| OPINIONS |
In 1954, the United States Supreme Court ordered
American schools desegregated, in Brown v. Board of Education.
In 1973, the U.S. Senate began its Watergate investigation.
In 1983, in response to a November 1982 Appalachian
Observer newspaper declassification request, the DOE Oak Ridge Operations
office admitted it "lost," emitted and dumped 2.4 million pounds of mercury
in Oak Ridge.
The DOE ORO telephone call came at about noon on
our weekly deadline day, requesting I send someone to DOE HQ in Oak Ridge
to pick up a FOIA response.
The rest, as they say, is history.
Some said that I was "crazy" and "out to destroy
Oak Ridge" for seeking this information, and that no one would care. They
were wrong. Others in Oak Ridge shared information confidentially, and
encouraged me to seek the truth.
DOE now admits that there were 4.2 million pounds
of mercury "lost."
Since 1983, DOE has spent some $4.5 billion on "cleanup"
in Oak Ridge, with no end in sight. DOE and its allies euchred ATSDR into
changing the cleanup standard for mercury, and serious problems remain
as a result.
On May 17, 1983, few of us envisioned just how widespread
DOE and contractor misconduct had been, or the vast numbers of people affected
by it. While I predicted "a potential environmental health disaster" in
AO editorials, and was churlishly chided by DOE for "alarmist language,"
the simple truth is that I did not then imagine just how big that DOE "environmental
health disaster" might become.
Seventeen years later, our leaders need the steely
determination of Harry Truman, Earl Warren, Thurgood Marshall and Sam Ervin.
Seventeen years later, that 26-year-old Appalachian
Observer newspaper editor is a public interest lawyer representing whistleblowers
and other DOE victims. He is still hated by DOE Oak Ridge managers. He
is still seeking the truth. I am now honored to have my views shared by
DOE's victims -- workers and residents from across the country, with an
apology by the Secretary of Energy and bipartisan compensation legislation
supported by editorial writers and Congressmen. This is a very special
day, with meaningful legislation possible, if not this year, then next
year.
The lesson of history: Never give up. Individual
efforts can change history.
See, e.g., Jimmy Breslin's book on Watergate, "How
the Good Guys Finally Won."
In tribute to all of the DOE/AEC victims whose sacrifice
made victory in the Cold War possible, Congress should pass full and fair
compensation legislation for all of DOE's Cold War radiation and toxicant
victims, whether babies with genetic damage, Downwinders/residents, plant
workers, Atomic Veterans or Gulf War veterans.
Our struggle is righteous and it can and should
be won. The bill should not be limited only to plant workers, but should
include family members and residents poisoned by DOE or suffering genetic
abnormalities.
Rep. Zach Wamp pressed the need for compensating
residents at the April 12 press conference held by Secretary Richardson,
televised by C-SPAN: Secretary Richardson only frowned at these words.
In my humble opinion, if Congress has to kill a
bad bill now to pass a good bill later, then so be it. DOE should not control
compensation of its own victims, or pick and choose which victims it will
compensate. This is a blatant conflict of interest.
Longtime Oak Ridge lawyer Gene Joyce made excellent
suggestions on enacting compensation legislation in his column, and I salute
him.
If hindsight is 20/20, it is only reasonable that
DOE should not be allowed to rush things so as to make the nuclear weapons
compensation bill a joke, covering only a few people, holding out cash
over their heads and then dashing peoples' hopes and prayers in the details.
What do you think?
For more information online, visit www.downwinders.org/victims.html
Edward A. Slavin Jr. is an attorney
who represents Oak Ridge whistle-blowers and sick workers. He lives in
St. Augustine, Fla., and can be reached by writing him at P.O. Box 3084,
St. Augustine, FL 32085-3084 or via e-mail at easlavin@aol.com