Tag Archives: environment

Divine Strake Test Still Planned

Mixed signals received on Test Site blast: DOE says it plans to go ahead with Divine Strake

By Launce Rake and Lisa Mascaro
Las Vegas Sun

Despite claims to the contrary, the planned detonation of 700 tons of chemical explosives at the Nevada Test Site is not quite dead.

In a U.S. District Court hearing conducted by telephone last week, government officials said they had no immediate plans to move forward with the fuel oil-ammonium nitrate explosion, and agreed to a stipulation that the earliest the test could go forward would be September. Designed to simulate an atomic-sized blast on underground structures, the explosion was originally scheduled for June 2 but has been postponed because of the court challenge.

Kevin Rohrer, an Energy Department spokesman working in Las Vegas, said Monday that his agency continues to work on the project: “We have not scrubbed it, canceled it, or whatever. We are still moving forward pending the outcome of the litigation.”

In Washington, however, congressional members got conflicting information about the blast, leaving them with little insight into the Defense Department’s intentions or schedule.
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Divine Strake Test – a temporary diversion

 As I suspected, the Divine Strake Test “postponment” was strategically announced the weekend of the action at the Nevada Test Site.  However, I have been hearing that the test will take place in September.  I will be providing updates and plans for further action to stop this test.  Meanwhile, here is an article that came across my desk today:

Awaiting the Divine
The Bush administration proposes to explode a huge conventional bomb in the Nevada desert, but activists see a short leap to resumed nuclear testing

~ By PERRY CROWE ~

 
 
America’s one-time nuclear weapons testing facility, the Nevada Test Site, is only 45 minutes north of Las Vegas, but it might as well be on the moon. The space between the two contains little more than desert, mountains, a prison, and an Air Force base. The gate on Highway 95 is called Mercury, and the peace camp at Mercury amounts to a dozen or so tents scattered amongst the sagebrush and rocks, hushed by a great sense of isolation. Cradled between two rows of mountains, the air is still and the vastness of the landscape swallows up most sound.

Things had been relatively quiet in the area for over 10 years, since the federal government put a moratorium on nuclear testing at NTS in 1992; the endless series of underground and above-ground nuclear blasts ended, and employment at NTS dropped from a Cold War peak of 11,000 to only a couple thousand. That is, until Divine Strake.

Under the Bush administration, NTS got noisier as employment rose to 4,000 during studies of the U.S.’s current nuclear stockpile and managing two nuclear waste management facilities. And when the Defense Department’s Defensive Threat Reduction Agency planned to use the site to conduct a test called Divine Strake, which would simulate the effects of an earth-penetrating bomb on “enemy underground installations,” noise outside NTS grew to a roar.

The test, which was scheduled for June 2, has been postponed due to environmental concerns regarding the effects of exploding a 700-ton ammonium nitrate fuel oil bomb 36 feet below the surface of an area that has seen nearly 1,000 nuclear explosions through the Nevada Test Site’s 50 years of operation. Opponents say the enormous blast will re-suspend irradiated material into the air, where it will then drift with the winds, spreading radiation sickness across the land. It’s far from an unfounded fear, as the U.S. Justice Department’s Radiation Exposure Compensation Program acknowledges that individuals “contracted certain cancers and other serious diseases as a result of their exposure to radiation released during above-ground nuclear weapons tests,” and provides “compassionate payments” of $50,000 per individual for people living or working “downwind” of the Nevada Test Site and $100,000 for uranium miners and DOE employees. Compensation has recently passed the $1 billion mark.

But while the Department of Energy, which runs the Nevada Test Site, has withdrawn its Finding of No Significant Impact (or “FONSI”) regarding Divine Strake’s environmental effect, the DOE insists the withdrawal has only been done to allow for a more thorough assessment of background radiation in the test area, and that Divine Strake will still take place. The background radiation assessment will give the DOE a baseline to determine how much radiation Divine Strake will throw into the atmosphere, and whether or not that amount would be beyond “normal” levels.

“There’s background radiation just about everywhere in this country, and, for that fact, throughout the northern hemisphere,” says Kevin Rohrer, spokesman for the Nevada Test Site. “When we refer to background [radiation], it’s a combination of naturally occurring [elements like uranium and radon] as well as worldwide fallout from nuclear testing activities, and manmade radiation from the Chernobyl event. Don’t get me wrong. There are other parts of the Nevada Test Site that are contaminated with fallout from nuclear testing and contaminated at higher levels. This area on the test site where we’re doing the Divine Strake is not one of those areas and is considered to be somewhat pristine.”

But thinking only of Divine Strake’s potential re-suspension of radioactive material may be too narrow a focus. “The whole point is that [Divine Strake] may lead to the development of new nuclear weapons, which may lead to a resumption of testing somewhere down the line,” says J. Truman, founder and director of Downwinders, a group formed in the mid-’70s with the goal of protecting citizens from nuclear and radiation hazards.

Truman’s entire life has been intertwined with the nuclear testing at NTS. Born in southwest Utah in 1951, the year testing began, Truman’s first memory is of sitting on his father’s knee, watching a nuclear detonation at the distant NTS.

“It would light up the whole sky 200 miles away when it went off,” says Truman. “You’d hear the sound when it came over. And three or four hours later, you’d have the pinkish grey cloud come over and you’d know what it was. You couldn’t miss it.”

As a teenager, Truman, along with 4,000 other schoolchildren in Utah, Nevada, and Arizona, took part in a government study to determine whether exposure to above-ground testing had caused an increase in thyroid cancer amongst those downwind from NTS (the radioactive isotope iodine 131, produced in nuclear fission, like, say, from a nuclear test, concentrates in the thyroid). The test checked on the children throughout the 1960s, checked in again during the 1980s and found an increase in thyroid cancer, and then again last year. With last year’s test, after checking 1,800 of the original 4,000, the study found a definite link to non-cancerous thyroiditis.

“After 40 years of being guinea pigs, they came back to check the cage one last time and found that the guinea pigs were nowhere near healthy,” says Truman, a noticeable wheeze in his voice. “So, bye-bye funding.”

There is also a funding issue surrounding the Divine Strake test. Congress has repeatedly denied funding for the so-called “bunker buster” bombs, which are low-yield nuclear weapons designed to penetrate the earth before exploding, thereby doing more damage to underground targets. Congressional opposition comes from the concern that such low-yield nuclear weapons could lower the nuclear threshold; i.e.; while the traditional nuclear arsenal is largely a deterrent against attack, a bunker buster is intended for actual use.

“[Divine Strake] is 700 tons of explosives. There’s only one way that you can ever get anything to produce that same explosive yield, and that’s a nuke,” says Truman.

It’s this development of usable nuclear weapons that concerns people like Scott Scheffer of the L.A. chapter of the International Action Committee, who sees Divine Strake as a potential ramp-up to military action against Iran or North Korea. “This is the beginning of them doing their actual planning for an attack,” he says.

Scheffer applauds the growth in the current antiwar movement, and he’d like to see more. He remembers the joke President Reagan made in 1984 during a mic test for a radio address that was eventually leaked to the public. The gipper quipped that Russia had been outlawed and “we begin bombing in five minutes.”

“Everybody knew it was a joke, but the world was just aghast that he would even joke about something like that,” says Scheffer. “And now George Bush Jr. can talk about a new generation of nuclear weapons and there’s no outcry. And there needs to be.”

06-22-06

STOP THE DIVINE STRAKE!

Today in history

(Sources: Peace Buttons, War Resisters League, and the Peace Center.)

June 18

1959
A Federal Court rules that an Arkansas attempt to close a school rather than desegregate it is unconstitutional.


1970
The U.S. voting age would be lowered to 18 as a result of the passage by Congress of the 26th amendment to the constitution.

1979

SALT II (Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty), an agreement to put limits on both America’s and the Soviet Union’s long-range missiles and bombers, was signed by Presidents Jimmy Carter and Leonid Brezhnev. This was the first arms-reduction treaty between the two superpowers.

Global Warming Rally

The Sierra Club in Utah sponsored a Global Warming Rally today in Salt Lake City. Jen’s Green Journal has photos of the event. It sounds like the rally was well attended. I was told by friend that about 100 people attended.

When I first found out about it a few weeks ago I called the outreach director to try to coordinate with the Desert Greens Green Party of Utah in the event. The Green Party’s platform addresses this issue and we have lots of literature we distribute on global warming. The Desert Greens also has several members and candidates who could have provided talks on the issue with clarity and expertise.

As much as I pleaded, though, I was told that because the Sierra Club is a 501 (c)(3) they would not allow political parties to participate in any fashion. Yet I found it interesting that featured speakers were politicians and that they have politicians featured on their website in various of their projects, which doesn’t make sense to me given what I was told. I think it is unfortunate that environmental organizations like the Sierra Club will not partner with groups that have platforms that address issues like global warming.

A Really Inconvenient Truth

Guerilla News Network has a piece by Stephen Marshall called Some Inconvenient Truths About Al Gore. Marshall describes Gore Vidal’s perspective about Al Gore’s emergence into the public arena with his recent film on global warming and what his real motives might be.

Global Warming Film in SLC

I was scheduled to see the film “An Inconvenient Truth” featuring Al Gore last night, but had to miss it due to the arduous task of moving my school (which is taking longer than I imagined, involving long strenuous hours to accomplish). I hope to be able to see the film sometime over the next week after my moving responsibilities are completed.

Jen’s Green Journal has an account of the movie and discussion following.

I am fortunate to be on the Green Party of the United States’ Eco Action Committee, as secretary, members of which are diligently working on position statements for the GPUS and for candidates around the nation in efforts to address the seriousness of the effects of global warming on our planet and its life.

Nuclear Waste plan attracts thousands of comments

Today’s Deseret News has an article on all the comments that have flooded the BLM’s office regarding the Private Fuel Storage (PFS) plan to store nuclear waste on the Goshute reservation. More than 7,000 comments were received.

The BLM’s public comment period ended May 8 on two competing proposals to get radioactive fuel from a rail line to the Goshute Indian reservation, where PFS wants to build the storage plant. The proposals are to build a railroad spur or to construct an intermodal facility where huge protective casks would be lifted from train cars and loaded onto trucks for the 26-mile drive to the reservation.

Go us! Keep up the pressure.

Newest federal land sell-off plan

This came across my desk today:

Newest federal land sell-off plan: Today’s most viewed story in LA Times online
June 6, 2006

Today’s Los Angeles Times highlights the Washington County Growth and Conservation Act, the most recent quid pro quo deal for the West’s public lands. Washington County, Utah is home to red rock wilderness, threatened desert tortoises and great weather; and has been attracting retirees to communities like St. George in increasing numbers in the past few years.

Following the precedent set by Harry Reid in Nevada in 2004, Utah Republican Senator Robert Bennett is about to introduce a bill that would allow sale of up to 25,000 acres of federal land for development.
What does the public get in return?

* 219,000 acres of wilderness designation–half of which is land already being protected as part of Zion National Park.
* A 66,000-acre tortoise preserve with a highway running through it.

The bill will be introduced in the coming weeks and is expected to be followed by others like it for Utah, Idaho, Nevada, and New Mexico, where there is similar pressure for developable land.

As one County Commissioner baldly states, “We’re in it for the land.”

Here is the article:
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/la-na-landbill6jun06,1,4464841.story
You can see a photo gallery also at the above site.
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Biodieselers are being challenged by big business

Why is it that a good thing for our planet ends up being challenged?

Today’s Salt Lake Tribune is reporting that Biodieselers are being challenged by big business.

Big collection and rendering companies are turning to the health department to challenge the hobbyists who make the fuel solely for their own use. They claim biodieselers shouldn’t be allowed to reap the “yellow grease” – so valuable it is traded on the commodities markets – unless they play by the rules.
The Salt Lake Valley Health Department is listening.
That means the little guys who make their own biodiesel who introduced the biodegradable, low-pollution, sustainable fuel to Utah long before anyone sold it commercially – already are the losers in this grease war, said Graydon Blair, a member of a 100-member grassroots group called the Utah Biodiesel Cooperative.
“It doesn’t matter if you’re doing it for yourself, you’re pretty much screwed,” he said. “This has pretty much killed [home-made] biodiesel in Salt Lake County.”

Big business buddies stick with big business buddies it looks like: The Health Department and these big companies.
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My Position on Improving Mass Transit

I am starting to be asked my position on certain issues as my candidacy for Salt Lake County Council takes on its character and I get out and about more. One of the issues is mass transit, how it can be improved, if I support property and sales tax increases to improve it. Here is my position, which can also be read at my campaign website.

Current Spending and Funding:
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