Sampling request to cities_web site[1]

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Citizens seek sampling of air for radioactivity
in area at Rocky Flats intended for
construction of the Jefferson Parkway
Rocky Flats as viewed from near Standley Lake on a windy day.
On Tuesday, February 21, 2012, local citizens asked elected officials of the cities most affected to
request that EPA and the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment test airborne
dust for its radioactive content in the area at Rocky Flats intended for construction of the
Jefferson Parkway.
“It’s no secret that the Rocky Flats site is still contaminated with highly toxic radioactive
materials like plutonium and americium,” commented LeRoy Moore of the Rocky Mountain
Peace and Justice Center. “Some of us who are concerned that constructing a highway at Rocky
Flats would endanger people’s health sent the following letter. “
To:
City Council, Broomfield, CO
City Council, Westminster, CO
Board of Trustees, Town of Superior, CO
City Council, Arvada, CO
City Council, Golden, CO
From:
LeRoy Moore, PhD, Rocky Mountain Peace & Justice Center
Harvey Nichols, PhD, Emeritus Professor of Biology
W. Gale Biggs, PhD, Meteorological investigator
Chuck Newby, Principal Physicist, Colorado Environmental
Analytics, LLC
Paula Elofson-Gardine, Environmental Information Network
Hildegard Hix, Citizen of Arvada
Rick Brownrigg, PhD, Software Engineer
Rob Medina, Citizens Involved in the Northwest Quadrant and
Re:
Date:
Gothebetterway.org
Request that affected cities ask EPA and CDPHE to test
airborne dust for plutonium and americium content in the area
at Rocky Flats intended for construction of the Jefferson Parkway
February 21, 2012
Building the Jefferson Parkway along the contaminated Indiana St. edge of the Rocky Flats
National Wildlife Refuge would endanger public health by stirring up clouds of dust laden with
plutonium, americium and other radionuclides.
In 1970 Atomic Energy Commission scientists showed that the area now intended for the
proposed highway was contaminated with plutonium released from Rocky Flats. Recent citizen
sampling shows that plutonium contamination in the soil in this same area at present is roughly
equivalent to what it was in 1970. See:
http://leroymoore.wordpress.com/2012/02/10/pusamplingjeffpkwyrfnwr/
Highway construction in the area therefore would stir up clouds of breathable particles of
plutonium and other alpha-emitting radionuclides. DOE and EPA state that inhalation is by far
the worst way to be exposed to such highly toxic material, since particles that lodge in the body
continually irradiate surrounding tissue. The result years later could be cancer and immune
suppression, leading to other chronic illnesses.
This reality, plus the documented deficiency of historic air sampling at Rocky Flats (see Nichols
on Air Sampling and Biggs on Airborne Emissions at http://rmpjc.org/rocky-flats/ ) forced us to
consider setting up our own project to sample airborne dust for radionuclide content along
Indiana St. adjacent to the Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge. This would provide baseline
data for airborne dust along the proposed route. But we think private citizens should not have to
cover the costs of needed sampling; it is the responsibility of the affected communities to
safeguard the health of their populations.
If the Jefferson Parkway were to be built, the most affected people, aside from highway
construction workers, would be residents of Arvada, Broomfield, Westminster, Superior and
Golden. We therefore propose that elected representatives of these cities request jointly or as
separate bodies that EPA and CDPHE sample airborne dust on both high-wind and low-wind
days at the Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge area intended for the Jefferson Parkway, with
the samples to be analyzed for plutonium and other radionuclide content. The proposed
EPA/CDPHE sampling must meet the following conditions:
1. EPA and CDPHE’s sampling protocols and procedures will be transparent and will be
monitored and approved by independent specialists designated by the authors of this
message. CDPHE sampling will be conducted separately by both its Air Pollution Control
Division and its Radiological Division.
2. The sampling will begin without delay.
3. EPA and CDPHE will issue bi-weekly reports of their sampling results, providing a baseline
for airborne radionuclide-bearing dust in the area.
4. If highway construction begins along the eastern edge of the Wildlife Refuge, sampling by
EPA and CDPHE of dust for gross alpha content must occur in this area around the clock
with computerized real-time report of gross alpha measurements to be disclosed immediately
to the public. Gross alpha measurements are important because both thorium and uranium,
also alpha-emitters, are present in this soil and thus pose additional inhalation danger,
though less than plutonium or americium.
5. All costs of sampling, analysis, reporting and monitoring are to be borne by the Jefferson
Parkway Authority or by some party it designates, such as the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service.
In December 2011 USFWS issued a “Finding of No Significant Impact,” giving itself
permission to transfer land to the Jefferson Parkway Authority.
Finally, the parties to whom this message is addressed are asked to provide the signatories of
this message a definitive yes or no answer to our proposal within 45 days, that is, by April 6,
2012.
Thank you for your attention to this proposal. Comments or questions can be addressed in
writing to LeRoy Moore at leroymoore@earthlink.net.
Cc:
Senator Mark Udall
Senator Michael Bennet
Representative Jared Polis
Representative Ed Perlmutter
Governor John Hickenlooper
Steve Guertin, Director, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Region 6
Michael D. Dix, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
Steve Berendzen, Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge
James B. Martin, Administrator, EPA Region 8
Martha E. Rudolph, Environmental Program Director, CDPHE
Jefferson County Board of County Commissioners
Boulder County Board of County Commissioners
Boulder City Council
Jefferson Parkway Public Highway Authority
Rocky Flats Stewardship Council
Supporters of this letter
Tom Hoffman, Friends of the Foothills
Anne Fenerty, MS, Chemistry
Jenna Hirsch, Lakewood resident, chemist, Air Pollution Testing, Inc.
Jane Bunin, PhD, ecologist
Tanya Ishikawa, Federal Heights, Buffalo Trails Multimedia
Dave Chandler, Arvada resident
Ron Forthofer, PhD, retired professor of biostatistics
Cody Spyker, student at Naropa University
Steven C. Moore and Martha Griffin, residents of Boulder
Carole Gallagher, American Ground Zero: The Secret Nuclear War
Dave and Doris Depenning, Blue Mountain
John Lodenkampe, The Environmental Group of Coal Creek Canyon
Oak Chezar, professor
Joy Boston, artist
Kim Homer, restauranteur.
Cynda Collins Arsenault, resident of Superior
Christopher Hormel, resident of Boulder County
Greg Marsh, Citizens Against Rocky Flats Contamination
Debra Odom, concerned voter
Stephen Thomas, professor
Daniel James, MA
Roy Young, conservation geologist, Boulder
Andrew Tirman, Nederland resident & student.
Richard D. Andrews, President, Boulder Innovative Technologies, Inc.
To support this letter, go to this link and sign the petition
http://www.petitions24.com/demand_testing_for_plutonium_dust_at_rocky_flats
Scientists from the Atomic Energy Commission produced this map in 1970
to show plutonium contamination on and off the Rocky Flats site.
The dotted red line indicates the route of the proposed Jefferson Parkway.
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