Sept. 11 first responders and state pols are pressing Gov. Cuomo to sign a bill granting better pension benefits to public employees disabled following Ground Zero rescue and recovery work.

A bill that passed the Legislature in June expands the World Trade Center Disability Law to include nonuniformed responders.

“We have a moral obligation to do this,” state Senate sponsor Jim Gaughran (D-Suffolk) told The Post, arguing that uniformed responders, such as cops and firefighters, are covered, but others, such as transit workers and civil engineers, are left out.

“They all breathed the same toxic air and touched the same toxic stuff,” Gaughran said.

In all, 610 people with injuries or illnesses directly related to 9/11 cleanup have already filed an application for the benefits, and the cost is estimated at $320,000 per person.

The new applicants would be eligible for disability pension benefits amounting to 75 percent of their final average salary.

“I haven’t seen [the bill] yet, but as soon as I review it, we’ll have an answer,” Cuomo said in Manhattan on Monday.