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- <text id=92TT1008>
- <title>
- May 11, 1992: Happily Near A Nuclear Trash Heap
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Endangered Earth Updates
- May 11, 1992 L.A.:"Can We All Get Along?"
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 53
- Living Happily Near A Nuclear Trash Heap
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The frogs and trees are radioactive, you can't catch the fish or
- wade in the streams, and a doctor warns of cancer risks, but that
- doesn't ruffle the people of Oak Ridge
- </p>
- <p>By Dick Thompson/Oak Ridge
- </p>
- <p> Dr. William Reid was new to Oak Ridge, Tenn., and
- disturbed by what he was seeing. Soon after he joined the staff
- of Methodist Medical Center in early 1991, he was treating four
- patients with kidney cancers, an unusually large number for one
- small area, and a cluster of other people who appeared to have
- weakened ability to ward off infections. Reid suspected that
- something in the local environment was attacking the residents'
- immune systems.
- </p>
- <p> It didn't take much imagination for Reid to figure out
- possible sources of contamination. For 49 years, federal
- installations at Oak Ridge have manufactured the innards of
- nuclear bombs. In the process, the plants have produced--and
- carelessly disposed of--mountains of radioactive material and
- hazardous wastes. Even the U.S. government admits the Oak Ridge
- labs have littered the surrounding countryside with everything
- from asbestos and mercury to enriched uranium. The story is much
- the same at all the country's now notorious nuclear weapons
- plants, scattered from Hanford, Wash., to Los Alamos, N. Mex.,
- to the Savannah River plant. The Department of Energy has
- launched a major clean-up effort, but it might be too late to
- prevent a host of medical problems in people who have lived in
- the shadow of the toxic plants for decades.
- </p>
- <p> Could a health disaster be hitting Oak Ridge? Reid was
- determined to find out. Last August he called Martin Marietta
- Corp., which took over management of the government's nuclear
- complex from Union Carbide in 1984. The doctor wanted to report
- his concerns and ask what chemicals he should test for in his
- patients. If Reid thought that Martin Marietta and his employers
- at Methodist Medical Center would appreciate his initiative, he
- was wrong. Three weeks later, the hospital began a disciplinary
- process aimed at forcing him off the staff. The doctor suspects
- that the hospital and Martin Marietta were trying to thwart his
- investigation. Says Reid: "They are worried they're going to
- have a Bhopal on their hands." The hospital denies there is any
- connection between the disciplinary action and Reid's
- allegations about health problems.
- </p>
- <p> When Reid's dispute with the hospital hit the Oak Ridge
- newspapers this year, the public response was strangely muted.
- Residents long ago learned to live with radioactivity and risk.
- This, after all, is one of the birthplaces of the Bomb, a town
- whose very existence was a by-product of nuclear reactions. The
- federal complex is still the largest employer of the population
- of 30,000. Even the mayor is a physicist, and newspapers report
- levels of background radiation each week. But decades of studies
- have failed to find any gross health problems. Says Oak Ridge
- physicist Chester Richmond: "People here just don't accept the
- arguments that this material is going to give you cancer."
- </p>
- <p> Still, Oak Ridge is no ordinary place. Earlier this year
- a visitor to one of the nuclear facilities accidentally turned
- off the main road. When he tried to leave, alarms rang, and the
- government bought his radioactive rental car on the spot. In the
- reservation surrounding the plants, creatures ranging from deer
- to frogs and water fleas have all excited Geiger counters.
- Contaminated trees, which take up nuclear liquids through their
- roots, have been chopped down and buried lest the autumn winds
- spread radioactive leaves. And the streams have carried toxic
- chemicals and nuclear products--including strontium, tritium
- and plutonium--for distances of 64 km (40 miles). Posted along
- the town's creek are NO FISHING signs and Department of Energy
- warnings: no water contact.
- </p>
- <p> No one worried much about environmental contamination when
- Oak Ridge quietly sprang up as part of the Manhattan Project
- during World War II. By 1944, two years after construction
- started, Oak Ridge had become Tennessee's fifth largest city,
- and it was all behind a guarded fence. At peak production, the
- "secret city" used 20% more power than New York City.
- </p>
- <p> After the products of the Manhattan Project exploded over
- Japan and ended the war, the mania for secrecy diminished. The
- fences surrounding the city came down, and Oak Ridge started
- appearing on maps. But its work was far from done. Once the arms
- race with the Soviets began, Oak Ridgers hunkered down to help
- produce an arsenal of American hydrogen bombs. A recently
- declassified report done for the Department of Energy found that
- the weapons factories "operated in an atmosphere of high
- urgency" that resulted in astounding environmental and health
- assaults.
- </p>
- <p> Between 1951 and '84, the Oak Ridge plants pumped 10.2
- million L (2.7 million gal.) of concentrated acids and nuclear
- wastes into open-air ponds, called the "witches' cauldron," from
- which the chemicals would evaporate or leach into a nearby
- stream. Barrels of strange brews and experimental gases, some
- so volatile that they would explode on contact with oxygen, were
- sealed and dropped into a quarry pool. A neatly stacked
- collection of 76,600 barrels and oil drums, filled with nuclear
- sludge and now rusting, is larger than the main building at Oak
- Ridge. Millions of cubic meters of toxic material, including
- pcbs and cobalt 60, were dumped in trenches and covered with
- soil. In 1983 the Department of Energy acknowledged that 1.1
- million kg (2.4 million lbs.) of mercury had been lost. It went
- up the smokestacks, drained into the soil and flowed into the
- stream that runs through town. After that revelation, mercury
- was found at the city's two high schools and in the blood of
- workers at one of the atomic-research sites. An unknown amount
- of enriched uranium went out smokestacks.
- </p>
- <p> Given this legacy, one might expect Oak Ridgers to be
- dying prematurely in droves. But nothing like that has occurred.
- Between 1988 and '90, cancer deaths in the county that contains
- Oak Ridge were 142 per 100,000 people--less than the 145 per
- 100,000 recorded for the entire state. Research shows that Oak
- Ridge employees are 20% less likely to die of cancer than
- Americans as a whole, perhaps because the nuclear workers all
- have health insurance and good medical care.
- </p>
- <p> Local environmental activists, who tend to live outside
- the city of Oak Ridge, suspect the results of reassuring
- studies have been skewed. They focus on workers and not on other
- members of the community. The studies look largely, though not
- exclusively, at cancer deaths, rather than cases of cancer that
- haven't yet proved lethal. And the best indication of radiation
- hazards might not be cancer but some other disability, such as
- neurological damage, immune dysfunction or birth defects. The
- worst flaw seems to be that no study has been carried out on
- women.
- </p>
- <p> The culture of secrecy and concern about job security may
- have kept information from health investigators. Says Robert
- Keil, president of the Oak Ridge Atomic Trades and Labor
- Council: "One thing that kept people from coming forward is that
- they were afraid they might jeopardize their security clearance
- by talking about something that was classified."
- </p>
- <p> The end of the cold war provides an opportunity to get at
- the truth. At Oak Ridge, as at other weapons labs, the threat
- of a nuclear conflict has been replaced by the threat of
- massive layoffs. The big job in town now seems to be cleaning
- up the nuclear trash heap. More than $1.5 billion has already
- been spent on detoxifying Oak Ridge, and the end isn't in
- sight. The government is beginning an exhaustive medical survey
- of the people who live around Oak Ridge, including the women.
- The Centers for Disease Control has been asked to look into
- Reid's allegations.
- </p>
- <p> But confident of the outcome, the people of Oak Ridge
- still sleep soundly. They have lived with danger for decades and
- see no reason to start panicking now.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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