Sharing a link to the Times article on Twitter, Rep. Frank Pallone Jr. (D-N.J.), the committee’s chairman, said, “This is exactly why we need to ban asbestos and why my committee is holding a hearing today on legislation that would fully ban this toxic material.”

During the committee hearing, Pallone noted that it has been 40 years since the EPA started its work to ban asbestos under the TSCA, 30 years since the agency finalized its ban, and 28 years since the ban was struck down in court—and yet, “asbestos is still being imported into the United States, it is still being used in this country, and it is still killing about 40,000 Americans every year.”

“Twenty-eight years of frustration, of sickness, and loss,” he said. “We have known the dangers of asbestos for decades. Enough is enough.”

The hearing centered on H.R. 1603 (pdf)—also known as the Alan Reinstein Ban Asbestos Now Act of 2019. Rep. Suzanne Bonamici (D-Ore.), the bill’s sponsor, took to Twitter Wednesday to highlight a testimony from the widow of the legislation’s namesake.

After Alan Reinstein was diagnosed with mesothelioma in 2003, Linda Reinstein and Doug Larkin co-founded the Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization (ADAO). Alan Reinstein and Larkin both died in the years that followed, but Linda Reinstein remains ADAO’s president and CEO.

“I’m honored to have H.R. 1603 named after my husband,” Linda Reinstein told lawmakers Wednesday, “but it’s really for the hundreds of thousands of Alans who have paid a price for this man-made disaster with their lives.”