Test-blast battle not over yet
Activists are not claiming victory over delay of explosion
"They still don't get it," said Robert R. Hager, the Reno attorney whose legal filing prompted the government to say it was putting off the explosion until at least June 23. In his opinion, the National Nuclear Security Administration still wants to ignite 700 tons of conventional explosives.
"This is no time to celebrate victory," said Peter Rickards, an Idaho Falls podiatrist who served nine years on an advisory panel for the Centers for Disease Control for a radiation exposure study.
On Tuesday, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, wrote to James T. Tegnelia, director of the Defense Threat Reduction Agency, about the test. The agency and the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) are planning the explosion.
Hatch said he welcomes the fact that the agency and the NNSA accepted his invitation to discuss Divine Strake at a town hall meeting in St. George.
The senator had these questions: Is there a possibility that contaminated soil could become airborne during the explosion? How close is the U16a tunnel area (where six underground nuclear tests were held) to the Divine Strake location? Could radioactive material become dislodged from the U16a site?
Hatch wrote that his objective is "to ensure that this proposed test will not result in further radiological exposure to the citizens of Utah and those of the downwind area."
Concerned about fallout for years, Rickards said a major worry about Divine Strake is that radiation left in the ground from nuclear blasts in the 1950s and '60s could become airborne in the mushroom cloud that Divine Strake is expected to release.
"They are only going to detonate this bomb when the wind is blowing northward toward Idaho and Utah," he said.
"If it was as safe as they claim and nothing would leave the site, they certainly could detonate it when the wind is blowing toward Vegas. But they refuse to."
Hager represents the Winnemucca Indian Tribe and others in a federal lawsuit seeking to halt the blast. One of the plaintiffs is Steve Erickson, a Salt Lake City anti-nuclear activist.
On Friday, Hager filed an "emergency motion" in the case, which is pending in U.S. District Court in Las Vegas. He sought documents that would show the test to be safe.
The federal government responded on Monday, asking for more time. The filing was accompanied by a declaration by Jay H. Norman, acting manager of the NNSA's Nevada State office.
A revised environmental assessment was released on Friday, Norman noted. As of Tuesday, the government intended to issue a revised decision document on the planned test. Because of that, the test has been delayed.
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