The health care program for 9/11 first responders ends at midnight Wednesday, but supporters expect to make it permanent long before it runs out of money sometime next year.
Congress recessed Wednesday without reauthorizing the James Zadroga Health and Compensation Act, which covers medical care for those who became sick after working at the World Trade Center following the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.
Former “Daily Show” host Jon Stewart has made the program — named for a New York cop who died of a respiratory disease after he worked for almost a full month at Ground Zero — a public cause, personally lobbying lawmakers to act before its Oct. 1 “sunset” date.
RELATED: Jon Stewart to Congress: Don’t forget 9/11 first responders
“We never intended for this important legislation to expire so quickly, but, once again, Washington politics got in the way,” Reps. Carolyn Maloney, Jerrold Nadler and Peter King of New York wrote in an op-ed Wednesday in the political newspaper The Hill.








