GEORGIA STATUTES AND CODES
               		§ 51-14-1 - Legislative findings and purpose
               		
               		
               	 	
               	 	               	 	
               	 	
               	 	
               	 		
O.C.G.A.    51-14-1   (2010)
   51-14-1.    Legislative findings and purpose 
      (a)  The General Assembly finds that:
      (1)  Asbestos is a mineral that was widely used prior to the 1980's for insulation, fire-proofing, and other purposes;
      (2)  Many  American workers and others were exposed to asbestos, especially during  and after World War II, at shipyards and other sites, prior to the  advent of regulation by the United States Occupational Safety and Health  Administration in the early 1970's;
      (3)  Exposure  to asbestos is associated with various types of cancer, including  mesothelioma, as well as nonmalignant conditions such as asbestosis and  diffuse pleural thickening;
      (4)  Diseases caused by asbestos exposure often have long latency periods;
      (5)  Silica  is a naturally occurring mineral and is the second most common  constituent of the earth's crust. Crystalline silica in the form of  quartz is present in sand, gravel, soil, and rocks;
      (6)  Silica  related illnesses, including silicosis, can develop from the inhalation  of respirable silica dust. Silicosis was widely recognized as an  occupational disease many years ago;
      (7)  Concerns  about statutes of limitations may prompt unimpaired asbestos and silica  claimants to bring lawsuits to protect their ability to recover for  their potentially progressive occupational disease;
      (8)  It  is proper for the General Assembly to support and protect the Georgia  courts from the massive litigation expense and the crowding of trial  dockets caused by asbestos and silica litigation;
      (9)  The  cost of compensating exposed individuals who are not sick and legal  costs spent on their claims jeopardize recoveries both now and in the  future by people with cancer or other serious asbestos related injuries;  threaten the savings, retirement benefits, and jobs of current and  retired employees of the defendants; and adversely affect the  communities in which the defendants operate;
      (10)  In  February, 2003, the American Bar Association Commission on Asbestos  Litigation, with input from ten of the nation's most prominent  physicians in the area of pulmonary function, adopted the "ABA Standard  For Non-Malignant Asbestos-Related Disease Claims," which sets forth  medical criteria for demonstrating asbestos related impairment that  provide the underlying framework for the criteria set forth in this  chapter and in similar legislation adopted in several other states;
      (11)  Ohio,  Florida, Texas, Kansas, South Carolina, and Tennessee have enacted  legislation similar to this chapter that, among other things, sets  medical criteria governing asbestos or silica claims or both, tolls  statutes of limitations, and requires persons alleging nonmalignant  disease claims to demonstrate physical impairment as a prerequisite to  filing or maintaining such claims; and
      (12)  Sound  public policy requires deferring the claims of persons exposed to  asbestos or silica and who are not presently impaired in order to give  priority to those cases that involve claims of actual and current  conditions of impairment; preserve compensation for people with cancer  and other serious injuries; and safeguard the jobs, benefits, and  savings of workers.
(b)  It is the purpose of this chapter to:
      (1)  Give priority to claimants who can demonstrate actual physical harm or illness caused by asbestos or silica;
      (2)  Preserve the rights of claimants to pursue asbestos or silica claims if an exposed person becomes sick in the future;
      (3)  Enhance the ability of the courts to supervise and control asbestos litigation and silica litigation; and
      (4)  Conserve  resources to allow compensation of claimants who have cancer and others  who are impaired as a result of exposure to asbestos or silica while  securing the right to similar compensation for those who may suffer  physical impairment in the future.
               	 	
               	 	
               	 	               	 	
               	 	               	 	               	  
               	 
               	 
               	 
               	 
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