USS Ted Stevens (DDG-128), an Arleigh Burke class Flight III guided missile destroyer, is under construction at Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula, Mississippi, and will join the Atlantic Fleet upon commissioning. Ted Stevens is powered by four General Electric LM2500 gas turbines and is the lead Flight III hull built at Ingalls, incorporating the SPY-6(V)1 Air and Missile Defense Radar. Ted Stevens incorporated asbestos-containing hull insulation, pipe lagging, gaskets, and construction materials consistent with current naval construction specifications.

USS Ted Stevens Hull Construction and Systems Asbestos

Ted Stevens’s hull construction and onboard systems incorporated asbestos in multiple areas:

  • Hull and structural insulation — Ted Stevens’s crew berthing, combat information center, engineering spaces, and working spaces were constructed with insulation materials consistent with current naval construction specifications, which according to publicly filed litigation records included asbestos-containing materials
  • Auxiliary steam and piping systems — Ted Stevens’s auxiliary steam systems and associated pipe lagging incorporated asbestos-containing insulation materials consistent with current construction specifications
  • Gaskets and packing materials — Ted Stevens’s engineering spaces incorporated gaskets and valve packing consistent with current construction specifications, which according to publicly filed litigation records included asbestos-containing materials
  • Fire-protective and thermal barriers — Ted Stevens’s combat spaces and engineering compartments incorporated fire-protective insulation materials consistent with current naval construction standards

VA Claims for USS Ted Stevens Veterans

VA presumptive service connection under 38 CFR § 3.309(d) covers asbestos exposure from Navy destroyer service. Gas Turbine System Technicians, Boatswain’s Mates, Fire Controlmen, Operations Specialists, and crew members who served aboard USS Ted Stevens and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestosis, or asbestos-related lung cancer may qualify for VA disability benefits.

Navy Ratings Most Exposed to Asbestos Aboard Ted Stevens

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and the public asbestos litigation record document that the following Navy ratings worked routinely in spaces where ACM was installed, maintained, ripped out, and replaced:

VA Presumptive Benefits — No Filing Deadline

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs recognizes mesothelioma, asbestos-related lung cancer, asbestosis, and pleural disease as conditions presumed to be service-connected for Navy veterans with documented asbestos exposure under 38 CFR § 3.309(d). No statute of limitations applies to VA disability compensation claims.

Available benefits may include monthly disability compensation, Dependency & Indemnity Compensation (DIC) for surviving spouses, priority VA healthcare enrollment, and Special Monthly Compensation for severe cases. Parallel claims against the asbestos bankruptcy trust funds established by the manufacturers of these products do not reduce VA compensation.

How to file a VA disability claim: VA claims are filed directly with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs — not with a law firm. Start at VA.gov › Hazardous Materials Exposure, call 1‑800‑827‑1000, or get free help filing from a Veterans Service Organization: DAV, VFW, or American Legion.

VA Claims Guide on This Site › Compare: VA vs. Civil Lawsuit

Source notes: equipment-manifest entries (where shown) are sourced from public-record BUSHIPS (Bureau of Ships) documentation, NARA archives, and the public asbestos litigation record. Manufacturer attributions link to documented asbestos-product histories on AsbestosIndex.com where available. Nothing on this page constitutes medical or legal advice.