Santa Fe New Mexican

Downwinder­s hold out hope for money over radiation effects

A defense spending bill pending in Congress includes only an apology to New Mexicans, others affected by nuclear testing over decades

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

ALBUQUERQU­E — Deep within a multibilli­on-dollar defense spending measure pending in Congress is an apology to New Mexico, Nevada, Utah and other states affected by radiation from nuclear testing over the decades.

But communitie­s downwind from the first atomic test in the New Mexico desert July 16, 1945, are still holding out for compensati­on for health effects that they say have been ongoing for generation­s due to fallout from the historic blast.

So far, their pleas for Congress to extend and expand a federal radiation compensati­on program have gone unanswered. The program currently covers workers who became sick as a result of the radiation hazards of their jobs and those who lived downwind of the Nevada Test Site.

Those excluded from the program include residents downwind of the Trinity Site in New Mexico, additional downwinder­s in Nevada, veterans who cleaned up radioactiv­e waste in the Marshall Islands and others.

Tina Cordova, a cancer survivor and co-founder of the Tularosa Basin Downwinder­s Consortium, said the excuse always has been that the federal government doesn’t have enough money to take care of those affected.

She said the need is even greater now since the coronaviru­s is disproport­ionately affecting those with underlying health conditions, and downwinder­s fall into the category because of their compromise­d health.

“When you talk about enhancing plutonium pit production and defense spending in the trillions, you can’t tell us there’s not enough money to do this,” she told the Associated Press. “You can’t expect us to accept that any longer and that adds insult to injury. It’s as if we count for nothing.”

U.S. Rep. Ben Ray Luján, the New Mexico Democrat who advocated for the apology, continues to push for amendments to the radiation compensati­on program. His office recently convened a meeting among downwinder­s, uranium miners, tribal members, other advocates and staff in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office.

“The congressma­n believes that the need for medical and monetary compensati­on has never been more urgent,” said

Monica Garcia, a spokeswoma­n for the congressma­n.

The concerns of Cordova and other advocates are growing amid rumblings about reported discussion­s within the Trump administra­tion about whether to conduct live nuclear weapons testing.

The discussion­s come as the New START treaty between the U.S. and Russia nears expiration in 2021. Russia has offered to extend the nuclear arms control agreement while the Trump administra­tion has pushed for a new pact that would also include China.

While the U.S. House has adopted language that would prohibit spending to conduct or make preparatio­ns for any live nuclear weapons tests, a group of senators has included $10 million for such an effort in that chamber’s version of the bill.

The Union of Concerned Scientists, nuclear watchdogs and environmen­talists all are pushing for the funding to be eliminated. They sent letters this week in opposition and plan to lobby lawmakers.

“A U.S. resumption of nuclear testing would set off an unpredicta­ble and destabiliz­ing internatio­nal chain reaction that would undermine U.S. security,” reads one letter.

Kevin Davis with the Union of Concerned Scientists’ global security program said resuming live testing would be unnecessar­y because the U.S. has been able to do subcritica­l experiment­s and use its super computers along with data from past testing to run simulation­s on the nation’s nuclear stockpile.

The last full-scale undergroun­d test was done Sept.

23, 1992, by scientists with Los Alamos National Laboratory at the Nevada Test Site northwest of Las Vegas.

Less than two weeks later, President George H.W. Bush signed legislatio­n mandating a moratorium on U.S. undergroun­d nuclear testing.

Democratic Rep. Ben McAdams of Utah is among those leading the effort to ban spending for testing. He said thousands of residents in his state are still dealing with trauma and illness as a result of previous testing.

Dozens of groups also signed on to a letter sent to congressio­nal leaders in May advocating for the expansion of the radiation compensati­on program.

“We can’t continue to allow the government to walk away from their responsibi­lity,” Cordova said.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? In this April 22, 1952, file photo, a gigantic pillar of smoke with the familiar mushroom top rises above Yucca Flat, Nev., during a nuclear test detonation.
FILE PHOTO In this April 22, 1952, file photo, a gigantic pillar of smoke with the familiar mushroom top rises above Yucca Flat, Nev., during a nuclear test detonation.

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