I was born in "the sacrifice zone," i.e.,
downwind from the Hanford Atomic Works, in 1949. The town my family lived in
until 1957 was Albion, Washington.
Albion was a wonderful place to be a child. Little did we know what simply
living downwind from Hanford was doing to our health.
There were only dirt roads in Albion, then, so every car that came through town
would kick-up a dose of dust. We kids would play for hours in the fields around
Albion, where the grass that the cows and goats would later eat grew. The cows
and goats would consume radioactive iodine-131 that had settled on the grass.
The radioactive iodine-131 would then be passed on to us children through their
milk, concentrating in our developing thyroid glands. Playing in the fields we
would be exposed to the radioactive iodine-131 pre-goat or cow. Farmers plowing
nearby would raise even more dust that we would breathe, inhaling even more
radioactive iodine-131 and other contaminants that had settled from the upwind
Hanford Atomic Works.
Among my playmates as a child in Albion were my cousins, Jerry and Karen, both
long dead. Karen died of leukemia at the age of 15, and Jerry died of a brain
tumor when he was only 32. My family often wondered why Jerry and Karen had died
at such early ages, and now we have a pretty good idea why.
Thinking of Jerry and Karen, and listening to the other downwinders' and atomic
workers' wrenching testimony here, I feel fortunate to at this time have
"only" thyroid disease for which I will have to take medication for
the rest of my life.
My father likes to joke that "the two biggest lies are 'the check is in the
mail' and 'we're from the government and we're here to help you.'" Speaking
earlier with another person who testified today, I mentioned that because he had
actually worked at Hanford, and lived in the area most of his life, his phone
must be ringing off the hook, what with all the expensive studies of radioactive
exposures that are being done. He got a good laugh out of that, and assured me
that that wasn't happening.
Governmental spending of millions of dollars on studies while downwinders drop
like flies without so much as an apology, much less well-deserved compensation,
gives new meaning to the term "Studying it to death."
Other downwinders and former Hanford atomic workers have told of missing files,
and dis- and misinformation. Similar stories are documented in the recent USA
Today series about atomic workers and people who live near nuclear facilities.
Many of these stories can be found at http://www.downwinders.org
. This same scenario is playing-out all over the United States, and the rest
of the world. In their zeal to develop more and bigger weapons, governments have
left a radioactive legacy that will affect not only the workers and downwinders,
but our posterity as well through our damaged genes.
The Hanford Health Effects Subcommittee must recognize that there is a huge
credibility gap between government agencies and what government agencies say and
the public and what the public believes.
Recognition by this subcommittee of the needs of downwinders as evidenced by a
recommendation that the standards used to evaluate workplace exposures be
applied to downwinders, and a further recommendation that downwinders be
eligible for compensation, would go a long way to bridge this credibility gap.
Thank you.
source: http://thyroid.about.com/health/thyroid/library/news/blstevewagner.htm 02feb01
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