Tag Archives: Utah

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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Go Back to Where?

Immigration Laws Affect Local Family

Today’s Salt Lake Tribune has published an article on a local Ogden family whose father was deported and is not permitted to return for 20 years.

Humberto “Bert” Fernandez-Vargas came to the U.S. in 1969, ultimately started a trucking business, married and raised a son, and paid his taxes. He was deported in 2004 due to a the retroactive (April 1, 1997) Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, a provision which “drastically reduced the possibility for undocumented immigrants to stop their deportation if they had re-entered the country illegally after having been previously deported.”

Fernandez-Vargas applied to become a permanent legal resident and got authorization to work while the application was pending. Then came his arrest at the immigration interview.

Fernandez-Vargas can apply for a waiver from the U.S. government, but that could take years.

No regard has been considered of Fernandez-Vargas’ longstanding residence in the U.S., his community and family commitments, and the responsibilities he displayed as a business-owner and tax-payer.

This is another example of dividing and conquering on the part of the U.S. which continues to build walls and barriers along the cultural and community divides.

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!

Human Rights Education

Last night I attended an open house for the Human Rights Education Center of Utah. It was fun to meet new people and to see the HREC’s new office.  My colleague, Carla Kelley, is the Executive Director. My fellow blogger, Cliff Lyon of oneutah is on the Board of Directors for the HREC.  Carla teaches human rights and peace study classes at our school, City Academy

“We must model and teach respect for all humanity as our hope for tomorrow relies upon it.”
~ Carla Kelley
From the HREC website:

The Human Rights Education Center of Utah (HREC) was established in 1999 to teach tolerance and promote respect for differences and an appreciation for diversity.
This year we will reach over 2500 children and young adults providing educational training programs teaching anti-bias, diversity and peacemaking education

“By kindergarten, some children believe they have the right to control the social experience of other children.” Vivian Gussin Paley

The HREC provides much needed valuable education for our community – especially in schools.  This organization is working on anti-bullying legislation for the next Utah Legislative Session.  Both Houses passed an anti-bullying resolution in the last session, a great first step and one that was long overdue.

The HREC offers all sorts of classes to individuals and groups.  It has an extensive library that anyone can utilize.

The Human Rights Education Center of Utah
2144 So. Highland Drive #110
Salt Lake City, Utah 841
06

Phone: 801.521.4283
Fax: 801.363.1277

Email: carla@hrecutah.org




Tax Cuts in Utah – an Election Year Tactic?

Of course it is!

Today’s Desert News reports on Utah legislators pushing for a special session to give taxpayers a $70 million cut in personal income taxes.

Putting the obvious reasons for this for this push aside, however, while there does need to be examination of our current income tax structure, what is the rush to push tax reform through in special sessions?

I wish our legislators would spend more time looking at ways to increase services to our citizens first and then examine our tax structure to find ways that all people would benefit.

Caravan to Cuba

The Pastors for Peace Caravan to Cuba will be in Salt Lake this Saturday. The Desert Greens Green Party Candidates have endorsed the event. I have a quote in the press release that was issued today. The Green Party of the United States published our press release on its home page under “local news”.

Yesterday I was interviewed by the Deseret News as participant with People for Peace and Justice of Utah. There will be an article in Saturday’s religion section of the D-News about Saturday’s event. HOpefully the press will come to the press conference at 5pm on Saturday to interview the caravanistas.

I am a strong advocate of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. I do not believe that our government, or any government for that matter, has the right to forbid its citizens from contributing aid to those in need in other countries, let alone forbid its citizens from free travel across borders.

Pastors for Peace and hundreds of volunteers from the US and 7 other countries are slated to cross the US border into Mexico on July 2nd challenging US restrictions on travel and aid to Cuba. This is the 17th annual Caravan. The Caravan will be stopping in Salt Lake City on Saturday, July 24th. People for Peace and Justice of Utah has organized a free public event at Free Speech Zone (2144 South Highland Drive) beginning at 5pm for the Press and 7pm for the public.

“Life on the Divide” – The Wall

Today’s Salt Lake Tribune has an article and photo gallery called Life on the Divide.

One employee in a store on the border stated that folks are calling the border fence as the new “Berlin Wall” and that many see the scenario now as more dangerous than pre-border fence days.

Daniel Beltran, a 30-year-old Mexican truck driver who lives in San Luis Río Colorado, crosses the border legally for work each week. He said he can’t believe the U.S. government is spending millions of dollars on the border when it can use the
“They should be helping the people,” Beltran said in Spanish. “The wall doesn’t help anyone.”

My point exactly.

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.

I am speaking at the West Jordan Senior Center today and at the Draper Senior Center next Friday as part of a series of Open Houses sponsored by the Salt Lake County Division of Aging Services. Candidates were invited to attend and take advantage of the opportunity to provide a 3-minute or less speech and talk with senior citizens.

I developed a personal statement on aging issues at my campaign website.

Here is what I will say today:
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