===The
Cold War was hot in Utah, though few realized it.
===The government chose the remote,
low-population state for secretive weapons tests that bombarded
it with nerve gas, germ weaponry and radioactive fallout.
===Oleta Nelson of Cedar City was
among the thousands of unwitting civilian casualties in
Utah.
===Fallout from atomic bomb tests in Nevada — conducted by
design of federal officials only when the wind was blowing
toward Utah — killed her after 12 years of agony from brain
cancer. The fallout hit not only southern Utah, but also the
heavily populated Wasatch Front — a fact few suspect.
===Another casualty was Ray Peck's family in Skull Valley. They
were likely hit with low doses of the nerve gas from a Dugway
Proving Ground test that accidentally killed 6,000 sheep near
their home in 1968. The Pecks lived but haven't been the same
since.
===On the other hand, Rolland Bivens was a voluntary human guinea
pig intentionally infected by germ weaponry in Utah's desert
with other Seventh-day Adventists who had avoided combat duty as
conscientious objectors. The same germ clouds that sickened him
floated toward major highways and some small cities.
===Much of the waste — and suffering — from Cold War tests and
military work remains in Utah. New secretive military testing
raises even more concerns.
===And wastes from more conventional arms testing and training also
litter vast areas of the state.
===That's not a new story. It is one that has been closely watched
and reported by the Deseret News for 25 years, with some cleanup
and compensation for victims achieved. But an update now shows
much remains undone.
'Downwinders'
===Energy Department records show the Nevada Test Site
conducted 141 tests of atomic bombs that likely spread radiation
toward Utah — just a portion of the 930 tests (both above and
below ground) conducted there through 1992.
===The bomb tests are the only class of Cold War weapons
testing that the government has acknowledged likely killed or
sickened civilians downwind. But it acknowledges that fact for
only a small portion of people who think they are victims.
===For example, studies show significant fallout from tests
not only hit southern Utah, but also heavily populated Salt Lake
County — and even every county in America. Congress never made
these areas eligible for compensation, in part, because it
simply would be too expensive.
===As of Nov. 15, Justice Department figures show 7,138 "downwinders,"
uranium workers and Nevada Test Site workers with claims settled
— but 3,574 (30 percent) were rejected.
===The case of Oleta Nelson demonstrates how many victims had
to wait for the government to acknowledge fault and offer
compensation — and why many may never receive it.
===Isaac Nelson, her husband, remembers that neighbors called
them outside on May 19, 1953, to watch a fallout cloud. It was
from an atomic bomb test later nicknamed "Dirty Harry" because
of its heavy fallout. They didn't worry because the government
falsely told residents it was safe.
===Later that night, Oleta Nelson suffered a headache that
would pound for six months. A few weeks later, she would scream
when much of her hair simply slipped off her scalp. She would
soon develop brain cancer and die 12 years later.
===Isaac Nelson joined early lawsuits seeking to make the
government acknowledge that fallout caused such deaths and to
pay for it. But judges ruled the government was immune from
suits for actions it made for national defense.
===In 1990, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and Rep. Wayne Owens,
D-Utah, passed a law that apologized to downwind cancer victims
and offered compensation. But Isaac Nelson didn't qualify. The
brain cancer that killed his wife was not included among a list
of cancers recognized as likely caused by the atomic tests.
===With better research in recent years, Hatch passed another
bill last year to expand the type of cancers covered — including
the brain cancer Oleta Nelson suffered. Her survivors could
finally now qualify for $50,000 in compensation.
===Isaac Nelson was pleased when that bill passed but still
bitter. "No amount of money will restore one hair to her head at
this point. The government murdered my wife."
===Obtaining money for people such as Isaac Nelson may be
difficult the next few years. The Justice Department ran out of
money for claims last spring — and has approved $20 million
worth of claims since then that it has been unable to pay.
===To make matters worse, the department only requested $13.9
million worth of funding for claims this year — not enough to
cover even those claims already approved.
===On top of that, changes that Hatch made to allow more
people to qualify are expected to bring $70 million worth of
claims a year, beginning in 2001. That means the Justice
Department will likely be $76 million short of money to fund all
claims this year.
Other radiation
===Utah wasn't hit by radiation
only from atomic bomb fallout. The government also spread
radioactive dust via artillery shells, bombs and airplane
spraying — and even intentional nuclear reactor meltdowns at
Dugway Proving
Ground.
===At least 74 tests of
"radiological arms" were conducted at Dugway in the 1940s and
1950s. Radioactive materials would be burst and scattered in a
way designed to contaminate enemy battlefields. Most the
materials used had short half-lives and would have ceased to
have been dangerous years ago.
===Also in 1959, the Air Force
secretly conducted what amounted to eight intentional nuclear
reactor meltdowns at Dugway. It melted reactor fuel in
high-temperature furnaces and used forced air to ensure the
resulting radiation would be spread to the wind. Researchers
wanted to see how far radiation from then-planned
nuclear-powered airplanes might spread if meltdowns occurred.
===When radiation clouds left
detector range, they were headed toward the old U.S. 40 (now
I-80). The communities of Wendover and Knolls might also have
been in the path of those clouds, according to documents
obtained and reported on by the Deseret News in 1994.
===Those tests release a total of
215.57 curies of radiation, or about 14 times more than that
released at the infamous Three Mile Island near-meltdown.
===Also between 1959 and 1965, the
Atomic Energy Commission experimented with atomic-powered
rockets in Nevada, which may have spread radiation downwind to
Utah.
Chemical tests
===Radiation wasn't the only
problem. Utah was also host to 1,174 series of open-air tests or
firing of munitions filled with chemical arms at Dugway Proving
Ground.
===Army documents obtained by the
Deseret News through the years show that at least 494,700 pounds
of nerve agent were spread to the winds. A pinhead-sized drop of
nerve agent VX can cause death.
===The strongest case that some of
it drifted off base came on March 13, 1968 — after a jet
streaked around the Dugway base, dropping 2,730 pounds of VX on
test grids. Documents said more than half of it may have
traveled farther than the mile downwind that monitors tracked
it.
===The next day, 6,000 sheep began
dying 25 miles from the base in Skull Valley. The Army paid $1
million in restitution to ranchers but never acknowledged the VX
killed those sheep.
===Ray Peck, who now lives in West
Valley City, was living in Skull Valley the night the VX was
spread and worked outside much of that evening. He went inside
when he developed an earache. The next morning, he said
new-fallen snow was so pretty that he ate a handful of it. Then
he saw the dead birds nearby and a dying rabbit struggling in
the distance.
===Soon the sheep began dying. An
Army helicopter would soon land on his yard, disgorging
officials who collected dead wildlife and performed blood tests
on his frightened family.
===Not long after the incident,
Peck said he began experiencing violent headaches, numbness, a
feeling of burning in his legs and "bouts of paranoia." He said
others in his family also have suffered violent headaches ever
since.
===Peck's family suffered another
problem not reported in scientific studies — high numbers of
miscarriages. "We come from large families and never had
problems with that before. But the girls (who were children at
the time of the incident) have a real struggle with
miscarriages," Peck said.
===In recent years, Peck also
suffered skin cancer and heart problems. "I wonder if the tests
didn't have something to do with that," he said in December.
Germ tests
===Documents obtained by the
Deseret News through the years show Dugway conducted at least
328 series of open-air tests of germ weapons during the Cold
War.
===Some tests used agents that
cause such diseases as anthrax, botulism, the plague, tularemia
and Q fever.
===Rolland Bivens, who now lives in
Colorado, was intentionally attacked by germ weapons spreading Q
fever in one 1955 Dugway test along with 29 other Seventh-day
Adventists who had avoided combat as conscientious objectors.
==="It was night. I remember
hearing in the distance some motors running. We were told they
were creating a cloud of Q fever germs. The cloud came toward us
and passed by. It was invisible, though; all we saw was clear
air," Bivens remembered in a 1991 Deseret News interview.
===Documents said the clouds headed
toward the old U.S. 40 (now I-80), along which the Army had
placed guinea pigs in cages in what the Army called "peripheral
sampling stations."
===The soldiers were flown to Ft.
Detrick, Md., where some became sick with Q fever — which can be
deadly, but usually is not.
===Bivens and others seemed not to
have suffered long-term effects.
===Dugway commander Col. Edward A.
Fisher said earlier this year, "Presidential directives,
originating in 1969, forbid open-air testing with any toxic
chemical or biological agents. For this purpose, we have built
state-of-the-art test chambers and laboratories" that he says
safely contain deadly germs.
Other threats
===Not surprisingly, the military
says a third of Dugway Proving Ground may be contaminated with
old unexploded bombs, rockets and artillery shells and most of
the vast Utah Test and Training Range is considered contaminated
by
similar ordnance from airplanes.
===However, it likely would
surprise most Utahns that 1,421 square miles of public lands off
of military bases — all on U.S. Bureau of Land Management areas
— are also considered possibly contaminated with unexploded
ordnance, according to a BLM study completed in 1994.
===The total square miles believed
to be contaminated adds up to an area roughly the size of Rhode
Island.
===In 1986, several campers were
injured on Hurricane Mesa, Washington County — once used as an
impact area for grenades and mortars. One of them found an old
M-79 40mm artillery shell and threw it into a campfire, where it
exploded.
===Not only conventional arms may
be scattered on such lands, but also germ and chemical weapons.
Dugway even tried to annex two possibly contaminated areas in
the late '80s, but the BLM opposed the move and simply wanted
them cleaned instead.
===Other military wastes have
"wandered" off military bases in Utah.
===For example, Department of
Defense environmental studies found that nitrates from
explosives at the old Tooele Army Depot had contaminated
regional groundwater between the 1940s and 1980s, when problems
were discovered.
===Nitrate poisoning is potentially
fatal to infants, but Army representatives said the situation
poses no immediate danger and contamination had not spread far.
===The Army also took steps to stop
further contamination, which it said had come from some unlined
ponds where wastewater was drained — often after washing off
equipment contaminated with explosives.
===Similarly, military
environmental studies reported contamination in groundwater near
Hill Air Force Base and the now-closed Defense Depot Ogden,
including fuel, solvents and toxic metals. The military has
taken steps to contain and clean such underground sources of
pollution.
Navy tools and machine parts contaminated with explosives are
also buried near western Salt Lake County suburbs.
===The Navy says the explosives
present no risk as long as they remain buried and relatively dry
so they do not contaminate groundwater beneath the Naval
Industrial Reserve Ordnance Plant near Magna.
Chemical arms
===Deseret Chemical Depot — formerly known as Tooele Army
Depot's South Area in Rush Valley — was the long-time home to 40
percent of the nation's chemical arms stockpile. Originally the
government stored a massive 13,616 tons of it in 1.1 million
separate containers, rockets, bombs and artillery shells.
===As of Oct. 15, the Army had destroyed 4,775 tons of
chemical agent (in 584,231 containers) at a $1 billion
incinerator at the Tooele County base, said John Pettebone,
public affairs specialist at Deseret Chemical Depot.
===But critics say incinerating those arms presents great
risks — accidents at the plant have released nerve agent — and
other communities near similar stockpiles nationwide are
fighting incinerators there. The incinerator's existence raises
the possibility that more arms could be transported to Utah for
destruction, although that is now banned by law.
===One accident at the depot in 1998 allowed unburned nerve
agent to escape the smokestack as workers figured alarms must be
in error. The incident shut down the plant for months and led to
congressional hearings.
===Deseret and Dugway are also home to some "non-stockpile"
chemical arms — a fancy name for old weapons that were dug up at
long-forgotten storage sites, or arms captured from foreign
countries.
Pettebone said Deseret has 297 such arms stored there —
296 rocket warheads plus one 1-ton container. Dugway spokeswoman
Melanie Moore said her base has 40 such arms in storage — all
but one of which were recovered on Dugway grounds. The other was
discovered at Denver's Rocky Mountain arsenal and sent to Utah.
===Congress has not yet decided how to dispose of such
"non-stockpile" weapons.
Continuing tests
===Not all chemical testing ended with the Cold War. Some
continues today.
===Dugway Proving Ground is continuing experiments with
poisonous chemicals inside the Melvin Bushnell Materiel Test
Facility, a $30 million structure built in the 1990s. The
research involves detection systems to warn when chemical
attacks are launched and to improve protective clothing used by
the military, police and emergency response teams.
===The building's test chamber measures 50 feet by 50 feet by
30 feet, so huge that technicians can place aircraft and tanks
inside to check susceptibility to chemical warfare agents. The
building standards used for the duct work that carries poison
gas to and from the chamber allows no detectable leakage.
===Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, has pushed — but has been
unsuccessful so far — to construct a mock city at Dugway,
complete with buildings, subway systems and homes where the
military and police could practice responding to chemical and
germ attacks.
===Dugway commander Fisher said earlier this year that Dugway
and Utah attract such testing now for many of the same reasons
they did during the Cold War.
==="The installation's land mass, remoteness, test facilities
and highly professional work force (make) our customers
recognize that Dugway is the ideal location for testing," he
said.
