Droves of Pantex workers will attend meetings Thursday when Labor Department officials will explain a new compensation package for sick workers or their survivors. The meetings will be at 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. Thursday at the Amarillo Civic Center.
Last summer, dozens of Pantex workers told of deaths, cancers and other unexplained illnesses they link to working on atomic weapons.
A federal law, passed in October, will provide $150,000 in lump sum compensation and related medical expenses to weapons workers who became seriously ill from exposure to radiation, beryllium or silica.
Compensation also will be available to some survivors who are eligible for benefits under a section of the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act.
Pete Lopez, a 51-year-old production technician, has worked at Pantex for nearly three decades. He now has chronic beryllium disease, an irreversible and sometimes fatal scarring of the lungs.
"For years, we worked on these weapons so our country could be free. Now, we are slaves to these diseases," said Lopez, who often feels a dull pain across his chest, rashes and pain in his joints.
Lopez wants others to attend the meeting and get blood tests for possible beryllium exposure.
"I would like to encourage everybody who has worked at the plant or who works at the plant to get tested because we're talking about a dust," he said.
Lopez said a Denver housewife also has chronic beryllium disease apparently linked to dust from her husband's clothes, which he wore at Colorado's Rocky Flats weapons plant.
David Pompa, a Pantex production technician who works with a Pantex beryllium support group, praised Pantex contractor BWXT for working to speed up beryllium blood-testing programs for workers.
"BWXT comes in and they do it in three months, four months," he said. "We have met with Larrie Trent from BWXT industrial hygiene. He's been very positive in dealing with certain issues that we have concerning beryllium."
Pompa now hopes the federal government will put a Pantex benefits center here to help workers or others claiming benefits. The closest benefits center now is in Espanola, N.M.
"It will be interesting to see how difficult the government will make it for the employee or the claimant to receive that fund," Pompa said. "Some have colon cancer. Some have experienced kidney cancer, thyroid cancer. There are different types of cancer. It's going to be interesting to see how supportive the government will be."
Pompa said five Pantex workers have been diagnosed with chronic beryllium disease and another 21 have tested sensitive to the lightweight metal used in nuclear weapons components.
"If you're sensitive at this time, that means your body hasn't reacted or is not reacting to the beryllium," he said. "But maybe five years from now or 10 years from now, the body will go into the chronic beryllium disease."
Duane Smith, a diesel mechanic who is a Pantex Metal Trades Council safety officer, urged Pantex workers to attend the meeting.
"All current and former employees should attend and participate," Smith said. "There needs to be extensive support not only from those people but also all of the people in Amarillo to get the center here."
He also praised BWXT for working to clean up beryllium dust inside the Pantex Plant.
"The facility cleanup is almost complete," he said. "The cleanup is just like doing a good dust job at your house."
According to information from the DOE, about 1 to 3 percent of all people exposed to beryllium develop chronic beryllium disease. In machinists closely involved in beryllium operations, the number grows to as many as 10 to 14 percent.
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8 Bush moves to stymie firearm cuts -
smh.com.au - World
July 10, 2001
By Ewen MacAskill in London
A United States delegation to a United Nations conference aimed
at reducing the number of small arms has been ordered to block
key proposals because President George Bush fears inflaming the
gun lobby.
The UN conference, which was to open in New York overnight, is
aimed at reducing the 500-million world stockpile of Kalashnikovs
and other small arms that kill millions of people each year.
The US delegation has been ordered to stymie the proposals
because Mr Bush is sensitive to the National Rifle Association's
insistence that international regulations on small arms may
infringe the constitutional right of Americans to bear arms. The
NRA heads the US gun lobby, and is one of the most powerful
vested interests in the country.
Mr Bush's move will anger European Union countries that support
the attempt by the UN Secretary-General, Mr Kofi Annan, to reel
in the arms trade.
A UN document published for the conference blames small arms for
4 million deaths in 46 conflicts since 1990, about 90 per cent of
them civilians, and 80 per cent of them women and children. ');
document.write(''); document.write('');
document.write(' advertisement
'); } } // --> The UN and the EU are pressing
for:
+ A legally binding UN resolution or treaty on the export of
small arms;
+ Proper regulation of arms sales to stem the flow of illegal
weapons;
+ Incentives to encourage destruction of the arms stockpile;
+ An internationally recognised system for marking weapons so
they can be traced back.
But the conference looks set to end with empty statements of
intent that will not be legally binding.
Failure will add to the deterioration in relations between the US
and Europe, strained since Mr Bush dumped the Kyoto protocol to
reduce carbon emissions and decided to press ahead with the
missile defence program.
US opposition to the small-arms plan took European and other
diplomats by surprise, and earlier optimism about the conference
has vanished.
Mr Annan, announcing the conference, said curbing the
proliferation of small arms was "one of the key challenges in
preventing conflict" in the 21st century.
A diplomat from one EU country preparing for the summit said
there had been a feeling only a few months ago that the world was
ready to deal with the proliferation of small arms.
"It was a noble ambition to try to disarm or destroy these
weapons. I think now it was too much to hope for."
Mr Bush will be able to block the gun control plan with ease
because there is also opposition from African and Latin American
countries. The European diplomat said some African countries were
suspicious because the impetus was coming from Europe, and they
saw a smack of imperialism about it, and some Latin American
countries were hesitant because of their internal security
problems.
Mr Ed Cairns, a policy adviser with Oxfam, one of the bodies
consulted on the proposals, said: "There are only a few days left
to prevent this from being a stunning disappointment which won't
stop a single person being killed.''
The Guardian
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9 Road across Rocky Flats studied
Rocky Mountain News: Local
Highway chief shocks local officials by saying he's still
considering Broomfield-Golden link
By Berny Morson, News Staff Writer
BROOMFIELD -- Jaws dropped among local elected officials Monday
as the state highway chief said he is still considering a highway
across Rocky Flats.
State transportation director Tom Norton said the defunct nuclear
weapons plant is among options he'll study for a road linking
Broomfield to Golden even though the area is being considered for
a wildlife refuge.
With support for a wildlife refuge coming from the state's top
elected officials in both parties, the local leaders had assumed
a road across the plant was dead.
"What on earth was that all about?" asked Boulder County
Commissioner Paul Danish shortly after the meeting with Norton.
Broomfield City Councilman Hank Stovall predicted a "firestorm of
criticism" if the highway department recommends a road through
Rocky Flats.
But Norton said all alternatives should be on the table in
deciding how to connect the end of the soon-to-be-built Northwest
Parkway in Broomfield with U.S. 6 in Golden.
"When you predetermine something, you're not doing a study,"
Norton said. Excluding a Rocky Flats alternative from such a
study will raise questions among federal agencies, Norton warned.
"Every time we discard something, we have a major battle with the
feds, because someone says, 'Why didn't you consider this?' "
Norton said.
Norton said he will also consider other alternatives, including
one being put forth by Arvada. That route would follow Indiana
Avenue along the eastern edge of Rocky Flats, then veer to the
west near Leyden to join Colorado 93.
Norton said he wants to do the study as soon as possible, but set
no date. A panel of local leaders will decide which part of Rocky
Flats that the road should be assumed to cross for purposes of
the study, Norton said. Soil on some parts of the 6,000-acre site
is highly contaminated from years of weapons production.
"It's an issue of how much Rocky Flats soil you want to toss up
into the air," said Boulder Mayor Will Toor.
A bill to make Rocky Flats a wildlife refuge is sponsored in the
Senate by Sen. Wayne Allard, a Republican, and in the House by
U.S. Rep. Mark Udall, a Democrat. The bill would bar roads within
the refuge.
Allard spokesman Sean Conway noted that the bill was drafted only
after two years of discussions among local elected leaders.
Conway said Allard is unlikely to change the bill without the
consent of those same leaders.
Udall said he was "very disappointed" by Norton's comments. He
said numerous transportation studies have been conducted in the
area over the years.
"A wildlife refuge and a road are mutually exclusive," Udall
said.
July 10, 2001
2001 © The E.W. Scripps Co.
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10 Nuclear veterans to be DNA tested
news.com.au
10 July 2001
From AP
RETIRED New Zealand servicemen exposed to the effects of British
nuclear tests in the 1950s will have their DNA examined for
possible damage caused by the blasts, a veterans' group said
today.
The study will check the DNA of 50 test veterans for possible
links between the bomb blasts and the poor health suffered by
many of the now-retired servicemen, Nuclear Test Veterans'
Association chairman Roy Sefton said.
The veterans worked on the tests or took part in exercises to
determine the effect of fallout on humans or equipment.
"This is a hands-on, clinical, definitive approach, completely
individualised," Sefton said. He added he had not expected to see
such extensive testing "in my lifetime."
Sefton said the project's importance was that the results would
be specific to the individual.
Broader, statistics-based New Zealand studies have been
inconclusive about the health effects of the nuclear tests, which
were carried out by Britain on Australian territory.
Sefton said though the study could add weight to veterans'
demands for compensation from the British government, that was
not its purpose.
The aim was to gain more definitive information about possible
genetic damage to test veterans generally, he said.
The research, led by Dr Al Rowlands of Massey University's
Institute of Molecular Biosciences, will use 100 subjects; 50
test veterans and 50 people who will form a control group.
The subjects will provide blood and saliva samples.
src="http://www.news.com.au/images/headlines_icon.gif" width="24"
Australian IT
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