Politics | 9/11 health bill Gillibrand, Schumer: We'll Pass New 9/11 Health Bill Revamped version said to pay for itself By Matt Cantor Posted Dec 20, 2010 11:11 AM CST Copied Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., with Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., speak about a bill to assist 9/11 first responders at a news conference Sunday, Dec. 19, 2010. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) Smile, Jon Stewart: the fight for a 9/11 health care bill may not be over, despite Republicans having blocked it weeks ago. New York’s senators have edited their bill to provide care for first responders, and they hold that the new version will "pay for itself," Reuters reports. “We believe we are on a path to victory by the end of this week,” said Sen. Charles Schumer. Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand say the new measure would initially cost $6.2 billion, and would eventually produce a $57 million surplus over 10 years; the blocked plan cost $7.4 billion. Schumer said that the House should continue its session until the bill is passed, Politico notes. But would the White House back it? Sen. Dick Durbin’s not sure: “I can’t tell you where the White House stands,” he told Fox News yesterday. "I hope they support it." The White House assures Politico it does in fact support the bill. Read These Next Keith Urban interview ends after Nicole Kidman question. Sean Combs jury reaches a decision on all charges. Bryan Kohberger has admitted his guilt. Red Sox player is just the 6th player to register rare HR combo. Report an error