Time to Cancel the Army’s Lease at Pohakuloa over Radiation Contamination

Call from Malu ‘Aina:

Time to Cancel the Army’s Lease at Pohakuloa over Radiation Contamination

1. The Army repeatedly denied the use of Depleted Uranium (DU) in Hawaii.

2. Now it has been confirmed that in the 1960s the U.S. Army used the Pohakuloa Training Area for firing spotting rounds containing DU for the Davy Crockett nuclear weapon system.

3. The DU spotting rounds have created the presence of radiation contamination at Pohakuloa.

4. DU is a chemically toxic and radioactive heavy metal with a half-life of 4.5 billion years.

5. DU emits radioactive alpha particles than can cause cancer when inhaled (and poses health concerns for troops, residents and visitors in Hawaii).

6. Due to poor military record keeping, there may be more DU contamination at Pohakuloa than just Davy Crockett spotting rounds.

7. On July 2, 2008 the Hawaii County Council passed Resolution 639-08 by a vote of 8-1.

8. Resolution 639-08 called for “a complete halt to B-2 bombing missions and to all live firing exercises and other activities at the Pohakuloa Training Area (PTA) that creates dust until there is an assessment and clean up of the depleted uranium already present.”

9. Live-fire continues at PTA and the DU has not been cleaned up. Live-fire and high winds at Pohakuloa risk spreading the radiation contamination off-base.

10. While major potions (more than 84,000-acres) of Crown lands at PTA were taken (without compensation) by Executive orders, PTA has a State General Lease No. S-3849 by the State of Hawaii, Board of Land and Natural Resources – U.S. Lease, Contract No. DA-94-626-ENG-80 – August 19, 1964 (expiration date 16 Aug. 2029) consisting of 22,988 acres for $1.00 for 65 years.

11. In the 1960s when the Army leased State land in the Waiakea Forest Reserve (Hilo’s watershed) for what was suppose to be weather testing, but in fact was chemical weapons testing including deadly sarin gas, Hawaii County residents spoke up and the State lease to the Army was canceled; now, therefore,

THE PEOPLE OF HAWAII COUNTY NEED TO SPEAK UP AGAIN TO CANCEL THE ARMY’S LEASE AT THE POHAKULOA TRAINING AREA AND REQUIRE CLEAN UP OF DEPLETED URANIUM (DU) RADIATION CONTAMINATION.

Let Your Voice Be Heard!

1. Mourn all victims of violence. 2. Reject war as a solution. 3. Defend civil liberties. 4. Oppose all discrimination, anti-Islamic, anti-Semitic, etc.5. Seek peace through justice in Hawai`i and around the world.

Contact: Malu `Aina Center for Non-violent Education & Action P.O. Box AB Kurtistown, Hawai`i 96760.

Phone (808) 966-7622. Email ja@interpac.net http://www.malu-aina.org

Hilo Peace Vigil leaflet (April 30, 2010 – 450th week) – Friday 3:30-5PM downtown Post Office

Army issues convoy advisory for Big Island

http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20100327/BREAKING01/100327053/Army+issues+convoy+advisory+for+Big+Island

Updated at 8:44 p.m., Saturday, March 27, 2010

Army issues convoy advisory for Big Island

Advertiser Staff

The Army says Oahu-based units are due to convoy from Kawaiahae Harbor to Pohakuloa Training Area on the Big Island starting this weekend.

The Army is asking motorists to be alert and drive with care Saturday through Tuesday — the days of the troop movement.

The soldiers are due to travel on Akioni Pule, Queen Kaahumanu Highway, Waikoloa Road and Mamalahoa-Saddle Road Corridor.

The Army says it’s working with local authorities to coordinate the troop movement.

Citizens denied access to meeting protest outside Pohakuloa Training Area

http://bigislandweekly.com/articles/2010/03/03/read/news/news03.txt

Citizens denied access to meeting protest outside PTA

By Heather Nicholson

Wednesday, March 3, 2010 11:38 AM HST

About 30 people concerned with depleted uranium (DU) radiation on Pohakuloa Training Area picketed outside the Saddle Road military base Feb. 24. At the same time, the group received word that their petition to challenge the Army’s license to possess DU was denied.

Jim Albertini, group leader and founder of the non-violent education and action group, Malu Aina, expressed disappointment at the decision handed down from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), who said the petition “lacked standing.”

“It means citizens have nothing to say about this issue,” said Albertini, who went in front of the NRC with three other Hawaii residents in January calling the Army’s assessment of DU hazards inadequate.

Though Albertini and his group were not invited to the U.S. Army’s annual Community Leaders Day, various decision makers were seen in attendance, including Mayor Billy Kenoi. The attendees heard progress updates on everything from Saddle Road construction to depleted uranium.

U.S. Army spokesman Mike Egami said the DU discussion was a review of topics already on the radar, including the Army’s application to the NRC to possess and manage residual quantities of DU at various bases, including Pohakuloa Training Area (PTA).

Repeated attempts to contact Kenoi’s office for information about the meeting went unanswered. When the Army was asked to provide Big Island Weekly with a list of the attendees, we were told the group consisted of “politicos or representatives from various offices from the Mayor’s office, County Council, Congressional offices, business leaders, UH Hilo, school principals, DLNR, hunters, and members of the PTA Cultural Advisory Committee.”

“The community leaders were invited to provide opportunities for each to take back information to their respective organization and disseminate information, as well as receive comments to provide back to the military,” said Egami.

The majority of protesters opposed to the fact that the public was not invited to the meeting and stood across from the entrance of PTA holding signs that read “Where’s the transparency” and “Radiation cover up.” The group tried several times to get inside the base and was denied a list of invited attendees.

“We want this meeting that they are having about our neighborhood to be open,” said Hilo resident Stephen Paulmier. “It’s mainly about transparency in government.”

Ret. U.S. Army Col. Ann Wright stood on the side of Albertini’s picket line, concerned that the politicians invited to the meeting could not be trusted to ask the Army hard questions.

“This meeting undercuts the citizen’s right to know. It’s outrageous that no one can go in since there’s been so much public outcry,” she said.

WHAT IS DEPLETED URANIUM?

Depleted uranium is a waste obtained from producing fuel for nuclear reactors and atomic bombs. DU is extremely dense and heavy, so much so that projectiles with a DU head can penetrate the armored steel of military vehicles and buildings. It is also a spontaneous pyrophoric material that can generate so much heat that when it reaches its target it explodes.

The American military has been using DU to coat artillery, tanks and aircraft for years, and the DU found on Hawaii military bases came from The Davy Crockett, a series of recoilless guns used in 1960s training missions.

When exposed to very high temperatures, DU can go airborne. According to the World Health Organization, DU emits about 60 percent of the radiation as natural uranium. When inhaled, DU particles make their way into the blood stream and can cause health problems, especially to the lungs.

When DU was discovered at Hawaii military bases in 2006, the Army received much backlash after years of denying that any uranium weapons were ever used on island. After military testing of the remaining DU at PTA and Oahu’s Schofield Barracks, the Army contends that the radiation is too low to be a health concern.

Pahoa resident and retired Army pilot Albert Tell agrees.

“There’s more radiation in my house then there is out here,” Tell said.

Tell and about 10 other military supporters comprised mainly of ex-military personnel picketed outside PTA on Feb. 24 also. Brandishing several American flags and dressed in military fatigues, the group said they were there to support the troops, PTA and counteract any misinformation Albertini and his supporters handed out.

“I don’t know anyone who’s died from DU,” said a picketer who refused to give his name. “We have some dying from cancer but they’ve lived other places to.”

IS DU BAD FOR YOU?

It’s true the long-term effects of DU radiation are largely unknown, and while some contend DU is the cause of Gulf War Syndrome there are no tests or reports to support it. Since DU goes airborne under extreme heat, some citizens are concerned that the live-fire and bombing training missions still conducted on PTA are aerosolizing DU and not only putting down-wind communities at risk, but active PTA soldiers as well.

Albertini said he won’t be satisfied until the Army allows independent scientists to conduct their own DU tests on PTA. He also wants all live-fire and bombing sessions on PTA halted until an independent DU test can be conducted.

“We have to know the extent of the health risks,” he said.

Hawaii County Council passed a resolution calling for the halt of live-fire and bombing that may spread airborne DU, however, the Army continues to do so. They said it is highly unlikely that DU will move off PTA and into the community due to military live-fire training.

“The Army has completed most of the DU investigation, but is continuing to monitor the water and air qualities at Schofield Barracks and PTA,” Egami said.

The Army is also awaiting a decision from NRC regarding their license to possess DU.

Military Closed Door Meeting at Pohakuloa with politicians Protested!

Below is a press release from Malu ‘Aina and Hawai’i Island peace movement activists about an action that took place today at Pohakuloa, where the Army held a closed door meeting with the Hawai’i Island Mayor Billy Kenoi and State Representative Faye Hanohano and other officials.  State Representative Josh Green sent a communication to organizer Jim Albertini that “Please alert your list that I didn’t and don’t exclude people.”

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Military Closed Door Meeting at Pohakuloa with politicians Protested!

On Wednesday, Feb. 24, 2010 more than 30 Big Island residents set up a picket line outside the Pohakuloa training Area (PTA) to protest a closed door meeting between military, county, state, federal officials, and special interests. The secret list of invitees was not released upon request. What ever happened to openness in government? Transparency? The consent of the governed? We the people…

Retired Army Colonel, Ann Wright, requested to attend the meeting to represent the interests of Malu Aina peace organization but was denied entry. Col. Wright then joined the picket.  Among the attendees seen entering PTA were Mayor Billy Kenoi and State Representative Faye Hanohano.

On Feb. 21, 2010, a letter from Malu Aina (on the web at www.malu-aina.org) was sent to the commanding officer at PTA and to all county and state elected officials. The letter states: “We do not believe in ‘Democracy by invitation only.'” The letter said that “we are angry that the military continues to conduct bombing missions and live-fire without a complete independent assessment of the Depleted Uranium (DU) radiation present at PTA and without cleaning up as called for in Hawaii County Council resolution 639-08. The military has been stonewalling the community’s concerns about health and safety for years. The Davy Crockett DU weapons may just be the tip of far more widespread DU contamination.”

The letter listed eight questions and asked the elected officials to ask the questions of the military and to “Please Get Answers.” Some of the questions asked included: Why hasn’t the Army stopped all live-fire and bombing missions ? Are there more forgotten hazards? Why is there plenty of money for new military projects, but little to clean up… When will all of the 50-plus present and former military sites, totaling more than 250,000-acres on Hawaii Island, be cleared of unexploded ordnance, toxins, and other hazards? Why won’t the military participate in public forums on community concerns about health and safety over depleted uranium and other military toxins? What’s the Army afraid of? How much Hawai’i Island land is the military planning to take? Where and when?”

The letter concluded with the following statement: ” If the U.S. stopped spending several $billion/per day on imperial wars there would be more money for county and state budget needs, jobs, and funding human needs. We urgently request that you–as public officials–speak up on these critical issues of War, Militarism and the Health of our island citizens.” With gratitude and aloha.

Military Clean-up NOT Build-up!

1. Mourn all victims of violence. 2. Reject war as a solution. 3. Defend civil liberties. 4. Oppose all discrimination, anti-Islamic, anti-Semitic, etc. 5. Seek peace through justice in Hawai`i and around the world.

Contact: Malu `Aina Center for Non-violent Education & Action P.O. Box AB Kurtistown, Hawai`i 96760.

Phone (808) 966-7622. Email ja@interpac.net http://www.malu-aina.org

Hilo Peace Vigil leaflet (Feb. 26, 2010 – 441st week) – Friday 3:30-5PM downtown Post Office

Pohakuloa Picket

Pohakuloa Picket

Military/Politicians/Business interests meet

(Peace groups, Kanaka Maoli organizations, environmental groups, community associations, etc. NOT INVITED!)

Democracy by Invitation Only!

Wednesdy, Feb. 24th

8:30AM Pohakuloa Training Area (PTA)

Main Gate

(car pools leave Hilo bayfront parking lot makai/Hamakua side of Pauahi St. Kamehameha Ave. intersection at 7:30 sharp)

What’s the Army afraid of?

Is it citizen participation in government?

Is it because we might object to military expansion plans on Hawaii Island, continued live-fire amid DU radiation contamination at PTA, new fast-track military superferry plans?

Why hasn’t the Army stopped all live-fire, B-2 bombing missions and other activities that create dust until there is a complete assessment and clean-up of the DU already present as called for in County of Hawaii resolution 639-08? The NRC has not signed off on radiation at PTA.

When will all of the 50-plus present and former military sites, totaling more than 250,000-acres on Hawaii Island, be cleared of unexploded ordnance, toxins, and other hazards?

We Demand Military Clean-up NOT Build-up!

Stop the Wars! Fund Human needs!

We demand an immediate end to all US imperial wars of aggression and occupation, including the ongoing illegal occupation of the independent nation of Hawaii.

Contact: Malu `Aina Center for Non-violent Education & Action P.O. Box AB Kurtistown, Hawai`i 96760.

Phone (808) 966-7622. Email ja@interpac.net http://www.malu-aina.org

Hawai’i faces a Strykerferry threat

When critics of the Hawaii Superferry uncovered its ties to military programs and warned that the Superferry was a front for establishing a U.S.-based shipyard that could compete for the military JHSV and Littoral Combat Ship contracts, these ideas were derided as “paranoid conspiracy theories”. But less than a year since the demise of the Hawaii Superferry, we are seeing the full scope of the military plans for inserting high speed ferries in the Pacific.
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http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20100209/NEWS01/2090360/High-speed+catamarans+may+be+based+in+Hawaii
Posted on: Tuesday, February 9, 2010

High-speed catamarans may be based in Hawaii

By William Cole
Advertiser Military Writer

The Army said it plans to look at the environmental impact of basing up to three “joint high-speed vessels” in Pearl Harbor — speedy craft capable of carrying large loads, similar to the defunct Hawaii Superferry’s ships.

Last March, Hawaii Superferry shut down operations of its ship Alakai after the state Supreme Court ruled the company couldn’t operate without completing an environmental impact statement. The company filed for bankruptcy in May.

Mike Formby, deputy director of the state Department of Transportation Harbors Division, said yesterday the impacts are unclear should the Army decide to base one or more of the 338-foot catamarans in Hawai’i.

“One thing we don’t know that needs to be fleshed out is where the vessels are going to operate, if they are deployed or positioned in Pearl Harbor,” Formby said. “Are they going to go to Pōhakuloa (Training Area) on the Big Island? Are they going to use our state piers? Where are they going to offload their military equipment and troops? None of that has been discussed with the state.”

The Army published a notice in the Federal Register on Friday saying it would conduct a programmatic environmental impact statement analysis of basing up to 12 joint high-speed vessels at five locations.

Officials with the Army Environmental Command in Maryland could not be reached for comment yesterday.

The notice said the Army is working in coordination with the Navy, which is scheduled to receive 10 of the catamarans.

The environmental analysis will consider the impacts of stationing the Army catamarans in the Virginia Tidewater area; San Diego; Seattle-Tacoma, Wash.; the Pearl Harbor area; and Guam.

The joint high-speed vessel “is a strategic transport vessel designed to support the rapid transport of military troops and equipment in the U.S. and abroad,” according to a statement from the Army Environmental Command.

The shallow-draft vessel includes a weapons mount, a flight deck for helicopters, and an off-load ramp that allows vehicles to drive off the ship quickly.

The Superferry’s Alakai catamaran was 349 feet long and could carry 866 passengers and up to 282 cars. The state in July stopped pursuing an environmental impact statement after Hawaii Superferry declared bankruptcy two months earlier.

Formby, with the state DOT, said about $750,000 had been spent for an EIS, but the completion of the environmental analysis would have cost about $500,000 more.

The Alakai made its last scheduled roundtrip between O’ahu and Maui in March.

A second Superferry vessel destined for Hawai’i, the Huakai, was retrofitted with a vehicle loading ramp that would have allowed the catamaran access to large piers without having to use onshore ramps and barges financed by the state. The vehicle ramps also make the vessels more useful to the military.

Formby said he didn’t know if the Hawai’i Superferry vessels could become part of the military’s joint high-speed vessel plan.

“There was some initial discussion that the (Pentagon) might have been interested in chartering one or both of the vessels as interim use until the (joint high-speed vessels) come off the production line,” Formby said.

He added that he hasn’t “seen anything to indicate they are moving in that direction, but it was discussed.”

The Army said it will look at three options as part of the joint high-speed vessel examination.

One option is stationing five high-speed vessels at port facilities in the U.S. or its territories as well as overseas locations, with up to three vessels at any one of the locations noted above.

A second option the Army said it will examine is the basing of 12 high-speed vessels, with up to three vessels at any one location. The Army said it also would examine a “no action” alternative.

High-speed vessel detachments consist of a 31-member crew and can accommodate up to 360 additional soldiers. The vessels can reach speeds of 35 to 45 knots (40 to 51 mph) and have an equipment carrying capacity of about 700 short tons.

The vessels will require fueling-at-sea training; helicopter training; live-fire training; and high-speed, open-water training, the Army said.

The Army said the vessels will spend 150 days or more away from the home station. The home-station sites would be used to support berthing and training requirements in and around the stationing location for 170 days per year.

Military joint high-speed vessels have periodically been in Hawai’i for testing and training before.

The HSV-2 “Swift,” a 320-foot all-aluminum catamaran, was in Hawai’i in 2004 for Rim of the Pacific war games, as was the HSV-X1 Joint Venture, a high-speed vessel leased by the Army, which was in the Isles for an extended period.

The Army at the time said it was interested in basing high-speed vessels in Hawai’i in part to transport its fast-response Stryker brigade of eight-wheeled vehicles.

Reach William Cole at wcole@honoluluadvertiser.com.

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Testimony heard on Army’s DU permit application

Four petitioners argued that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) should force the Army to clean up depleted uranium (DU) contamination in Hawai’i, acccording to the Hawaii Tribune Herald.  According the the article, the Army admitted it had “no way of knowing how many rounds of depleted uranium were fired at Pohakuloa Training Area and that at least 714 rounds were shipped to Hawaii in the past.”  But they Army, with concurrence from the NRC, argued that the petitioners did not have standing to bring a challenge to the license.

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Testimony heard on DU request

by Peter Sur

Tribune-Herald Staff Writer

Published: Thursday, January 14, 2010 7:09 AM HST

Group wants Army to clean up contamination

Four people urged a panel of judges to force the Army to clean up its depleted uranium-contaminated lands Wednesday.

During the videoconference hearing, which lasted more than five hours, an Army attorney acknowledged that there was no way of knowing how many rounds of depleted uranium were fired at Pohakuloa Training Area and that at least 714 rounds were shipped to Hawaii in the past.

But the Army also challenged the petitioners’ standing, or right to bring a complaint, and said that even if they did have standing they did not have any admissible complaints.

READ MORE…

http://www.hawaiitribune-herald.com/articles/2010/01/14/local_news//local02.txt

Testimony heard on DU request

by Peter Sur

Tribune-Herald Staff Writer

Published: Thursday, January 14, 2010 7:09 AM HST

Group wants Army to clean up contamination

Four people urged a panel of judges to force the Army to clean up its depleted uranium-contaminated lands Wednesday.

During the videoconference hearing, which lasted more than five hours, an Army attorney acknowledged that there was no way of knowing how many rounds of depleted uranium were fired at Pohakuloa Training Area and that at least 714 rounds were shipped to Hawaii in the past.

But the Army also challenged the petitioners’ standing, or right to bring a complaint, and said that even if they did have standing they did not have any admissible complaints.

The Army’s position was shared by attorneys for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, to the dismay of the petitioners.

The Army on Nov. 6, 2008, applied before the NRC for a license to possess and manage depleted uranium at nine -military installations, including Pohakuloa and Oahu’s Schofield Barracks.

Jim Albertini, Cory Harden, Isaac Harp and Luwella Leonardi are opposing the license. They contend that the weak radioactive material left over after enriched uranium is removed is toxic and harmful to humans when vaporized and inhaled.

The Army has said the DU impact zones are in restricted areas and are not a threat to the public. The three-judge Licensing Board heard arguments from the petitioners, the Army and the NRC.

In the 1960s, spotting rounds containing depleted uranium were shipped to Hawaii so troops could practice with the Davy Crockett Recoilless Rifle. The gun was designed to fire a small nuclear warhead against ground troops. The DU was later rediscovered at Schofield, and in 2007 at Pohakuloa.

Wednesday, the petitioners gathered in a small room on the third floor of the University of Hawaii at Hilo’s Mookini Library to argue their cases. They spoke by videoconference to the judges and attorneys for the Army and the NRC, who gathered in Rockville, Md.

About 10 people, friends of Albertini and Harden, watched the proceedings from a television set up just outside the room. The connection dropped several times.

Speaking first, Harden asked the Army to do a thorough search for “forgotten radioactive hazards” and said only 1,000 acres of the 51,000-acre impact area at Pohakuloa was adequately searched.

“If the military has nothing to hide,” said Albertini, a peace activist, “prove it by transparency which at present is terribly lacking.”

Harp and Leonardi both spoke of their heritage as Native Hawaiians. Leonardi lives in Waianae, Oahu, and discussed the situation at Schofield Barracks.

Depleted Uranium: Residents accuse Army of covering up contamination

http://www.westhawaiitoday.com/articles/2010/01/14/local/local02.txt

Residents accuse Army of covering up contamination

DEPLETED URANIUM: ‘The burden should be on the Army’

By NANCY COOK LAUER

WES T HAWAII TODAY

ncook-lauer@westhawaiitoday.com

HILO — Four Hawaii residents charged the U.S. Army with trying to cover up its discovery of depleted uranium and then taking a cavalier attitude about cleaning it up during a five-hour hearing Wednesday before a panel of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The Army is seeking an after-the-fact license to possess the radioactive material that was used in weapons training at Schofield Barracks on Oahu and Pohakuloa Training Area on the Big Island. The DU spotting rounds were used in the 1960s and have been emitting low levels of radiation since.

The Army contends the radiation is too low to pose a safety hazard.

“We’ve been open, transparent and we believe accountable with the steps we have taken,” said Lt. Col. Kent Herring, representing the Army’s Environmental Litigation Division. “The Army has kept the public informed. …There’s no purposeful withholding.”

But the Army’s contention is disputed by the petitioners, Kurtistown resident and peace activist Jim Albertini; Cory Harden, representing the Sierra Club; and two Native Hawaiians: Isaac Harp, of Waimea, and Luwella Leonardi, of Waianae, Oahu.

They say the Army has never proven the radiation is not harming those who live and travel near the military installations and they criticized the Army for sampling less than 1 percent of the 133,000-acre PTA installation off Saddle Road between Mauna Loa and Mauna Kea.

“The burden should be on the Army to prove no harm. The Army says there is no harm because they haven’t looked and don’t want to look,” said Albertini. “A license to possess depleted uranium is a nuclear waste dump.”

The three-member Atomic Safety and Licensing Board grilled the Hawaii residents, Army staff and NRC staffers alike. A decision on whether the petitioners have standing to participate in the license application will be made next month.

The petitioners participated by videoconference from a cramped video booth at the University of Hawaii at Hilo, while the federal officials participated from a Rockville, Md., hearing room.

Both the Army and NRC staff attorneys contend the petitioners didn’t prove they have a right to intervene in the license application process. Just living nearby is not enough, they said. Nor did the residents prove there is greater health risks to them because of the Army’s actions.

“Their claims cannot be entirely speculative,” said NRC staff attorney Kimberly Sexton.

Harp was hesitant to believe the Army’s position that there was no health hazard associated with the DU contamination. He noted that the military has a long history of conducting biological and chemical warfare experiments on the Big Island under code names such as Blue Tango, Yellow Leaf, Green Mist and Tall Timber.

“No one knows how many may have become ill, disabled or died from these experiments because only the military and their partners knew about them,” Harp said.

Harden produced documents showing the government knew about the DU at Schofield as early as 1996, not 2005 as the Army claims.

“I think if it was gold and not radioactivity, I think they would have found a lot more of it,” Harden said.

Even the administrative judges weren’t completely satisfied with the Army’s position that it was using a conservative estimate of how many rounds were even used at the two sites. The Army can account for 714 rounds — containing 299 pounds of DU — shipped to Hawaii. But it doesn’t know if that’s all that was sent to the state, because the records have been lost.

“I’m still troubled by the uncertainty of the numbers,” said Judge Anthony Baratta.

Herring said the Army is not dumping any DU contaminated soil off-site, but it has started collecting some of it into 55-gallon drums that are being stored at Schofield.

And Herring said all live round exercises now under way at the two sites do not fire high explosives into the contaminated areas, but they do use 50-caliber machine guns, spotting rounds that have just enough explosive to create a puff of smoke and 120 mm mortar rounds.

“No high-explosive rounds will be fired into DU areas,” Herring said.

Albertini: Opening Statement before the Nuclear Regulatory Commission Atomic Safety & Licensing Board

Opening Statement before the Nuclear Regulatory Commission Atomic Safety & Licensing Board by Jim Albertini

Docket #40-9083

University of Hawaii, Hilo Campus

Library Building, Videoconference Room LRC 361

Administrative Judges for Oral Arguments:

E. Roy Hawkens, Chairman, Dr. Anthony J. Baratta, Dr. Michael F. Kennedy

January 13, 2010

Aloha Kakou –A warm greeting to you all In Rockville, Maryland and others viewing via the internet wherever you may be.

Before us is the issue of the U.S. Army’s request for a license to possess Depleted Uranium (DU), not only at sites in Hawaii but at numerous other sites around the U.S.  Let me translate that is simple terms.  A license to possess rubbish is a rubbish dump.  A license to possess depleted uranium is a nuclear waste dump.

For the record –my name is James V. Albertini.  My physical address is l7-339 Helenihi Place in Ola’a (Kurtistown), Island of Hawaii which is the same physical address of Malu ‘Aina Center For Non-violent education & Action.  My phone # is 808-966-7622.  The Center for Non-violent Education & Action is a 50l (c) (3) non-profit all volunteer organization.  I am the president of the organization which grows food — fruits and vegetables, fish and eggs on its 22-acre organic farm.  Most of the food we grow is shared freely with people in need.  Some is marketed to carry on educational work for peace, justice and protecting the environment.  I am here both as an individual and representing the organization which is very much concerned about military contamination in Hawaii and around the world.

My home and our organization are located approximately 25 miles from Pohakuloa Training Area (PTA).  I planted the first banana trees and the beginning of more than 50 varieties of fruit, 30 varieties of taro and other vegetables, 30 years ago.  Malu ‘Aina farm has been my home ever since.  On cool nights, with winds coming off the mountains (and the cocqui frogs not chirping), I can hear the live-fire shelling and bombing at Pohakuloa.  If the wind carries the sound I wonder if it’s also carrying the poison dust of Depleted Uranium –DU. On an island we are all downwind.  The same can be said of the planet.

Let’s cut to the chase.  Recently 6700 tons of sand from Kuwait contaminated with DU at Camp Doha, a U.S. Army base there, has been shipped to Boise, Idaho for burial.  Poor Boise, but what’s good for Kuwait should be good for Hawaii.  Instead of seeking a license for the depleted uranium to remain in place at Schofield and Pohakuloa, the military needs to learn a lesson that all of our mothers teach us from small kid time — clean up your mess. The Army needs to clean up in Hawaii as it did Camp Doha, and in such a way so as to not contaminate other communities, if that is even feasible.   Maybe you have room in Rockville, Maryland.

On Hawaii island, our organization published a map (put map on screen) documenting 57 known present and former military sites totaling over 400 square miles (250,000-acres) that may contain live arms and other military toxins and should be considered military hazard areas.  Most of these sites remain unfenced and with no signage about unexploded ordnance and other hazards.

Instead of cleaning up, the military is expanding its mess that now involves radiation contamination at Schofield, PTA, and possibly other sites in Hawaii, especially Makua Valley.   For more information on this military mess in Hawaii I refer you to “No Peace in Paradise,” Haleakala Times, May 8, 2007 by Kyle Kajihiro.  Also the book –“The Dark Side of Paradise –Hawaii in a Nuclear World” co-authored by myself and others.

In September of 2009 the West Hawaii Today daily newspaper on this island conducted a poll.  Approximately l,000 people responded to the question: Do you believe the army about depleted uranium on Pohakuloa?  l4% –l35 votes said they believe the army and are not concerned about their health. 48% –445 votes said they want independent testing for DU, and 36% –339 votes said they do not believe a word the army says.

The NRC’s job is to protect the health and safety of the people and not to put a burden on the people to prove that we have been harmed by military depleted uranium.  This basic human right and legal principle is recognized in environmental law –that the proponent (in this case the U.S. Army) is required to study the possible impacts before actually impacting the public by training, etc.  Environmental Impact law recognizes the premise that the cart (the impact) comes after, not before, the horse (the study).  The Army has it backwards.  It’s impacted us and now it doesn’t even want to do good science to see what the impact might be.

I’m a taxpayer and I have overall financial and other responsibility for our non-profit organization.  I want the organic food we grow, and the air, land and water in Hawaii and around the world to be healthy, not contaminated with chemicals or military radiation.  As a taxpayer, my taxes have unfortunately helped pay for the mess, and my taxes will have to help clean it up. That constitutes legal standing to me.

On July 2, 2008, The Hawaii County Council passed resolution #639-08 by a vote of 8 to l.  The resolution urges the U.S. military to address the hazards of depleted uranium at the Pohakuloa Training Area. The only nay vote was by a retired Army Colonel.  The resolution calls for 8 action points but number one is “Order a complete halt to B-2 bombing missions and to all live firing exercises and other activities at the Pohakuloa training Area that create dust until there is an assessment and clean up of the depleted uranium already present.”  The other 7 actions call for monitoring, funding, reports, meetings, search of records, etc.  By the way, according to the Army Stryker EIS, between 7 million and l4.8 million live-rounds are fired at PTA annually.  Everything from small arms, to heavy artillery, rockets, missiles, and bunker busting bombs.

My preference is for no military license to possess DU here or anywhere. International law says DU weapons are WMDs and illegal.   I want PTA shut down, decommissioned, cleaned up and returned to its rightful owners — the independent nation of Hawaii.  A first step toward that end, or in any license to possess DU,  is a halt to all live-fire and other activities that create dust at PTA.  There needs to be a thorough independent assessment (thorough testing and monitoring) of the entire l33,000-acre PTA base for DU contamination (not simply l,000-acres spot checked).  After the assessment, clean up needs to be completed.  Given the military’s history of lies (example –Army doing nerve gas testing instead of weather testing in Hilo’s watershed), and the use of DU for ballast and in penetrator weapons (put document of various DU weapons on screen), there is reason to believe there is far more DU contamination at PTA than the military wants us to know.  This is all the more reason we need independent, comprehensive good scientific data, which to date is missing.  If the military has nothing to hide, prove it by transparency which at present is terribly lacking.

My Response to NRC Question One  –How the Army downplays inhalation hazard of DU oxide?

First I would like to concur with submissions sent to you Oct. 30, 2009 by Cory Harden quoting Dr. Lorrin Pang, MD,  Dr. Mike Reimer,  and Dr. Marshall Blann with criticisms of the Army’s air monitoring and characterization studies –what’s at PTA and how much of a hazard.

How does the Army fail to acknowledge the inhalation hazard of DU poison dust?  The Army has made numerous unreliable safety claims without any studies done, data and reviews.  Examples.

l. August 27, 2007 Hawaii Tribune-Herald news article headline “DU found at PTA”: “Material doesn’t pose a health dangers” Army says.  This is the date the Army claimed they discovered DU at Pohakuloa.

2. Aug. 30, 2007 Army News  Army.Mil/News: “DU found at PTA poses no threat to the population of Hawaii, civilian or military.” Col. Matthew Margotta, Commander, US Army Garrison. Same article “Today DU is not used in military training, but in the 50s and 60s it was used anytime you needed a heavy weight,” said Greg Komp, Senior health physicist, Office of the Director of Army Safety, Washington, D.C.

3. April 24, 2008 Honolulu Advertiser “DU poses no Health Risk” Army says.

4.  Aug. 4, 2008 Honolulu Star-Bulletin “DU –NO Risk to public Army contends.”

Let me make an analogy:  Army Garrison Commander Col. Margotta says that quote “DU found at PTA poses no threat to the population of Hawaii, civilian or military.” end quote.  He said those words  3 days after DU was confirmed to be present at PTA. What was his assurance based on?  No studies were done.  No data produced.  No peer reviews.  Nothing. Zip.  Zilch.

The analogy I want to make concerns cigarettes.  The few DU pieces found (the cigarette) are not the major concern.  Since only a few DU pieces were found , much remains unaccounted for.The unaccounted for DU may have been exploded and burned by 40-50 years of bombing and the DU particles scattered by the winds.  Like a cigarette butt in an ash tray is an indication of smoking.  With cigarettes, it’s the smoking of the cigarette that is the health threat.  With DU it is the inhalation of insoluble DU oxide particles that is the main possible health threat, danger, risk, etc. The Army found a few chunks of DU from the Davy Crockett DU spotting rounds at PTA out of several hundreds, perhaps more than 2500 rounds that were fired.  It’s not what they found that is my main concern although that should be cleaned up.  It’s what they didn’t find.  Where is the rest of the 292 pounds or perhaps more than a half ton of DU from the Davy Crocketts?  Possibly vaporized by 40 years of bombing and carried with the wind?

I’m going to cite a recent statement by Dr. Lorrin Pang, MD, MPH, 24 yrs. in the Army medical core, consultant to the WHO, Maui County Public Health Officer, but speaking as a private citizen.

Dr. Pang said, “the Army previously assured us that soldiers exposed to high levels of inhaled DU oxides developed no illnesses.  This has been reviewed by a group of independent researchers sponsored by the VA who showed that problems like tumors (benign and malignant) were ignored.  Were other symptoms ignored as well in their obsession to “prove” safety? Because of this the Army has publicly lost credibility on the issue of DU health risks.”

Concerning PTA, Dr. Pang contends that this NRC process needs to be similar to an Environmental Impact Statement process.   The users (the Army) need to investigate and show the impact on health, etc. The onus is on the Army to guarantee (within reason) the safety of their actions.  The citizen should not have to show, and prove, harm.  The NRC is the regulator, charged to protect public health.  Now for some specifics.

I have always said and continue to say that we should follow the analogy of cigarettes. Until lit and inhaled cigarettes are not bad for you.  When smoking is over there may be no more harmful effects but looking for ashes in the ash tray is evidence that someone previously smoked, was previously at risk for health effects. Looking for evidence of DUoxide dust NOW at PTA is evidence of a higher previous exposure. How much previous DUoxide dust and its effect PREVIOUSLY occurring is anyone’s guess. I hope that whatever was done previously does not occur again.  This is the primary objective – but our government agencies make vague commitments.  They will say that since we did not show harm previously they are free to use DU weaponry however they choose in the future.  They are depending on our short memories to violate rules and principles set forth today.

Next the issue was raised if CURRENT levels of DU oxide dust are harmful.  The two basic principles are to show 1) if PTA levels are higher than background and 2) if this excess level is related to health effects (attributable risk).

1)       For the first principle for medical reasons I want to focus on inhalable radioactive compounds, especially the non-soluble DU oxides.  While the test is not specific for DU oxides the comparison between Kona readings (zero elevated of 20,000 cpm readings) and Kilohana (Saddle Road/Mauna Kea Park) (4 of 500 cpm readings) is statistically very significant (P less than .0001 by Fishers exact test). This needs to be further investigated and is a “smoking gun” till proven otherwise.

2)       Even if the above elevated radioactivity were due to DU oxides, what is the associated health risk?  I don’t believe that this is known for inhaled DU oxides.  Because of the much slower clearance from the body extrapolations cannot be made to soluble uranium forms.  Dr. (Rosalie) Bertell, (PhD in Canada) would also argue about nano-toxicity from the nano forms of expended DU weapons.  The military and its collaborators have repeatedly and publicly cited the friendly fire studies as the key guarantee of safe threshold levels for inhaled DUoxides.  Not only has that study been shown to have seriously flawed methodology – but the manner in which it was used to mislead has damaged the credibility of all involved.

For a group of agencies which cited such tainted and flawed science to demand that the community shows good science to prove our case of harm is arrogant and against the principles of EIS.  The Army says DU stays in the impact area, but they have only turned up a few pieces of the 300 to over l000 ponds of the Davy Crockett.  Where is the rest?  Where is the proof that’s it’s in the impact area?

Dr. Helen Caldicott, MD founder of Physicians for Social Responsibility (23,000 doctors) and founder of International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War which was awarded the l985 Nobel Peace prize says  quote DU “aerosolized particles that are inhaled… translocate to the thoracic lymph nodes, and are also deposited in bone, kidneys and excreted in semen where almost certainly the uranium can cause birth defects.  It also causes bone cancer, leukemia, lung cancer, lymphoma, and kidney cancer.” end quote

I personally know three people within 18 miles of my home with lymphoma cancer.  Two have died within the past year and a half, the other is in an advanced stage.  Two of the three were close friends active with our organization.  When family and friends die prematurely of cancer we too are harmed emotionally.  It is not an easy thing to see friends die.  According to the National Cancer Institute, State Cancer Profiles, the Island of Hawaii has the highest cancer statistics of all the Hawaiian islands. The cause is unknown.  Could it be linked to DU from PTA?  Possibly.

According to very recent figures coming out of Iraq, there is a 5-6 year latent period from exposure to cancer development there.  The figures are now skyrocketing  –6 years after the Shock & Awe of March 2003. In some cases increasing l800%.

The Davy Crockett DU at PTA, and possibly other DU used there, has been bombed and burned for 45 plus years.

My Response to NRC Question Two  — Provide details of the May 29, 2007 monitor spike of 75cpm at Mauna Kea State Park

On May 29, 2007 our Malu ‘Aina peace organization sponsored a protest of the opening ceremony of the first section of the realigned Saddle Road from the Mauna Kea Access Rd to Mauna Kea State Park, a distance of approximately six miles.  Our protest concerned several issues, one being the facilitating of more military live-fire training by rerouting the road in a northerly direction through a mamane forest which is a critical habitat for the endangered Palila bird.

On May 29, 2007, Guenter Monkowshi was conducting radiation monitoring with his gammascout monitor.  The meter was new and set on alpha/beta/gamma.  The same monitor had been used the prior month in South Kona  for 20,000 minutes of monitoring and saw no spikes above 40cpm according to Dr. Pang’s analysis of the data.  On May 29, 2007, his meter had been running for an hour with normal background around l5cpm readings.  At about ll AM as I recall, the winds began to pick up coming directly from the south toward the park where about 2-3 dozen of us were peacefully protesting. I would guess the wind gusts were 20-30MPH or even more at times. There were dust devils with suspended dirt clearly visible in the air and Guenter’s monitor spiked at 75cpm.  I was standing next to Guenter and saw the meter.  Over the next 2-3 hours at various points along saddle Road there were 3 other spikes in the 40-60s range. That’s 4 spikes in a few hundred minutes and should be a smoking gun signal that requires more investigation.

These readings emphasize the importance of looking for spikes not mere averaging.  State of Hawaii Department of Heath radiation chief, Russell Takata, has gone to take measurement is various spots on the Kona side.  He only kept his meter on for 5 minutes at each site.  That will not likely catch a spike.  Longer periods of air monitoring are key.

In essence, my conclusion is that we were at the wrong place at the wrong time, meaning we were in the path of a radiation plume.   Three months later, the Army confirmed DU was present on the range located l and l/2 miles from the park in line with the direction of the winds coming directly at us on May 27, 2009.  Some form of radiation caused our monitor to spike, not once but 4 times in a relatively short time period.  We were at PTA.  The winds were coming off the impact ranges where DU was later confirmed to have been fired.  If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it is likely a duck.  President Obama recently talked about the failure to connect the dots.  Whatever went into our monitor on May 29, 2007 likely went into our lungs.  The burden is on the Army to rule out DU oxide. The burden should be on the Army to prove no harm.  The Army says no harm has been shown but that’s because they haven’t looked and don’t want to look.  Same from Vietnam with Agent orange.  Same with Gulf War syndrome.

High wind gusts are common in the Saddle area between Mauna Loa and Mauna Kea.

The predominant trade winds are from north east to south west, but often by early afternoon the winds shift blowing from the west or south.  At night, the winds generally come down off the mountains.  (Wind conditions can be seen at the link below.  http://www.weather.gov/data/obhistory/PHTO.html
Also see American Meteorological Society Journals Online
http://ams.allenpress.com/perlserv/?request=get-abstract&doi=
Evolution of Katabatic Flow on the Island of Hawaii by Jiuhua Feng and Yi-Leng Chen l0 August l990

The Army doesn’t even know the # of DU Davy Crockett spotting rounds fired at PTA.  The Army’s records are poor to say the least.  The range is from 714 to possibly over 2500.  From about 290 pounds of DU to over a half ton.  And that’s just for Davy Crockett.  Then there is Greg Komp’s (Office of Army Safety’s) statement that “in the 50s and 60s it (DU) was used anytime we needed a heavy weight.”  Then there was the 70s, 80s, and 90s when DU was NOT prohibited in training.  Connect the dots.  There could be tens of thousands of DU rounds fired at PTA, including DU bunker busters.  There could be tons, tens of tons of DU at PTA.

We likely won’t know from Army records.  But with thorough proper independent testing and monitoring we should learn the truth.  What we need is good science.  And we don’t have that at this point from the U.S. Army and we won’t get it from the U.S. Army.  It must come from truly independent sources.

My Response to NRC Question Three — concerning visits to Mauna Kea Park

Mauna Kea State park is presently across the street from Pohakuloa Training Area (PTA).  Prior to May 27, 2007, the day of the high spike radiation readings, the Saddle Road traveled through the PTA base for about l2-l4 miles and still does now west of the main gate area.

Prior to May 27, 2007, the road came within l/2 mile of the eastern most range (I believe Range l0) at PTA where DU has been confirmed.  On that section of the road which was used by the public for 4 decades, there were signs posted “Live artillery overhead” or “live-firing overhead”.

For 30 years while driving the cross island Saddle Rd highway, I and family and friends, would always stop at Mauna Kea State park to picnic and use the rest rooms.  In years past I spent several nights at the cabins in the park, including nights when it was hard to get any sleep because of live firing taking place at PTA.

Over the years I’ve participated in numerous Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) cultural and religious ceremonies at Mauna Kea Park and nearby at the Hawaiian ahu (altar) located at the junction of Saddle Rd and the Mauna kea access road.  I have also gone to the summit of Mauna Kea for numerous ceremonies while elders and others who couldn’t handle the high altitude gather and stay at Mauna Kea Park and conduct ceremonies there.

Over 30 years I’ve hiked both Mauna Kea, Mauna Loa, and Hualalai mountains extensively, hiking to the summits and other trails in the Waiakea Forest and to King Umi’s temple.

Years back I probably traveled the Saddle Rd cross island once a month.  In more recent years it’s less.   On average we have 3 yearly healing ceremonies for the land and protests of live-fire training at PTA,  another couple ceremonies on Mauna Kea and other trips cross island and occasional hikes that results in travel through the Saddle Area.  Mauna Kea Park is always a stopping point or rallying point, although we go to other places along Saddle Rd for live-fire protests.  We have built an Hawaiian ahu on the PTA base at Pu’u Ka Pele  where we have placed ho’okupu (offerings) for the healing of the land.  The duration of the visits for ceremonies or a rally is roughly 2-4 hours, longer if we are hiking in the area.

I have also attended a military press briefing on PTA and was transported to the firing range to observe howitzer live firing.  I also organized a group briefing  and tour of PTA for visiting students, Hawaiian, and environmental activists during the Stryker EIS process.

There have been reports of animals with tumors downwind of PTA.  A hunter friend, Luna Hauanio phone 808-3l5-0677 who has hunted extensively in the Pohakuloa area and the normal down stream air flow area from PTA toward Hualalai and Keahou mauka has informed me of numerous abdominal and throat tumors in pigs, goats and sheep hunted in the area.  Luna Hauanio worked work 22 years with the sheriffs department and is a Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) very much concerned about traditional and customary rights and hunting which is important to many people for subsistence.

My Closing Statement

For most of this hearing we, the petitioners, have responded to questions from you, the judges.  Now I have a question for you to ponder.  How far are you this minute from PTA live-fire training areas where DU presence is known?  I suspect the answer is around 5,000 miles to Rockville Maryland.  There is something wrong with this picture.  You in Rockville, Maryland are preparing to judge if we who live on this island having standing and if our contentions about military depleted uranium on our island home have any merit.

The Army’s application for a DU license doesn’t say a word about DU moving off site.  It’s all neatly packaged and stays in the bombing impact area?  Yeah right.

Around l980 the Knolls Power Lab technitions monitoring atmospheric radiation picked up the DU oxide from Colonie, NY over 25 miles away.  Nine days after the Tora Bora bombings in Afghanistan, and Shock and Awe DU bombings of Bagdhad, the sophisticated radiation monitors at Aldermaston in England recorded a big persistent spike of radiation lasting several days.  Everyone in the northern hemisphere has legal standing when it comes to DU, and maybe the southern hemisphere as well.  We’re all in this together.

If you –the NRC license the Army to possess DU on site, and citizens turn up DU off site, you will have a lot of poison DU egg on your face.  But we the residents of Hawaii will be breathing and eating the poison dust.  That’s why if you are going to issue a license it better be with strict transparent monitoring and testing done with the guidance of Dr. Lorrin Pang and Dr. Mike Reimer to insure the confidence of the community.  And all the live-fire and other activity that creates dust must be stopped until there is a comprehensive assessment of the entire PTA base for DU contamination.  Military maps of PTA have written on them in capital letters: “ALL OF PTA SHOULD BE CONSIDERED A DUD HAZARD AREA.”  The same is true for DU.  All of PTA should be considered a DU hazard area and any activity that may disperse that DU should be prohibited.

DU can travel off base from wind, fire, explosions, vehicles, and rain.  The NRC may not be able to prohibit wind, fire and rain, but it can prohibit explosions and vehicles on PTA.

On average, the bases across the US covered by the Army’s license request correlate with higher cancer incidences, same as Viegues in Puerto Rico and other sites with DU contamination, especially Iraq and Afghanistan.  The cancer rate in the province of Babil, south of Baghdad has risen from 500 diagnosed cases in 2004 to 9,082 in 2009 an increase of l800 percent.

See  http://www.countercurrents.org/ghazi090110.htm
Cancer – The Deadly Legacy Of The Invasion Of Iraq

Dr. Helen Caldicottt has said: “The incidence of childhood cancer in Basra (Iraq) has increased 700% since (DU) weapons were used there in 1991 and the incidence of severe congenital malformations has also risen 700%. Uranium particles will contaminate the cradle of civilization for eternity inducing more and more cancer, especially in children, genetic diseases and congenital malformations. Such US military policy is beyond a war crime.”

According to the National Cancer Institute web site – here is the overall cancer rates for the counties were Davy Crockett spotting rounds have been used.
(http://statecancerprofiles.cancer.gov/map/map.noimage.php)

NRC list:
Fort Benning, Georgia (* Chatahoochee County- 2nd highest category in state)
Fort Campbell, Kentucky (Christian – lowest)
Fort Carson, Colorado (El Paso – 2nd highest)
Fort Hood   Texas   (Bell – 2nd highest)
Fort Knox  Kentucky (Meade- 2nd highest)
Fort Lewis  Wash. (Pierce- 1st highest)
Pohakuloa/PTA Hawai’i (1st highest)
O’ahu              (2nd highest)
Fort Riley Kansas (Geary- no data)
********
fyi: Jefferson Proving Ground (Jefferson/Ripley – 2nd highest)
Yuma            ”                       (Yuma – 4th highest)
Aberdeen       ”                       (no data)

I am well aware that if this appeal by citizens falls on deaf ears of the NRC for action to protect public health and safety, I will have participated in a proceeding that can be categorized as a fraud.

You, the NRC are suppose to be the regulator of the nuclear industry.  Don’t fail us like the Wall St. and Mortgage banker regulators failed us.  You job is to protect the public health against the military/nuclear industrial complex.  Put the burden where it belongs, not on the citizen to prove harm, but on the military/nuclear industrial complex to prove that it is safe.  They have not done so.

A note on conflict of interest:  Wall St. Bank regulators got rich off the very banks they were later charged to regulate but failed to do properly.  Is the same true of the Nuclear industry regulators– the NRC?  As ordinary citizens we do what we can to speak truth to power, realizing the deck is stacked against us, as these proceedings certainly demonstrate in a manner that is crystal clear.

In any event, the actions that are warranted remain:

l. Stop all live-fire and dust creating activities at PTA and support the other 7 points called for by the Hawaii County Council in Resolution 639-08 and resolution 70l-08 naming Dr. Lorrin Pang as the official county representative on the DU issue with the Army. The points in Resolution 639-08 all support the precautionary principle.

2. The entire PTA base needs to be thoroughly tested and monitored independently with guidance from Dr. Lorrin Pang and Dr. Mike Reimer.

3. A thorough clean up and decommissioning of these military complexes is necessary to protect our health.

4. There needs to be transparency and community input throughout the process. Otherwise there will be a vote of no confidence by the community as the WHT poll on PTA already underscores.
The Pentagon dirty bombers in paradise must be stopped. The land must be returned (cleaned) to its rightful owners –the independent nation of Hawaii.

With gratitude and aloha,

Jim Albertini

Malu ‘Aina Center for Non-violent Education & Action

P.O.Box AB

Kurtistown, Hawai’i 96760

phone: 808-966-7622

email: JA@interpac.net

Visit us on the web at: www.malu-aina.org

Hawai’i Residents challenge Army bid to possess depleted uranium

Excerpts from the article below:

Albertini wants the NRC to deny the PTA license, shut down and clean up the 133,000-acre military installation and return the ceded lands to the Kingdom of Hawaii.

Because the NRC, an independent federal agency, has never denied a license, Albertini said, he concedes that scenario is unlikely. Assuming a license is granted, he wants to see stringent restrictions to the military’s actions, including a halt to live-fire exercises and an independent, comprehensive assessment and monitoring program.

Those concerned with the health effects of DU say that it poses a health hazard for anybody who might inhale atomized particles. Some Kona residents in the past have expressed concern that they are at high risk for cancer because they are downwind of Pohakuloa.

“They’re putting the burden on the citizen to prove that we’ve been harmed, and that’s not the way it should work,” Albertini said yesterday.

He also said it was “appalling” to see the number of requirements that citizens have to pass through before they could challenge the government. While the Army’s lawyers and the board will be participating in the conference from Rockville, Md., the petitioners will be speaking for themselves in a small room on the third floor of the University of Hawaii-Hilo’s main library. The petitioners are not allowed to bring in any expert witnesses.

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http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20100112/BREAKING01/100112016/Hawaii+residents+challenge+Army+bid+to+possess+depleted+uranium

Updated at 8:13 a.m., Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Hawaii residents challenge Army bid to possess depleted uranium

By Peter Sur

Hawaii Tribune-Herald

HILO — Four Hawaii residents, including three from the Big Island, are challenging the U.S. Army’s application to possess depleted uranium.

A videoconference hearing tomorrow in Hilo will determine whether the petitioners — peace activist Jim Albertini, the Sierra Club’s Cory Harden, plus Isaac Harp of Waimea and Luwella Leonardi of Waianae — have standing to challenge the Army.

The hearing will also determine whether the petitioners’ arguments have merit.

They will be arguing by videoconference to the three-member Atomic Safety and Licensing Board, which was formed by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

The Army in 2009 said that it found three spotting rounds containing the toxic heavy metal at its training site in Pohakuloa. The Army is also seeking a license to possess DU at Schofield Barracks and seven other sites on the mainland.

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