Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XXXI— - WORLD TRADE CENTER HEALTH PROGRAM › Part Part B— - Program of Monitoring, Initial Health Evaluations, and Treatment › Subpart subpart 3— - payor provisions › § 300mm–41
The World Trade Center (WTC) Program must pay for health monitoring, treatment, and initial health checks from the WTC Program funds created under sections 300mm–61, 300mm–62, 300mm–63, and 300mm–64, unless other rules below apply. If a WTC-related condition is work-related and a workers’ compensation law, a federal, state, or local plan, or an employer’s work-injury plan will pay for the care, the WTC Program’s payment will be reduced or reclaimed to the extent those other plans pay. If a person has public or private health insurance (including Medicare, Medicaid, or CHIP) for a non-work-related WTC condition, rules like those in section 1862(b) of the Social Security Act apply to that health plan, and any copays, deductibles, or coinsurance that the health plan does not pay can be covered by the WTC Program when the Program covers those services. The WTC Program does not have to try to get paid by a health plan with which it has no payment contract. No WTC payments may be made for any month starting in July 2014 for a person who is an “applicable individual” (per section 5000A) without the applicable exemption and who does not have minimum essential coverage. New York City must sign a contract with the WTC Program Administrator and pay, for each calendar quarter in fiscal year 2016 through fiscal year 2090, an amount equal to 10 percent of the Program’s expenditures for that quarter (with certain fund exclusions). Those payments cannot come from Federal money, sums paid before January 2, 2011, or from judgments/settlements tied to the September 11, 2001 attacks. Payments are due by the last day of the second calendar quarter after the quarter billed. Late payments earn interest based on New York City municipal bond yields plus 1 percentage point and can be recovered by the United States. WTC-related health condition treated as work-related: one, a diagnosis in an enrolled WTC responder or a certified-eligible WTC survivor who worked in rescue, recovery, or cleanup; or two, a condition for which a workers’ compensation or employer work-injury claim was filed and approved.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 300mm–41
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73