing less uranium-235 than the naturally occurring distribution of uranium isotopes.

2. On and after February first, two thousand seven, the adjutant general and the state commissioner shall assist any eligible member or veteran who has been experiencing health problems. Such problems may include exposure to toxic materials or harmful physical agents such as depleted uranium. An eligible member or veteran who has been assigned a risk level I, II or III for depleted uranium exposure by his or her branch of service, is referred by a military physician, or has reason to believe that he or she was exposed to toxic materials or harmful physical agents such as depleted uranium during such service, in obtaining federal treatment services. Such treatment shall include, but not be limited to, a best practice health screening test for exposure to depleted uranium using a bioassay procedure involving sensitive methods capable of detecting depleted uranium at low levels and the use of equipment with the capacity to discriminate between different radioisotopes in naturally occurring levels of uranium and the characteristic ratio and marker for depleted uranium. As more scientific reliable tests become available such test shall be included in the treatment protocol. No state funds shall be used to pay for such tests or such other federal treatment services.

3. On or before February first, two thousand seven, the adjutant general shall submit a report to the chair of the senate veterans, homeland security and military affairs committee and the chair of the assembly veterans' affairs committee on the scope and adequacy of training received by members of the New York army national guard and the New York air national guard on detecting whether their service as eligible members is likely to entail, or to have entailed, exposure to toxic materials or harmful physical agents such as depleted uranium. The report shall include an assessment of the feasibility and cost of adding predeployment training concerning potential exposure to depleted uranium and other toxic chemical substances and the precautions recommended under combat and noncombat conditions while in a combat theater or combat zone of operations.