This isn’t “a very complicated subject,” as President Trump called it. And yes, there is reason to get “all bent out of shape” about this, though Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said there is not.

The future of the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund for first responders and other survivors of the 9/11 terrorist attacks lies in the hands of Trump and McConnell. So, let’s set the record straight.

The fund is running out of money. Very soon, those who’ve gotten sick because they ran into the horror, worked on the pile or lived in the area won’t be able to pay their medical bills. Others who become sick won’t be able to file claims as of December 2020. So, once again, police officers, firefighters and others are begging Congress for help.

That included retired NYPD Detective Luis Alvarez, who, just after dragging his gaunt, weary body to Washington to testify, entered hospice care and stopped treatment for his advanced cancer. His cancer was diagnosed as likely to have been caused by the pulverized dust at ground zero that thousands of first responders like him breathed in after 9/11.

It’s horrifying that Alvarez, who died Saturday at the age of 53, had to make his case.

Never forgetting shouldn’t take any more meetings. And it’s not complicated.

Trump and McConnell have the power to stop this ridiculous, demeaning charade. Last week, McConnell met with first responders and apparently promised to call a vote by August. Now he has to deliver. Both the House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate should permanently authorize the compensation fund so that those who are sick and dying don’t have to beg anymore. Don’t wait. Don’t debate. Don’t tell us, “We’ll see what happens,” as Trump recently did.

Put a picture of Luis Alvarez on every Congress member’s desk. Then vote.

Editor’s note: This editorial was updated at 11:35 a.m. Monday, July 1, to reflect the death of 9/11 first responder and retired NYPD Detective Luis Alvarez.