From Deseret News archives:

Idaho downwinders tell their story

Iodine-131 exposure very high in 4 Idaho counties, study says

Published: Saturday, Nov. 6, 2004 9:59 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
BOISE — For much of her childhood, Sheri Garman drank poisoned milk.

Like many other children in eastern Idaho in the 1950s, Garman and her family drank locally produced raw milk. But the cows on Garman's family dairy and other regional dairies were ingesting radioactive fallout from Cold War nuclear testing in Nevada, and passing on the radiation to humans through their milk.

"Radiation fallout was like dew on the grass," Garman told researchers with National Academies Board on Radiation Effects Research during a hearing for downwinders — the Idaho residents believed to be suffering radiation-related health problems.

Garman asked the research council to recommend that Idaho residents be covered under the federal government's Radiation Exposure Compensation Act.

"We are the poster children for the radiation that came to Idaho, yet we are not included in RECA," she said.

The National Academy of Sciences agreed to accept testimony in Idaho about the impact fallout had on residents' health in response to hundreds of letters. The hearing in Boise Saturday drew hundreds of downwinders.

Story continues below
The compensation act provides a $50,000 payment to residents with certain kinds of cancers who lived in 21 counties in southern Utah, Nevada and Arizona during the testing.

Not included under the act are the four Idaho counties — Blaine, Gem, Custer and Lemhi — which received some of the highest levels of iodine-131, one of the radioactive elements released by the tests, according to a 1997 National Cancer Institute Study.

Garman said the exposure left her with thyroid cancer, followed by breast cancer. When the breast cancer recently spread, doctors told her she could expect to live between 18 and 24 more months.

"If I meet the statistics, I will die by this time next year," Garman told the scientists. "Cancer is knowing that it will take more than modern medicine for me to see my daughter's wedding. I'm fighting terminal cancer that could have been avoided."

Jeannie Burkhart sent a written statement and a videotaped statement to be played for the scientists. Burkhart was diagnosed with a rare stomach cancer while still in high school, and in the years since doctors have removed parts of her stomach, liver and spleen in an effort to fight the disease. Burkhart continues to have surgery an average of every four years, she said.

"I am out of spare parts, and I know someday this cancer will take me down," she said. "Please don't just hear us. Please take us all to heart."

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

the city council in PHOENIX have read this comment board and have learned a...

Bronco, Kyle rubber match

Utah 38 BYU 24 You heard it here first!!!

Re Skaggs Center: One should remember that the majority of people in SLC are...

only if it was my team that had the 9 or 63.

You're a guy, nuff said! Get more in touch with your feminine side and you'll...

I think Mr. Ash should be embarrassed by his articles. He does not provide...

Love about living near a temple is the way the light shines in my bedroom...

Porter commits to SDSU

Michael Jordan was a great player and he did... more than once!!! Now you...

RSL wins MLS Cup on penalty kicks

Where else, but in america, can a player be called for "Attempting to...

This is the most worthless article. All coaches complain about AFA cut...

Advertisements