Albuquerque Journal

Anti-nukers rally against NNSA campus proposal

They say Santa Fe’s ‘culture of peace’ at risk

- BY MARK OSWALD JOURNAL NORTH

SANTA FE — While considerat­ion of proposals to develop the city-owned Midtown Campus continues in private at City Hall, one group that has presented ideas for the property is already drawing public opposition.

About 50 people gathered in front of City Hall on Wednesday to say that the city needs to keep the National Nuclear Security Administra­tion and its local operation — Los Alamos National Laboratory — out of Santa Fe.

The NNSA’s Los Alamos Field Office has expressed interest in the campus mainly for office space or for engineerin­g, light manufactur­ing and research, but nothing involving radioactiv­e materials. City leaders are expected to name finalists for the role of “master developer” of the mostlyvaca­nt campus this month.

At Wednesday’s rally, Greg Mello of the Albuquerqu­e-based Los Alamos Study Group, noted that the Santa Fe City Council over the years has passed several resolution­s skeptical of lab operations. In 2018, the council OK’d a resolution citing safety lapses at LANL and calling for “suspension of any planned expanded plutonium pit production at LANL until all nuclear criticalit­y issues are resolved.”

Mello said Santa Fe has spoken out against LANL’s nuclear weapons mission and that inviting NNSA into town would be contrary to Santa Fe’s “culture of peace” and hurt its reputation.

A spokesman for the NNSA said Wednesday that in keeping with the confidenti­al process the city is using to assess proposals for the campus, the agency would have no comment.

People at the City Hall rally had signs saying “No LANL in Santa Fe,” “LANL: Toxic Science” and “Mayor Webber, listen to the people.”

Lydia Clark, the Study Group’s outreach director, said LANL’s “presence in the MidTown project will continue to support only a very small group of people, not the community as a whole, and will create even more instabilit­y and inequality.” Mello said LANL’s mission “is not economic developmen­t or technology transfer. Its mission is making nuclear bombs.”

He also said NNSA or LANL couldn’t do research or other work at the 84-acre campus site without significan­t security, contrary to the city’s goal of creating an open “town center.” Mello also said that while city leaders may see LANL as a source for job training and STEM education, “We can’t fix our schools by transferri­ng them to the military.”

 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Cathie Sullivan, center, takes part in a City Hall rally Wednesday against a proposal by NNSA for use of the city-owned Midtown Campus in Santa Fe.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Cathie Sullivan, center, takes part in a City Hall rally Wednesday against a proposal by NNSA for use of the city-owned Midtown Campus in Santa Fe.

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