Colorado

Care and Compensation for Rocky Flats, Uranium & DOE Workers

Former Rocky Flats and Uranium Workers in Colorado

Thousands of former Rocky Flats and Uranium workers living in Colorado suffer from illnesses due to their workplace exposure to radioactive and toxic substances.

Nuclear Care Partners delivers customized, no-cost, in-home health care to former Department of Energy and Atomic Workers impacted by workplace exposure, so they can live healthier, more independent lives at home. We integrate expert clinical care, innovative health programs, and relentless benefits advocacy all under one roof, empowering atomic heroes to access and maximize their care and compensation benefits under the EEOICPA program.

Colorado Branch Office

We host a variety of educational and social events.

Meet other former workers, explore helpful resources and get answers to your EEOICPA questions.

Fall Senior Resource Fair

Connect With Your Local Benefits Specialists

We can help you determine your EEOICPA and RECA benefits eligibility and connect you with resources to help you access and maximize your compensation and medical benefits.

Jessica Beal

Local Benefits Specialist

Locations

For over a decade, we’ve helped former atomic workers, including former Grand Junction Operations Office and Rocky Flats Plant workers, get connected with and maximize their EEOICPA benefits and receive the quality care services they deserve. We know the EEOICPA inside and out and can help you wherever you’re at in your journey with your benefits!

More than 600,000 former atomic workers across the United States may qualify for up to $400,000 in financial compensation, plus no cost medical benefits for life through the Department of Labor’s EEOICPA.

Grand Junction Operations Office

In March of 1943, the US Army Corps of Engineers leased space in Grand Junction, CO to enable the construction of a uranium refinery and local recovery sites for the operations of the Manhattan Project. In August of 1943, the land was purchased and the site became the U.S. Department of Energy’s Grand Junction Projects Office, later becoming the Grand Junction Operations Office in the ’50s. Local vanadium mill tailings were sent to the GJOO location where they were refined into uranium oxide for nuclear weapons during the Cold War. Employees of the GJOO were potentially exposed through direct radiation and inhalation during the site’s operations.

Rocky Flats Plant

Golden, CO 1952-1983

Rocky Flats Plant was built by the Atomic Energy Commission for the process of purifying and recycling plutonium to create detonators in nuclear weapons and bombs. Workplace accidents included spills, fires, and leaking storage containers. Over 8000 chemicals were used for various projects at the worksite, causing exposure through inhalation of contaminated air, soil, and water.

Your Community. Your Care.

Let us help you get the most from your EEOICPA benefits and home health services. Speak with your local benefits specialist today.
Industry-leading, next-level health care

With Nuclear Care Partners, live with greater comfort, dignity, and independence.