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- NATION, Page 37American NotesHARASSMENTNow Go to Your Room
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- Energy Secretary James Watkins, who oversees the nation's
- problem-plagued government nuclear facilities, insists that
- employees who go public with charges of plant-safety problems
- are free to blow the whistle without fear of reprisal.
- Unfortunately, it didn't work out that way for Charles ("Bud")
- Varnadore, a technician at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in
- Tennessee. Varnadore, 50, suffers from colon cancer and
- underwent 52 weeks of chemotherapy. After he appeared on a CBS
- news program in March 1991 to talk about a study that showed
- suspiciously high rates of cancer among workers at the facility,
- his bosses assigned him to a new office -- a storage closet next
- to the chemical lab. Later they moved him to other offices
- crammed with mercury, radioactive materials and asbestos.
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- Last week the Labor Department upheld Varnadore's claim
- that the plant managers at Oak Ridge, which is operated for the
- government by Martin Marietta Energy Systems, had acted in
- retaliation against Varnadore for his complaints. The company
- plans to appeal the decision. So does Varnadore, who is also
- looking for $1.5 million in damages.
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