Article 16374 of alt.conspiracy: Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy,alt.activism,alt.society.civil-liberty,alt.individualism,alt.censorship,talk.politics.misc,misc.headlines,soc.culture.usa Path: cbnewsl!jad From: jad@cbnewsl.cb.att.com (John DiNardo) Subject: Part 4, RADIOACTIVE MEAT, MILK & PRODUCE: Supermarkets Selling Leukemia Organization: AT&T Bell Laboratories Distribution: North America Date: Tue, 13 Oct 1992 12:30:35 GMT Message-ID: <1992Oct13.123035.20452@cbnewsl.cb.att.com> Followup-To: alt.conspiracy Keywords: radioactive meat, milk & produce: supermarkets selling leukemia Lines: 127 The following article is from IN THESE TIMES, August 19 - September 1, 1987. Back issues and subscriptions can be ordered by calling (312) 772-0100. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * (continuation) In Oklahoma, Kerr-McGee and politics are synonymous. According to Richard Rashke in THE KILLING OF KAREN SILKWOOD, in 1959, the late Senator Robert F. Kerr (D.-Oklahoma) arranged for Kerr-McGee to sell to the Atomic Energy Commission (later to become the NRC) three hundred million dollars worth of uranium. His grandson, Robert F. Kerr III, is currently the Lieutenant-Governor of Oklahoma. But it is the Oklahoma Water Resources Board "where people speculate that Kerr-McGee gets the most pull politically," says Rhonda Haraway, a reporter for the Southwest Times Record in Fort Smith, Arkansas. The late senator's son and the present lieutenant-governor's father, Robert F. Kerr Jr, is a major Kerr-McGee shareholder and sits on the company's board of directors. He also is on the Water Resources Board that regulates Kerr-McGee's discharge of radioactive waste water into the Illinois River, one of Oklahoma's designated "wild and scenic" rivers. WASTE DOWN THE RIVER: According to Kerr-McGee records, the company annually dumps eleven thousand pounds of uranium into the Illinois River. But local residents believe that the actual amount dumped is MUCH higher. The company operates with two discharge permits, one of which is issued by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). In 1984 and 1985, the EPA cited Kerr-McGee with twenty-one dumping violations. (Figures do not exist for 1986 because the facility was closed due to the uranium hexafluoride explosion.) The NRC also found problems with the river dumping, and wrote in a report: "Accumulation of uranium in the sediment or soil along the combination stream [the ditch that carries the waste to the river] has reached a significant level; therefore, [NRC] staff has requested Sequoyah Fuels to propose a better method of transference of the waste from the facility to the river." Kerr-McGee's second dumping permit is issued by the Oklahoma Water Resources Board. The board's guidelines originally did not require that it regulate radioactive waste, but that had changed by 1982 when the company's state dumping permit expired. For the past five years, Kerr-McGee has discharged its radioactive water into the Illinois River through a legal loophole. Oklahoma law states that if the Water Resources Board fails to renew a permit before it expires, the company involved is allowed to dump at the old levels until the board acts. So in 1982 when the Water Resources Board did not renew Kerr-McGee's permit, the company could legally discharge its radioactive water as usual. Robert F. Kerr was named to the Water Resources Board that same year. Kerr-McGee says that Kerr doesn't take part in board decisions involving the company, yet Oklahoma law allows a board member to vote on permits affecting his business concerns if that individual believes that he can give the matter "a fair and impartial hearing." In the case of Sequoyah Fuels, Kerr's actions have yet to be tested since over the past five years no permit has been voted on. "What it says to me is that Kerr-McGee and the Water Resources Board appear to be acting in concert," says Kathy Carter-White, the attorney for NACE. Evidence of this conclusion is a Jan. 24, 1984 Water Resources Board internal memorandum addressed to the board's chief of water quality that acknowledges dumping violations. The note says: "An enforcement action is in progress. If we draft up a permit before the enforcement request is satisfied, we would put the permittee under more instant violations." Late last year, the board finally moved to control Kerr-McGee's discharge of radioactive waste into the river and set a December 9th date for a public hearing on the company's disposal methods. But before they could take place, Kerr-McGee obtained an injunction to stop the hearings. The company argued that the NRC, not the Water Resources Board, was the government body responsible for regulating uranium dumping. Early in July, a district court judge ruled that the Water Resources Board did have jurisdiction over Kerr-McGee's dumping. The company then appealed to the Oklahoma Supreme Court, which on July 21st, upheld the lower court ruling, saying that the company would have to get a permit from the Water Resources Board both to dump plant waste into the Illinois River and to dump its raffinate fertilizer on the ground. On August 31st, the Wate Resources Board will hold a public hearing on Kerr-McGee's proposal practices. NACE, Carlisle Area Residents Association and Warner Area Residents are busy preparing for the hearings. NACE's attorney Carter-White will present the board with thirty-one arguments against approving a dumping permit. Greenpeace's Costner will ask for a peer review of all Kerr-McGee test data. The Warner Area Residents have a veterinarian who will testify about heavy-metal poisoning causing kidney failure in pets that wandered onto raffinate-sprayed property. He will also document the sudden appearance of mutations in a local herd of pure-bred cattle. Carter-White believes that the permit proposed by the Water Resources Board will "be an improvement." She says: "The discharges will be considerably less than would have occurred if citizens hadn't intervened. Yet it is still not adequate. The board will continue to allow Sequoyah Fuels to dump toxic, mutagenic, carcinogenic and radioactive wastes into the river. The proposed permit allows Kerr-McGee to dump up to five hundred and fifty-two thousand, nine hundred and seventy-five pounds of uranium into the Illinois River per year -- as long as the discharge, when tested in the laboratory, does not kill an excessive number of flathead minnows." (end of report) * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * If you believe that American consumers have a right to know if the food and milk they are ingesting is giving them leukemia and other cancers, please assist in disseminating this story by posting it to other bulletin boards and by posting hardcopies in public places, both on and off campus. John DiNardo