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- From: dave@ratmandu.esd.sgi.com (dave "who can do? ratmandu!" ratcliffe)
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive,alt.censorship,alt.activism,talk.environment
- Subject: "SECRET FALLOUT, Low-Level Radiation from Hiroshima to TMI" [11/15]
- Summary: part 11 of 15: chapter 18
- Keywords: low-level ionizing radiation, fallout, deception, secrecy, survival
- Message-ID: <1993Jan11.171004.14490@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Date: 11 Jan 93 17:10:04 GMT
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-
-
- 18
-
-
- Too Little Information Too Late
-
-
-
-
- THE TRUTH WAS more difficult to suppress this time than it had been in
- the atmosphere of fear engendered in the cold war of the McCarthy
- years, the Cuban missile crisis, and the Vietnam war. Nonetheless, an
- attempt to keep the facts from the people was clearly being made.
- The same Freedom of Information Act that had made it possible for
- the {Washington Post} to reveal how the truth about the bomb tests in
- Nevada had been kept from the American people was used only a few days
- later to provide the first clue to what really happened at Three Mile
- Island.
- On Monday, April 16, 1979, only two days after Bill Curry's story
- had gone out over the wires, the {Pittsburgh Post-Gazette} carried
- across the top of its front page a special report from the Associated
- Press with excerpts of tape recordings of the proceedings of the
- Nuclear Regulatory Commission during the crisis at Three Mile Island.
- Strangely enough, as in the case of the Watergate affair, it would be
- the private conversations of top government officials recorded on
- magnetic tape and unexpectedly released to the news media that would
- provide the crucial information.
- My own awareness of the existence of the tapes had begun with a
- rather amusing phone call from a {Washington Post} reporter. He
- wanted me to comment on a not very complimentary, and very bitter and
- sarcastic remark made by one of the NRC staff members on what I was
- likely to say about the doses that would be received by the people
- near Three Mile Island during the first few days of crisis. When the
- excerpts of the NRC officials' comments appeared in the {Post-
- Gazette}, I saw immediately that my worst fears about the true
- magnitude of the radiation doses were likely to have been correct. I
- was sure that there would once again be a large rise in fetal deaths,
- congenital abnormalities, infant mortality, and childhood leukemia,
- followed by the delayed rises in infectious diseases, heart disease,
- and cancer among those exposed in the years to come.
- The excerpts opened with the following comment by Lee V. Gossick,
- Executive Director for Operations of the NRC on Friday, March 30, the
- day after I had urged the evacuation of pregnant women and young
- children at the news conference in Harrisburg:
- "Bill, we have got a deteriorating situation up there with regard
- to some releases. The Governor is asking us to confirm what he is
- getting from the plant, which says that they had an uncontrolled
- release of stuff."
- To this, Harold Denton, Director of the Office of Nuclear Reactor
- Regulation in charge of all NRC activities at Three Mile Island,
- answered:
- "They are getting 63 curies per second, and I can't explain to you
- the mathematics, but what they are saying is if that's true, by
- comparing it with what we know the shutdown rate was and the
- measurements taken at the north gate, and those were yesterday, they
- were on the order of three times what they were yesterday, which would
- put us in the 1200 millirems per hour."
- These were truly enormous release rates of fresh fission gases,
- since in a single hour (consisting of 3600 seconds) there would be
- 3600 times 63 or some 226,000 curies being released in an uncontrolled
- manner without detailed analysis or significant hold-up to allow the
- most dangerous short-lived isotopes to decay. Even Millstone, the
- worst of all reactors, had not released more than fifteen times that
- much in a whole year.
- The corresponding radiation dose of 1200 millirems per hour,
- equivalent to the dose of some 50 to 100 chest X-rays, was presumably
- measured in the narrow plume close to the release point at the plant,
- since it was ten thousand times the dose-rate that I had recorded the
- previous day in the airplane and on the ground a few miles away in the
- pockets of trapped gas. The road into Harrisburg was evidently well
- away from the narrow, invisible plume of radioactive gases meandering
- upstream, to the northwest, toward Middletown and Harrisburg with the
- slowly moving prevailing winds. Wherever it touched down, it would
- lead to an enormous inhalation dose in a very short time.
- The taped conversation continued with the following question by
- Peter Bradford, one of the NRC commissioners who was not trained as a
- nuclear engineer:
-
- BRADFORD: What actual measurements do you have?
- GOSSICK: I can't give you any at the moment. I don't have
- anything that is current since this happened here, you
- understand. The source has been sealed up again and I think
- this is probably being released for one or two hours. We
- don't know, however, whether that's good for any period of
- time.
- GILINSKY (NRC Commissioner): Do we have any monitoring
- equipment--
- DENTON: There is a lot up there, Vic, but it takes a while for
- it to ever get back here.
- FOUCHARD (Director of Public Affairs for the NRC): I just had
- a call from my guy in the Governor's office and he says the
- Governor says the information he is getting from the plant is
- ambiguous, that he needs some recommendations from the NRC.
- DENTON: It is really difficult to get the data. We seem to
- get it after the fact. They opened the valves this morning,
- on the let-down, and were releasing at a six-curie-per-second
- rate before anyone knew about it. By the time we got fully
- up to speed, apparently they had stopped, there was a
- possible release on the order of an hour or an hour and a
- half--
- GILINSKY: And when did this plume--when was the puff released?
- DENTON: Within the last two hours.
- HENDRIE (Chairman of the NRC): Presumably it has just
- terminated recently, then.
- DENTON: We don't know how long, but if it was a continuous
- release over a period of an hour or an hour and a half, which
- from what I understand which is a kind of lot of puff.
- HENDRIE: A couple-of-knots wind and the dammed thing--the head
- edge of it is already past the five-mile line.
- HENDRIE: There has been a suggestion for a five-mile
- evacuation in the northeast direction. I take it--
- DENTON: A good five miles, I would say from first impression.
- BRADFORD: It ought to be made clear that you are not talking
- about lethal doses.
- FOUCHARD: Mr. Chairman, I think you should call Governor
- Thornburgh and tell him what we know. I don't know whether
- you are prepared at the present time to make a commission
- recommendation or not. The Civil Defense people up there say
- that our state programs people have advised evacuation out to
- five miles in the direction of the plume. I believe that the
- commission has to communicate with the Governor and do it
- very promptly.
- GILINSKY: Well, one thing we have got to do is get better
- data.
- FOUCHARD: Don't you think, as a precautionary measure, there
- should be some evacuation?
- HENDRIE: Probably, but I must say, it is operating totally in
- the blind and I don't have any confidence at all that if we
- order an evacuation of people from a place, where they have
- already gotten a piece of the dose they are going to get into
- an area where they will have had 0.0 of what they were going
- to get and now they move some place else and get 1.0.
- GILINSKY: Does it make sense that they have to continue
- recurrent releases at this time?
- DENTON: I guess I tend to feel that if they really didn't stop
- the release a half an hour ago--it's probably best to leave
- it to the operational people up there. The cloud hasn't had
- a chance to get down to these low levels.
- AHEARNE (NRC commissioner): But Harold, what confidence do you
- have that they won't embark on the same thing?
- DENTON: I don't have any basis for believing that it might not
- happen--is not likely to happen again. I don't understand
- the reason for this one yet.
- HENDRIE: It seems to me that I have got to call the Governor .
- . . to do it immediately. We are operating almost totally in
- the blind, his information is ambiguous, mine is nonexistent,
- and--I don't know, it's like a couple of blind men staggering
- around making decisions.
-
-
- This last remark by Chairman Joseph M. Hendrie was to be quoted
- repeatedly by the news media later, but strangely enough it was always
- referred to in the context of the danger of a major melt-down. But
- clearly, either by reason of ignorance or design, the public was not
- told that the remark was made in the context of the danger from the
- ongoing large gas releases that were rapidly approaching the critical
- EPA emergency dose of 25,000 millirems to the whole body or key organs
- such as the thyroid from internal and external sources combined. This
- high level had been set by the Federal Radiation Council back in 1965
- and later adopted by the EPA as the maximum allowable dose before
- countermeasures or an evacuation of the population should be ordered.
- Certainly neither the people living nearby nor the reporters at the
- site had ever been told of the large radiation doses from the inhaled
- gases that they were receiving.
- The excerpts from the tapes continued to record the enormous
- concern about the growing radiation doses from the inhalation of the
- gases to the people in the area:
-
- FOUCHARD: Is there anybody who disagrees that we ought to
- advise the Governor on what to do?
- DENTON: I don't. Just on the basis of what we know. It's a
- good first step.
- HENDRIE: Go ahead with the evacuation?
- DENTON: I certainly recommended we do it when we first got the
- word, commissioner. Since the rains have stopped and the
- plume is going--I would still recommend a precautionary
- evacuation in front and under. And if it turns out we have
- been too conservative--
- GRIMES: My view is that it might have been useful right near
- the site, but now it is down below the EPA [unintelligible]
- level, so it probably is the most that should be done, in my
- view, is to tell people to stay inside this morning.
- AHEARNE: I was going to ask, what about pregnant women and
- children?
- GILINSKY: Well, Brian says it is a factor of 10 that can be
- gained by staying indoors. Anyway, I just think it is worth
- getting that half hour to find out, first of all, you are
- alerting people that they are going to have to do something,
- and they are not going to be able to do something in a half-
- hour anyway.
- HENDRIE (on telephone): Governor Thornburgh, glad to get in
- touch with you at last. I must say that the state of our
- information is not much better than I understand yours is.
- It appears to us that it would be desirable to suggest that
- people out in that northeast quadrant within five miles of
- the plant stay indoors for the next half hour.
- We have got one of those monitoring aircraft up and seem
- to have an open line to it and we ought to be able to get
- some information in the next 10 to 15 minutes. They can tell
- us whether it would be prudent to go ahead and start an
- evacuation out in that direction.
- THORNBURGH: So your immediate recommendation would be for
- people to stay indoors?
- HENDRIE: Yes, out in that--out in the northeast direction from
- the plant.
- THORNBURGH: The northeast direction from the plant to a
- distance of?
- HENDRIE: To a distance of about five miles.
- I have got a reading. During one of these burst, releases
- up over the plant several hours ago, up over the plant about
- 1200 millirems per hour which seems to calculate out, by the
- time the plume comes to the ground where people would get it,
- would be about 120 millirems per hour. Now, that is still
- below the EPA evacuation trigger levels; on the other hand,
- it certainly is a pretty husky dose rate to be having off-
- site.
-
- Here it was: the NRC knew that the true doses were not just a few
- millirems to the people in the area, as had been claimed at the
- Kennedy hearings, with maximum values of the order of 75 to 100
- millirems nearest to the plant.
- They knew just as I did that the greatest dose arose not from the
- external gamma radiation measured by a survey meter or a film badge,
- but from the internal beta radiation from the inhaled fission gases
- and particles in the lung, the thyroid, and the other critical organs
- that concentrate the different substances according to their various
- chemical properties. So when the external gamma-dose rate on the
- ground was of the order of 1 to 2 millirems per hour, the true dose
- rate to the lung and other critical organs could be as much as 50 to
- 100 times greater, or of the same general magnitude as the 120
- millirems per hour Hendrie himself had just mentioned.
- But they also knew, as I did, that if they ever were to order the
- full evacuation that should have been ordered long before, it would
- not only have caused a panic among the completely confused and
- unprepared population, it would also have been the end of the nuclear
- industry, whether or not the core would ever go to a complete melt-
- down.
- And so more precious time in which to save lives was being lost by
- recommending only that people should stay indoors, as was clear from
- the taped conversation with Governor Thornburgh. At that very moment
- Governor Thornburgh was under enormous pressures from those wanting to
- protect this important Pennsylvania industry on the one hand, and his
- Secretary of Health, Gordon MacLeod, on the other hand, who was at
- that very time urging that at least the pregnant women and young
- children should be evacuated.
- But the NRC was clinging to the hope that an evacuation of any kind
- would not have to be ordered because of the continuing gas releases:
-
- KENNEDY: Don't we know that it has been stopped?
- FOUCHARD: Vice-President Herbein of the company reports it has
- been stopped. Chairman Hendrie has talked to the Governor
- and recommended that he advise people to stay indoors up to a
- distance of about five miles for the present time.
- GOSSICK: We have just lost telephone contact with the site. I
- assume that it is telephone problems, but--[inaudible].
- Okay, we have got communications with a trailer up there, but
- we have lost contact with the control room. . . .
- GILINSKY: Let me ask you, what is the status of the reactor,
- by the way?
- CASE: Same as it was an hour ago, I guess.
- GILINSKY: What is the state of the core?
- CASE: Well, it is about like it was yesterday. The
- temperature is about 280 degrees, the pressure is up
- [inaudible] . . .
-
- Here was the proof that up to that very moment the primary
- consideration in the decision to evacuate the people was not the
- awareness of a serious chance of a melt-down of the core, but the
- continuing uncontrolled releases of radioactive gases that were
- threatening to give internal exposures to the public on the order of
- tens of thousands of millirems.
- In fact, the subsequent excerpts made it clear that only at this
- point in the desperate deliberations did the knowledge of extensive
- core damage and a hydrogen explosion reach the NRC commissioners:
-
- HENDRIE (TO DENTON): I have talked to the President and I
- think you ought to go down to the site. He will be sending
- down, immediately, a sort of communication system that he
- takes with him when he travels. He will send somebody with
- it and he wants to be in a position to pick up the telephone
- and go right through to the site, and be able to talk to his
- man down there for information and recommendations on what to
- do. . . .
- MATTSON: [Director of the Division of Systems Safety] . . .
- Now, B and W [Babcock and Wilcox] and we have both concluded
- . . . that we have extensive damage to this core. That
- corroborates with the releases we are seeing. . . . My best
- guess is that the core uncovered, stayed uncovered for a long
- period of time, we saw failure modes, the likes of which has
- never been analyzed. . . . We just learned . . . that on the
- afternoon of the first day, some 10 hours into the transient,
- there was a 28-pound containment pressure spike. We are
- guessing that may have been a hydrogen explosion. They, for
- some reason, never reported it here until this morning. That
- would have given us a clue hours ago that the thermocouples
- were right and we had a partially disassembled core.
- HENDRIE: Where abouts is the bubble?
- MATTSON: The bubble is in the upper head. The upper head
- volume at 1128 cubic feet as best we can tell. The estimate
- of the gas in that volume now is 1000 cubic feet, best that
- we can tell. That is at 1000 psi. If you take the plant to
- 200 psi, then--
- HENDRIE: Yes, you are going to blow right down and empty the
- core.
- MATTSON: I have got a horse race. I'm putting in high head,
- and if I get down in pressure, low head and coolant, it is
- coming in the cold leg, it is going down to the lower plenum,
- it is coming up through the core, it is splashing and it runs
- into the noncondensibles, I've got a core partially full or
- maybe totally full of noncondensibles. . . . We have got
- every systems engineer we can find, except the ones we put on
- the helicopter, thinking the problem, how the hell do we get
- the noncondensibles out of there? . . . Do we win the horse
- race or do we lose the horse race? And if you are lucky and
- there is not a lot of--you have overestimated the
- noncondensibles, you might win. If you are not lucky and you
- have got the right number on the noncondensibles you might
- lose it.
- HENDRIE: . . . It sounds to me like we ought to stay where we
- are. I don't like the sound of depressurizing and letting
- that bubble creep down into the core.
-
- And then came the following most revealing words from Roger
- Mattson, Director of the Division of Systems Safety, whom I knew to be
- very knowledgeable with regard to radiation dose calculations.
-
- MATTSON: Not yet. I don't think we want to depressurize yet.
- The latest burst didn't hurt many people. I'm not sure why
- you are not moving people. Got to say it. I have been
- saying it down here. I don't know what we are protecting at
- this point. I think we ought to be moving people.
- HENDRIE: How far out?
- MATTSON: I would get them downwind, and unfortunately the wind
- is still meandering, but at these dose levels that is
- probably not bad because it is [inaudible].
- KENNEDY: But downwind how far?
- MATTSON: I might add, you aren't going to kill any people out
- to 10 miles. There aren't that many people and these people
- have been--they have had two days to get ready and prepare.
- KENNEDY: Ten miles is Harrisburg.
- MATTSON: 40,000 [inaudible] five miles. . . . It's too little
- information too late, unfortunately, and it is the same way
- every partial core melt-down has gone. People haven't
- believed the instrumentation as they went along. It took us
- until midnight last night to convince anybody that those
- goddamn temperature measurements meant something. By four
- o'clock this morning, B and W agreed.
-
- Not until later in the day did Governor Thornburgh finally agree to
- the compromise plan of ordering evacuation of pregnant women and young
- children. But as I was to learn in an unexpected manner a few months
- later, most of the damage had already been done before the evacuation
- was ordered.
- During the latter part of the summer I received a phone call from
- someone who asked me for a collection of all my articles on the
- effects of low-level radiation. He said that he was working on a
- study of the total economic and health impact of the Three Mile Island
- accident for the Presidential Commission chaired by Dr. George Kemeny
- of Dartmouth College, and he wanted to include an upper-limit estimate
- based on my statistical findings around various nuclear plants and
- after various fallout episodes.
- I was surprised by this request, since I had not been asked to
- testify before the Kemeny Commission, which had been holding extensive
- hearings all summer long. Also, I wondered how the caller could use
- my earlier studies if there were no detailed estimates of releases and
- dose measurements available. The NRC had claimed that all the meters
- in the stack had gone off scale so that no one knew or would ever know
- just how much had actually been released.
- And so I asked whether he had any detailed information on the
- quantities of gases released or the amounts of radioactivity in the
- air, the milk, and the diet on which to base a meaningful estimate of
- the likely health effects and their costs.
- To my surprise, he said that he had such a document prepared for
- the Metropolitan Edison Company by their own environmental
- consultants, Pickard, Lowe and Garrick, and that he would be glad to
- send me a copy for my examination, since it was being widely
- circulated within the NRC and the Kemeny Commission.
- A few days later, the two-inch-thick document entitled "Assessment
- of Offsite Radiation Doses from the Three Mile Island Unit 2 Accident
- TDR-TMI-116," dated July 31, 1979, arrived in the mail. And there, in
- the second paragraph, was the proof that the evacuation ordered on the
- third day had indeed been too late:
-
- Based on techniques used in this analysis, dose estimates are
- consistent with the release of seven million curies of noble
- gases in the first one-and-one-half days of the accident, two
- million in the next two days and one million in the next three
- days, and a relatively small amount thereafter.
-
- By Friday afternoon, the third day of the accident, when the
- evacuation took place, between 7 and 9 million curies out of an
- estimated 10 million curies of radioactive fission gases had already
- been released, together with a corresponding fraction of the 14 curies
- of radioactive iodine 131 as given on page III of the report. And
- since the report also concluded that most of the thyroid dose was due
- to inhalation--and not ingestion of drinking water or milk--in the
- first five days of the accident, it was clear that by the time the
- evacuation of the pregnant women had been ordered, most of the thyroid
- dose to the developing fetuses had already taken place.
- These were indeed very large amounts of radioactivity, comparable
- to those that arrived from the Chinese bomb tests in October 1976 on
- the East Coast, and for which I had found a 20 to 60 percent increase
- in infant mortality in the following three months all the way from
- Delaware to Maine. Just two years earlier, I had prepared a paper on
- this incident for the Committee on the Biological Effects of Ionizing
- Radiation of the National Academy of Sciences for its meeting in
- Washington on July 17, 1977, in which the levels of radioactive iodine
- 131 in the milk reported by the EPA were summarized.
- Looking at the Metropolitan Edison Company's own measurements in
- some of the nearby towns, I saw it was evident that levels of iodine
- 131 had been produced by the Three Mile Island accident comparable to
- those that had been produced by the heavy rainout of the drifting
- Chinese fallout as it met a severe rainstorm moving up the East Coast
- from Delaware to Maine. For the Hardison Farm, to the north of Three
- Mile Island, the report listed 110 picocuries per liter on April 25,
- almost a month after the accident. By that time, the activity would
- have decayed away to only about one-eighth to one-sixteenth of its
- maximum value, so that the peak values in local farms, if there had
- been adequate monitoring at the time, would have been in the range of
- 800 to 1600 picocuries per liter. The amount one worried about was
- measured in picocuries, which was only a millionth of a millionth, or
- a trillionth, of one curie. Yet 14 curies or 14 trillion of these
- units had been discharged into the air, breathed by the pregnant women
- in the area, and added to what they ingested with the milk. The
- report showed concentrations in the air as high as 20 picocuries per
- cubic meter. Since 1 cubic meter was roughly the volume of air
- inhaled by an adult every hour, 20 picocuries of iodine 131 entered a
- pregnant woman's lungs each hour at these concentrations.
- The milk concentrations compared with the highest values listed in
- the EPA's December 1976 tabulation published two months after the
- Chinese fallout had arrived. These had ranged from 36 picocuries per
- liter in Rhode Island to 123 in Connecticut. At that time, infant
- mortality rose 60 percent in the first quarter of 1977 compared to the
- same period in 1976 in Delaware, 41 percent in New Hampshire, 17
- percent in Maine, and 13 percent in Connecticut. But what was even
- more significant was that in Massachusetts, where the health
- department had ordered the cows to be fed stored hay which was
- relatively free from fresh fallout, infant mortality continued its
- rapid decline. Furthermore, infant mortality kept decreasing in the
- United States as a whole by 7 percent, as it did in Rhode Island,
- which receives most of its milk from Massachusetts.
- Thus, if the measurements reported by Picker, Lowe and Garrick were
- accurate, there simply would have to be a sharp rise in infant
- mortality in the Harrisburg area and those parts of Pennsylvania and
- other nearby states over which the radioactive gases released in the
- first three days had drifted. On the other hand, infant mortality
- should again continue its normal decline in areas that happened to be
- spared by the invisible clouds of radioactive gases from the Three
- Mile Island nuclear plant.
- But in which direction was the wind blowing during the period of
- highest release rates? Was there any way to find out how much was
- coming out at any given moment? After all, according to a story sent
- out by the {Washington Post} News Service and published on April 22,
- the Nuclear Regulatory Commission had been told by one of its staff
- people, Albert Gibson, that the radiation monitors in the stack went
- off scale on the morning of the accident. Thus, in answer to
- Commissioner Victor Gilinsky's question, "So we don't really know what
- went up," Gibson replied, "That's correct."
- The story went on to say that as much as 365 millirems per hour of
- beta and gamma radiation were recorded on the ground some 1000 feet
- from the stack, and a helicopter had recorded three times this level
- in the air over the vent, confirming once again that the dose rates
- were far higher than the public had been told at the Senate hearings
- when the beta radiation that accounts for most of the internal dose
- from inhaled gases is taken into account. But Gibson went on to say
- that "those measurements were very inconclusive," and that "without
- knowing the precise weather patterns, we don't know if they were made
- at the appropriate locations."
- However, leafing through the report of Met Ed's environmental
- consultants, I found that these were all completely misleading
- statements. Contrary to what the NRC commissioners and the public
- were being told, there were radiation monitoring instruments in the
- plant that never went off scale, namely in the auxiliary building,
- whose readings were directly related to the amount of radioactive gas
- being released. Here was the way the utility's consultants described
- how it was possible to know how much gas was being released every
- moment:
-
- Strip chart records from all noble gas radiation monitors in the
- plant ventilation exhaust show no significant radiation levels
- during the first three hours of the accident. Since these
- monitors are in the most probable pathway for release, it is
- concluded that no significant releases occurred before 0700
- March 28. Shortly after 0700, however, these monitors, which
- are designed to read normal low levels, indicated rapidly
- increasing radiation concentrations. Within a few minutes, they
- went off scale on the high side. At about the same time, the
- in-plant building area monitors which measure radiation levels
- inside the fuel handling and auxiliary buildings began to record
- increasing levels from about 1 milliroentgen to 100
- milliroentgen per hour at 0740. At about 0900 the readings
- began to increase again to reach about 100 milliroentgen per
- hour at 1000 hours. They continued to fluctuate at high levels
- for about four days. One or more of these area monitors
- continued to read on scale during the course of the accident.
-
- The report went on to explain in detail that by means of these
- measuring instruments it was possible to know what went out the stack
- because:
-
- . . . radiation levels measured by area monitors in the
- auxiliary and fuel handling buildings are proportional to the
- rate at which airborne gamma activity was released to the
- environment . . .
-
- In table after table and chart after chart, the releases and gamma
- radiation doses in different directions were worked out in detail.
- For every hour of the accident from 4 A.M. on March 28 until midnight
- of the fourth day, the readings of the area monitors were given
- together with the hourly wind direction and wind speeds. It showed
- that during the period of highest releases, from 10 A.M. on Wednesday
- the 28th to 7 A.M. on Thursday the 29th, the winds were blowing north,
- northwest, and west at 6 to 9 miles per hour, sending the radioactive
- gas toward upstate New York and western Pennsylvania. Only later,
- when the rate of release had decreased tenfold, did the winds shift
- briefly to the south, becoming more variable thereafter.
- By the time the winds were blowing toward the northeast on
- Saturday, the fourth day of the accident, the intensity had dropped to
- less than one-twentieth of its peak value, thus largely sparing the
- most densely populated areas of Philadelphia, New Jersey, and New York
- City.
- No wonder the NRC staff did not want to let the public know that
- they knew exactly in which direction the most radioactive clouds had
- moved, since this information could then be used to tie any later
- localized rises in fetal deaths, infant mortality, and cancer to the
- radioactive gas clouds from Three Mile Island. In fact, I remembered
- only too well the attempts of some of the same individuals formerly
- working for the AEC to discredit my findings on the rises of infant
- mortality across the southeastern United States following the first
- nuclear-bomb test at Alamogordo by claiming that the winds were not
- blowing in that direction. And they certainly did not want any of
- this to become known before the Kemeny Commission was scheduled to
- complete its report in early November.
- Once again, as in the case of the Nevada tests, it was essential to
- keep such knowledge from the public and the scientific community at
- large. The NRC, the EPA, and all the other federal and state agencies
- knew full well that the doses were comparable with those experienced
- by the people of Utah, Montana, Wyoming, and the other states across
- the northern United States as far as New York and New England during
- the period of the Nevada tests, or for releases from some of the
- largest and most heavily emitting reactors, such as Millstone in New
- London, Connecticut, over a period of a year or two.
- If, indeed, there should once again be sudden rises in infant
- mortality in areas where the radioactive clouds had drifted and the
- public should learn of them when the televised nightmare of Three Mile
- Island was still fresh on everyone's mind, this public knowledge would
- threaten the government's and the nuclear industry's vast program to
- build a thousand of these giant reactors by the end of the century
- near all the major cities, and would result in costly damage suits,
- exactly as in the case of the Nevada tests.
- I had tried to obtain the preliminary data on monthly infant
- mortality rates by county from the Health Department in Harrisburg
- without success. I was told that this data had not yet been sorted
- out and processed, and that it would be many months before it could be
- properly assembled, even though such data had already been sent to me
- by the Maryland Health Department. All research on the health effects
- of Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania were under the direction of Dr.
- George Tokuhata, the same man who prepared the statistical portion of
- the Shapp Report exonerating Shippingport back in 1973. There was
- clearly no hope for any help from that direction.
- All I could do was to wait for the state-by-state data on monthly
- infant deaths and births published by the Center for Health Statistics
- in Washington, which was usually three or four months behind. Thus,
- if significant effects would first show up for infants two to three
- months after the accident, or for the months of May and June, the
- earliest numbers indicating an effect would not become publicly
- available until August or September, too late for any presentation to
- the Kemeny Commission.
- Nevertheless, I decided to gather whatever data I could as soon as
- possible, for an enormous media campaign had been launched by the
- nuclear industry to convince the public that there were no serious
- health effects due to the accident at Three Mile Island. No one had
- died, and no member of the public had been injured; the safety
- systems had worked, and there was no reason to abandon this important
- source of energy at a time when the United States depended so heavily
- on imported oil from the unstable Middle East.
- In mid-August, the latest monthly report from the U.S. Center for
- Health Statistics for the month of May arrived in the library.
- Calculating the rates of infant deaths per 1000 live births, I found
- what I had expected. Instead of declining from the winter high,
- infant mortality in Pennsylvania had gone up following the accident at
- the end of March. Compared to 147 deaths in February and 141 in
- March, there had been 166 in April and 198 in May, an unprecedented
- rise of 40 percent. Yet, the number of births had actually declined
- from 13,589 in March to 13,201 in May. Thus the rate of infant deaths
- per 1000 live births had increased even more, namely by 44 percent,
- from 10.4 in March to 15.0 in May.
- Yet, at the same time, the rate for the United States as a whole
- between March and May had declined 11 percent as it normally did,
- dropping from 14.1 to 12.6 per 1000 live births.
- These were highly significant changes, the Pennsylvania figures for
- March and May representing an increase of 57 deaths, which was more
- than three times the statistically expected normal fluctuation of
- about +/- 16, and thus unlikely to occur purely by chance in less than
- one in a thousand instances. But how else could I test the hypothesis
- that these increased rates were likely to be due to the releases from
- Three Mile Island without having the county-by-county and the
- Harrisburg figures available to me?
- Having learned from the utility's own report that the heaviest
- releases had occurred when the wind was blowing north, northwest, and
- west, and having seen reports in the papers of high levels of
- radioactivity being measured in Syracuse, New York, some 150 miles to
- the north, at the time of the accident, I decided to examine the
- figures for New York State. By a fortunate coincidence, the U.S.
- Vital Statistics gave separate figures for New York City and the rest
- of the state, most of whose population was located in upstate New
- York--north, northwest, and northeast of Harrisburg some 100 to 200
- miles away. Here, then, was a clear prediction of the hypothesis that
- could be tested: The figures for the rest of the state outside of New
- York City should have gone up, while New York City should either have
- shown no change or an actual decline.
- And this is exactly what the numbers showed: Between March and
- May, infant deaths outside New York City climbed an amazing 52
- percent, by 63 deaths, from 121 to 184. For New York City during the
- same period the number declined from 166 to 129. Again, these changes
- were many times as large as normal fluctuations, and the number of
- births changed relatively little, or by less than 10 percent, so that
- there could be no doubt about the significance of these changes in
- infant deaths.
- So far, the hypothesis had passed its first major tests, but would
- it hold up for the other nearby states? What about Maryland to the
- south, where some of the gases had drifted in the morning and
- afternoon of the second day, according to Met Ed's report. The
- numbers were smaller than for the more populous states, but the
- changes continued to support the hypothesis: Infant mortality rose 26
- percent, from 39 to 49 deaths, while the number of births remained
- essentially unchanged--4013 in March and 4076 in May.
- What about New Jersey, to the east and northeast of Harrisburg? If
- the hypothesis was correct, there should not be any significant
- increase, since by the fourth day of the accident, when the winds
- shifted toward New Jersey, the rate of release had already sharply
- declined. Again, the hypothesis held up under the test. Between
- March and May, New Jersey infant mortality rose by only 8 deaths, from
- 87 to 95. This is not considered a significant increase, with the
- spontaneous statistical fluctuation of about +/- 13 normally expected.
- What about Ohio to the west, which had for decades closely
- paralleled Pennsylvania in its declining infant mortality figures?
- Did it show the same 40 to 50 percent rises of Pennsylvania and of New
- York State outside New York City? It was not to be expected that the
- gases would have drifted more than 200 to 300 miles west of
- Harrisburg, counter to the generally prevailing west-to-east movement
- of air masses across the United States, and so there should really be
- very little change in the Ohio figures. Again the numbers bore this
- out: Between March and May, infant deaths declined in Ohio from 177
- to 160, the rate remaining constant at 11.5 per 1000 live births.
- There simply could be no other explanation for such a localized
- pattern of sharply increased infant deaths in the areas where confined
- winds had blown the radioactive gases, while infant mortality rates
- were steady or declined in all the surrounding states that were not in
- the direction of the winds during the first two days of highest
- releases.
- And yet, it would be important to have some figures for the area
- that was most heavily exposed close to the plant. If the figures
- around Harrisburg should indeed show much higher rises in infant
- mortality than the 44 percent for Pennsylvania and the 50 percent for
- New York State outside New York City, then it would be difficult to
- reject the hypothesis that it was indeed the radioactive gases from
- the stricken plant that were responsible for the unusual increase in
- newborn deaths.
- But only Tokuhata had the data for the 5-mile and 10-mile zones
- around the plant, and there was no way that I would be able to obtain
- them. From everything I had been able to piece together, the numbers
- in Harrisburg had to show very large increases if areas as far away as
- 150 miles in upstate New York showed 50 percent rises in infant
- deaths. From my earlier studies on fallout clouds, I knew that the
- effect would roughly decrease in inverse proportion to the distance
- from the point of release. Thus, for Harrisburg, only 10 miles to the
- north of the plant, the rise in newborn infant mortality would have to
- be as high as 300 percent to 600 percent, corresponding to a four- to
- sevenfold increase above normal to be consistent with the rises in
- upstate New York.
- How could I get at least an indication of whether this was the
- case? Just at this very moment, a way opened up to obtain this
- crucial information without the need to obtain access to the
- Pennsylvania Health Department's carefully guarded data.
- Earlier in the summer I had been invited to address a public
- meeting in Harrisburg on the likely health effects of the accident at
- Three Mile Island. At the end of the meeting, someone introduced
- himself to me, and asked me whether he could be of any help. His name
- was Warren L. Prelesnik, and he told me that he was deeply concerned,
- since he had just moved to the area with his family shortly before the
- accident, and that he was working in the Harrisburg Hospital as
- executive vice-president in charge of administration.
- I asked him whether it might be possible to obtain information on
- the monthly number of births and infant deaths together with their
- cause over the past few years, and he said that he would try to see
- what he could do.
- More than a month later, when I had already given up hope of
- receiving any information, there arrived in the mail a letter with a
- list of the monthly infant deaths, fetal deaths, stillbirths, and live
- births in the Harrisburg Hospital for the previous two years.
- At first there seemed to be no obvious change, if one looked at the
- total numbers of all types of fetal and infant deaths combined. But
- then I examined separately the category of newborn or neonatal infant
- deaths--those that were born alive but died within the first year, but
- mainly in the first few hours after birth. Here was the evidence I
- needed. In February, March, and April of 1979, there had only been 1
- infant death per month. But for each of the two months of May and
- June, there were 4. Effectively, since the number of births had not
- only remained nearly the same but had actually declined slightly, this
- was more than a fourfold increase in the mortality rate, or of the
- right magnitude required to fit the observed 50 percent rise in the
- more distant area of upstate New York.
- From an average of 5.7 per 1000 live births in the three months of
- February, March, and April--before the releases could have had an
- appreciable effect--the newborn mortality rate had risen to 24.1 for
- May and 26.0 for June, an unprecedented summer peak that did not occur
- the previous year. In fact, for May and June of 1978, there had been
- a total of only 3 infant deaths, while for the same period in 1979
- after the accident, there had been 8.
- As some of my colleagues with whom I discussed these findings
- agreed, by themselves the Harrisburg Hospital numbers were of course
- small, and only marginally significant, representing only about one-
- third of all the births and deaths in Harrisburg. But taken together
- with the vastly more significant and independent numbers for all of
- Pennsylvania, upstate New York, New York City, New Jersey, Maryland,
- and Ohio, there was now a much greater degree of certainty: It would
- have been much too much of a coincidence--perhaps less than one in a
- million--for all these different numbers to show the pattern they did.
- At this very moment, there arrived an invitation to address an
- international meeting of engineers and scientists in Israel. The
- meeting was devoted to studying the environmental problems of
- industrialization of Third World nations. It was to be held in
- December, and I was asked if I would be willing to address the meeting
- on the environmental health problems connected with nuclear energy.
- I could hardly believe that such an opportunity to bring these
- facts into the open should come at precisely the time when the data
- from the Harrisburg Hospital had convinced me more strongly than ever
- of the great danger of nuclear reactors. I decided to accept the
- invitation and to devote myself in the remaining few months to
- preparing a detailed paper that would begin with a review of the
- previous evidence on the effects of low-level radiation from fallout
- and normal nuclear plant releases and end with the evidence for the
- rise of infant deaths after Three Mile Island.
- One of the remaining important questions that had to be checked,
- however, was the time and cause of death. Clearly, if the excess
- deaths were connected with the radioactive iodine released from the
- plant, then they should be associated with underweight births or
- immaturity, since damage to the fetal thyroid would slow down the
- normal rapid growth and development of the baby in the last few months
- before birth. The development of the lungs, which have to be ready to
- begin breathing at the moment of birth, is one of the most critical
- phases of late fetal development. Any developmental slowdown would be
- most life-threatening if it led to the inability of the tiny air sacs
- in the lungs to inflate and start supplying the blood with oxygen.
- Failure of the lungs to function properly would therefore lead to
- immediate symptoms of respiratory distress, and if efforts to treat
- the baby should not succeed, it would die in a matter of minutes,
- hours, or days of respiratory insufficiency or hyaline membrane
- disease.
- Thus, one would not expect to find as large an increase in
- spontaneous miscarriages well before birth as newborn deaths within a
- short time after birth, since the lungs did not need to start
- functioning until the baby was born. Also, there should be no
- significant increase in gross congenital malformations a few months
- after the accident, since by the time the baby in the mother's womb
- had reached the sixth or seventh month of development, all the major
- organs had already fully developed. Thus, only some six to seven
- months after the accident would one expect some increase in serious
- physical malformations, since these infants would have been exposed to
- radiation in the first three months of development of critical-organ
- formation.
- The data from the Harrisburg Hospital supported these expectations.
- There was much less of an increase in the number of spontaneous
- miscarriages and stillbirths than in the number of newborn babies that
- died shortly after birth because of immaturity and respiratory
- distress, indicating the strong likelihood that it was the effect of
- iodine 131 and other shorter-lived iodines such as iodine 133 that had
- damaged the ability of the thyroid to produce the necessary hormones
- needed for normal growth and development.
- In fact, it was for this reason that I had publicly urged
- widespread screening for hypothyroidism at the time of the news
- conference in Harrisburg on the second day of the accident, the kind
- of simple test that could prevent permanent mental retardation if
- detected and treated early. This test was already being used
- routinely for every newborn baby born in hospitals of a number of
- states in New England, the Northwest Coast, and Pennsylvania, but not
- yet in New York or Maryland. There would have to be a rise in the
- incidence of this condition if my past findings on the increase in
- underweight births and subtle forms of mental retardation during the
- period of heavy nuclear-bomb testing were indeed related to the action
- of radioactive fallout. But not until many months later, long after
- the Kemeny Commission hearing had been completed, would I learn that a
- rise in hypothyroidism had already been discovered by the Health
- Department of the State of Pennsylvania among the newborn babies in
- areas where the invisible radioactive gases from Three Mile Island had
- been carried by the winds.
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