“Ice wall” around Fukushima nuclear plant melts in 2 places following powerful typhoons via Manilla Bulletin

TOKYO — The frozen soil wall built around the crippled Fukushima No.1 nuclear plant have melted in two places following recent powerful typhoons, local media reported Friday, raising concerns over effect of the approach adopted by the Tokyo Electric Power Co.(TEPCO) to reduce the massive volume of radioactive water.

The 1.5-km-long frozen soil wall, also known as the “ice wall,” which was partly put into use in March, melted in two places following Powerful Lionrock, the tenth of the season, battered the region, with temperature of the melting parts rising above zero centigrade, Japan’s Asahi Shimbun reported.

The melting was probably caused by lashing of large amount of groundwater as a result of recent powerful typhoons and heavy rainfall, said local reports.

Groundwater flowing under the nuclear plant is leaking through the melted parts of the wall to outside and TEPCO is trying to refreeze the parts by injecting special chemicals to the wall, said the reports.

The ice wall construction was finished in February after two years of work involving driving more than 1,500 steel pipes with 30 meters into the soil around the perimeter surrounding the No. 1 to 4 reactors at the troubled plant.

Liquid calcium chloride at minus 40 degrees Celsius was then pumped into the pipes to freeze the surrounding soil, which, in theory, would prevent groundwater from flowing into the facilities and getting contaminated when it comes into contact with melted nuclear fuel.

However, reports showed that there still remained unfrozen parts as of mid-August, and TEPCO revealed plans to take additional steps such as injecting cement into the parts of the wall that are not fully frozen.

[…]

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Fukushima could host 2020 events via The Japan Times

Organizers of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics are working toward staging a baseball and softball game in the 2011 earthquake and tsunami struck Fukushima Prefecture, a source close to the matter said Friday.

Baseball and softball were among the five sports approved last month by the International Olympic Committee to be added to the Tokyo Games program, and the 2020 organizers will look to get approval for the plan from the IOC executive board in December.

[…]
Three baseball parks inside the prefecture — all previous hosts of NPB games — are on the shortlist, and organizers are likely to argue accessibility from Tokyo and the possibility of installing fixed seats in the outfield stands as to why the idea is feasible.

The main ballpark for the 2020 Games is set to be Yokohama Stadium, home of the Yokohama BayStars.

Former Olympic minister Toshiaki Endo reiterated on March 11 — the fifth anniversary of the disaster — that the prefecture could host some games in order to demonstrate the revitalization of the Tohoku region, most affected by the disaster.

[…]

Read more.

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規制委の調査に抗議 玄海で反原発団体 via 佐賀新聞

 原子力規制委員会が行う九州電力玄海原発(東松浦郡玄海町)の現地調査に合わせ、反原発を訴える市民団体のメンバーらが2日、原発のゲート前で抗議活動を行った。

「玄海原発プルサーマルと全基をみんなで止める裁判の会」のメンバーら十数人が集まり、「再稼働にNO!」「効なき避難計画は国・県の犯罪である」などと書かれたのぼりを手に抗議した。規制委に対しても「規制ではなく推進しかしていない」と批判した。

続きは規制委の調査に抗議 玄海で反原発団体

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IAEA sees Asia as driver of nuclear energy via World Nuclear News

Asia is one of the regions where nuclear energy is “high on the agenda” and could be one of the drivers for global nuclear power deployment, according to the deputy director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

Speaking at a conference in Manila, Mikhail Chudakov said, “There are several member states already operating nuclear power plants, and many more aspiring states [are] exploring the potential for developing nuclear power programs in this region.”

The conference – titled The Prospects for Nuclear Power in the Asia Pacific Region – was held 30 August to 1 September. It was organized by the IAEA in collaboration with the International Framework for Nuclear Energy Cooperation and hosted by the Philippines Department of Energy. More than 120 participants attended the event, including representatives from 14 member states.

[…]

There are currently 128 nuclear power reactors operable in five Southeast Asian countries plus Taiwan with a total generating capacity of more than 100 GWe. There are also 40 units under construction and firm plans in place to build dozens more. In addition, there are about 56 research reactors in 14 countries of the region.

Read more at IAEA sees Asia as driver of nuclear energy

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食べて応援 「チームふくしまプライド。」設立 via 河北新報

復興庁は2日、福島県産の農産物の販路拡大を応援するファンクラブ組織「チームふくしまプライド。」を8日に設立すると発表した。インターネットの専用サ イトで「食べて応援する」会員を募り、農産物や加工品などを販売する。生産者との交流イベントも企画し、県産品の魅力をさまざまな形で発信する。

サイトで約20の生産者や加工業者が果物や米、ジュース、ピクルスなど約80品目を販売する。会員登録は無料で、会員向けの限定商品も用意する。

(略)

同庁は本年度、設立に向けたモデル事業「福 島の食のプラットフォーム」を実施しており、ファンクラブもその一環。事業は本年度末までで、内容を踏まえて継続を検討する。

一連の事業は、東日本大震災で被災した食産業を支援する一般社団法人「東の食の会」(東京)が5月に受託した。事業費は約2200万円。農家が農産加工品の開発やブランド化を学ぶキャンプ、県産の米こうじを使った美容ドリンク開発などにも取り組んでいる。

全文は食べて応援 「チームふくしまプライド。」設立 

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「私の夫はフクイチに殺された!」急死した原発作業員の妻が“決意の告発”via nifty.news

[…]
そんな中、今年6月13日に亡くなったとされる原発作業員・山岸浩さん(享年50)の妻・光子さんが、怒りの声を上げた。「主人は、3畳もない犬小屋のような作業員宿舎の個室で誰にも看取られず死んでいたんです。しかも、具合が悪くなり約1週間前から、その個室で臥せっていたそうです。なぜ、仲間も会社も病院に連れて行ってくれなかったのか。もし気に留めてくれていたら、もっと長生きしていたと思うんです。それが悔しくて、今回お話することを決心しました」(光子さん=以下同)

 山岸さんは13日の朝、亡くなっているのを仕事仲間が部屋を訪ねた際に発見された。死亡推定時刻は13日午前0時とされるが、それはベニヤ板1枚ほどの薄い仕切り越しに、死亡推定時刻の30分ほど前まで人の気配がしていたという隣り部屋の作業員の証言から推測されたものだ。

「私が最後に会ったのは5月末に帰京した際。体調が悪い中、無理して浅草までデートしてくれたのが、最後の思い出となりました」

[…]
それほど危険と隣り合わせの仕事なら当然、作業時間にも制限があるはずだが、「そこでは放射線量の関係で20分作業して1時間休むべきところ、実際は作業2時間、休み1時間のサイクルでやらされていると言っていました。“現場が青白く見えるんだ”と電話してきたこともありました」

 この他にも作業現場では安全のために数々の規制が設けられているが、それを守っていたら作業が進まないと、規則破りが恒常化していたと思われる話も、いろいろ聞いたという。

 起床は午前3時半。1時間後には宿泊所の前に集合して現場へ出発。担当する場所によって異なるが、山岸さんが死の少し前までやっていた作業時間は、1日に作業6時間とミーティング2時間の計8時間。午後4時頃には宿舎に戻るが、翌朝が早いので午後8時頃には床に就いていたそうだ。帰京できるのは月に一度、3日だけだったという。

「主人は“肝臓が痛い”などと常々、体調不良を訴えていました。実は5月末に帰京した際、約20キロもやせ、歩行もままならない状態だったんです。当然、私は福島に戻るのを止めましたが、“自分は現場責任者だから休んでいられない”と行ってしまったんです」

[…]
「主人は帰京時、毎日、作業終了時に計る放射能測定結果の紙を束ねて持ち帰っていたんですが、それを見ると、数値のほとんどがゼロだったんです。それに、遺体を引き取りに行った息子たちの話では、地元警察で解剖して放射能測定をした数値もゼロだったと説明を受けたというんです。いくらなんでも、そんなわけないでしょうと、葬儀の際に、派遣した会社の社長に問い質そうとしたんですが、不信感を抱いた息子と睨み合いになり、社長は線香の1本も上げず、“休日に亡くなったから労災は下りない!”と一方的に言い残して帰ってしまった。以来、互いに連絡を取っていない状況なんです」

 本誌が光子さんから見せてもらった山岸さんの「死体埋火葬許可証」の死因欄には「一類感染症等」と記されたところが消され「その他」となっていた。ちなみに、一類感染症とはエボラ出血熱、天然痘、ペストなど感染力や死亡率が極めて高い感染症を指す。光子さんによると、この他にも今回の山岸さんの死亡時の対応に関しては不可解な事実があるという。

「息子たちが警察から宿舎に戻ってくると、すでに主人の部屋は勝手に片づけられ、返してもらえたのは時計と携帯電話ぐらい。主人は几帳面な性格で、給与明細を束にして持っていたはずなんですが、その明細も放射線管理手帳も、戻ってきていません」
[…]
「たとえば熱中症で仲間が倒れた際、チームの仲間が倒れた者を大きな布で覆って隠し、作業が中断しないようにしていたそうです。また、救急車やドクターヘリで急病人が搬送されることもあったそうですが、その際、自分が福島第一原発で働いていることは絶対に伏せるように指導されていたそうなんです。主人も入社時、福島第一原発で働くことを部外者に口外しないように誓約書を書かされたと、漏らしていました」
[…]
 一方、宿舎の住環境についても、地元でこんな話を聞けた。「同じような宿泊所は原発周辺にいくつもあります。事故当初は、いわき市内の旅館を借りるなどしていましたが、山間の遊休地に安い中国製プレハブを建てたほうが安上がりだし、管理もしやすいですからね。今回の話も、1週間も寝込んでいる人を病院に行かせないなんて、第三者の目がないからできること。実態は昔の“タコ部屋”と同じでしょう」(地元事情通)
最後に光子さんは言う。「主人は、地元の方が作業頑張ってとの思いで折ってくれた鶴を大切に保管していました。福島に行くとき、“未来の子どもたちのために放射能浴びて来るんだ”とも言っていました。だから納棺の際、その鶴を入れてあげました。主人なりに誇りを持って作業員をしていたんです。でも、こんな野垂れ死にのような形で……。他にも、同じように亡くなった方はたくさんいると思います。そんな犠牲のもと、事故になれば将来の子どもに責任を負えない放射能が出る原発の再稼動を目指していいのか、もう一度、考えていただきたい」

[…]

もっと読む。
◇参照元福島原発作業員・釣崎清隆の『シン・ゴジラ』評! 大概の批評が見落とした“シン・ゴジラの本当の価値”とは?

『シン・ゴジラ』のクライマックスこそ、たゆまぬ試行錯誤と日進月歩の技術革新を続ける1Fという壮大な実験場のリアリティに迫っている。原発事故当初は日本の技術的敗北を見せ付けられたものの、事故後の国産極地作業ロボットの長足の進歩は僕自身が現場で目の当たりにしているし、忌憚のない収束技術の公募によって、日本全国のユニークなアイデアが1Fに集約され、実際にあらゆる実験が現在も行われている。

 放射性物質の固化技術もそのひとつである。石棺化を超越するゴジラの「凍結」技術とはまさにこれであり、地に足の付いた近未来の技術なのだ。

 人類の英知で原子力を制圧するという夢のある未来像は、反原発のノイズの渦中にありながらも、現在進行形で地道に追及され続けている。ゴジラという動く原子炉を人間の手で制圧するこの作品では、いったん敗北しても立ち上がる日本人の姿も描いている。

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Protect the Colorado Plateau from Uranium Poisoning via Grand Canyon Trust

Uranium mining and milling on the Colorado Plateau have left a toxic legacy.

Today, you can help protect our communities, lands, and waters from toxic and radioactive uranium poisoning.

Please raise your voice to protect the Grand Canyon and Colorado Plateau from uranium contamination.

By signing, you are speaking out against:

  • Thousands of new uranium claims in the Grand Canyon region
  • Re-opening of the Canyon uranium mine near the Grand Canyon’s south rim
  • The irresponsible operation of the White Mesa Uranium Mill
  • Environmental injustice that has subjected tribal communities to decades of toxic and radioactive contamination in their homes, waters, and sacred sites
  • Widespread failure to hold industry accountable for the clean-up of uranium contamination across the Colorado Plateau

Your voice is critical to protecting the Grand Canyon region and greater Colorado Plateau from uranium poisoning.Please join us today by signing the petition.

Read the appeal and sign here.
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Why the President Must Ban Grand Canyon Uranium Mining via Huffington Post

Mark Udall
Former U.S. Senator from Colorado; Board member, Grand Canyon Trust

 

Throughout my career in the private sector and politics, I’ve seen people fight consensus and wage unwinnable battles. If there’s one piece of advice I’ve given my friends and colleagues in this situation, it’s to quit digging.

Sadly, I’m not sure the National Mining Association is willing or able to follow that advice.

The association’s president recently wrote that the impact of uranium mining on Grand Canyon National Park is “virtually nonexistent.” That’s about as reassuring as BP saying that deep water oil drilling poses virtually no risk to the Gulf of Mexico.

The mining industry’s statement counts on readers to be ignorant of the fact that federal and state agencies do not require wells to measure water pollution more than a thousand feet underground, where uranium mining threatens aquifers that feed springs deep within the Grand Canyon. No monitoring means contamination is undetected: out of sight, out of mind.

But that’s changing as the U.S. Geological Survey pieces together samples taken from existing wells and places where groundwater flows downward into the Grand Canyon. These show that mining has already polluted 15 springs and five wells within the Grand Canyon’s watershed with toxic levels of uranium.

The National Park Service reports that existing uranium mines, including some closed more than two decades ago, have fouled the regional aquifer in their vicinity with uranium levels considered unsafe to drink. Water from one sample has uranium concentrations 1,200 times the safe maximum.

Evidence is mounting to suggest that the Grand Canyon’s uranium spills have been ongoing — and undetected — for decades. We now know that contaminated water from the Orphan uranium mine on the canyon’s south rim is poisoning a spring-fed creek deep below the rim where the damage cannot be repaired. On the surface, the mining company walked away from their mess and left the taxpayers with the $15 million clean-up bill. On the canyon’s north rim, miners discovered more than two million gallons of highly contaminated groundwater filling the deep shaft of the Pinenut uranium mine when they re-opened it in 2009.

As I’ve said with regards to oil and gas development, one well contaminated or one person made sick is one too many. The same is true for uranium mining, making the situation around the Grand Canyon a disaster where we can least afford one.

In 2012, this sorry history led my friend and fellow Coloradan, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, to impose a 20-year ban on new uranium mining in the watersheds that drain directly into the Grand Canyon. His action came in response to thousands of new mining claims filed in the preceding decade. Science and prudence also guided his decision, coupled with the knowledge that nearly $1 billion in annual economic activity is generated by this greatest of earth’s geological treasures.

An unprecedented coalition of interests wrote over 300,000 comments in support for his action, led by the Havasupai Tribe, “people of the blue-green water,” whose only source of water is threatened by a mine at the headwaters of Havasu Canyon.

According to the U.S. Geological Survey, the ban temporarily removed just 12 percent of northern Arizona’s uranium resources from the clutches of the mining industry. You might think that they would accept protection of the Grand Canyon with some grace; but you would be wrong. Since the withdrawal, mining interests have mounted a relentless legal and public relations war on the mining ban, attempting to make it illegal for any future secretary of the interior to protect any area, no matter what the emergency. The same industry that has protected the wildly antiquated 1872 Mining Law from amendment for nearly a century and a half is determined that no place be closed off to them. If they can mine the Grand Canyon’s watershed, what place is safe?

Continue reading the article here.

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Uranium-mine cleanup on Navajo Reservation could take 100 years via azcentral

CHURCH ROCK, N.M. — Twin plateaus of radioactive rock and dirt stand as monuments to the daunting and expensive cleanup ahead.

The piles from two former uranium mines — Northeast Church Rock and Quivira — rose steadily on opposite sides of Red Water Pond Road until the Cold War’s final decade, and now stand as silent hulks over Navajo homes and hogans up the valley. The federal government is working with two companies to finalize a plan to remove the waste and dispose of it a few miles down a state highway, consolidating it with another pile of radioactive mill waste farther from homes.

Estimated price: $131 million.

These piles are from just two of 521 old uranium mines one for every 52 square miles afflicting Navajo lands, not counting hundreds more sites with related contamination. And the Northeast Church Rock and Quivira piles are among only a few dozen for which the government can determine ownership.

“It’s going to take 100 years,” lamented Lillie Lane, Navajo Nation Environmental Protection Agency outreach coordinator.

The cost is too high and tribal EPA staffing too low to plan and execute quick action, she said. The office working on cleanup has 10 employees but needs 50, she said. The tribe asked for 25 full-time appointments from federal funds during a congressional hearing in 2007, but has not received them.

Likewise, the federal purse isn’t up to the task. The entire budget for 2008-12 reservation cleanups was only $110 million, less than what it will eventually cost to clean up just these two mines.

“This whole thing is huge,” Lane said. “It’s homes. It’s mines. It’s our old dump site in Tuba City.”

America’s legacy of uranium extraction and toxic abandonment remains a bitter betrayal to Navajos here, on their reservation’s eastern side, and across thousands of square miles through northern Arizona to Cameron on the west. Decades after the mines and mills served their purpose, hundreds remain as health threats, many with no clear path to cleanup.

Some mines left heaps of radioactive waste that sloughs or blows toward homes. Others were pits that have since been bulldozed over with a temporary soil covering. Still others were shafts that have been plugged but may still contaminate groundwater.

 

With 521 abandoned uranium mines on the Navajo Nation, cleanup could take decades or more and cost billions of dollars. So far just one abandoned uranium mine has been cleaned up.

At Church Rock, at least, there is a plan.

The U.S. Department of Justice this spring announced a $5.15 billion settlement for nationwide environmental cleanups — the largest in U.S. history. It included about $1 billion to clean up 49 mine sites on Navajo lands, with $87 million to remove the Quivira waste. The settlement from Anadarko Petroleum Co. covers hazards left by Kerr-McGee Corp., which Anadarko purchased in 2006.

Anadarko officials did not respond to requests for comment.

The Northeast Church Rock pile across the road, owned by General Electric since its acquisition of United Nuclear Corp., will cost $44 million to move up the road to an existing tailings dump on private land nearer the spired sandstone tower that gives Church Rock its name. Hundreds of thousands of cubic yards will roll out on trucks from each.

For perspective, a hundred thousand yards of dirt would fill 5,000 “belly dump” truck trailers. If those trailers were placed end to end, they would extend nearly 38 miles.

The government will pay to move residents to temporary housing for up to five years to isolate them from any radioactivity that is kicked up. Then they will monitor to ensure soils around the homes are clean.

GE argued that the government shared responsibility because the uranium was mined for weapons, and in a 2012 consent decree, the government agreed to reimburse the company about a third of the cost.

“GE and UNC are committed to continue to work cooperatively with the U.S. government, the EPA, Navajo Nation, the state of New Mexico, and local residents to carry out interim cleanups and reach agreement on the remedy for the mine,” the company said in a written statement to The Arizona Republic.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has completed just one mine cleanup on the reservation, and the logistical challenges at that site on the Arizona-Utah state line illustrate the enormousness of the task ahead.

Skyline Mine, in Monument Valley, was a uranium seam atop an 800-foot mesa requiring a cable tram for ore removal. After years of neglect, the waste that spilled down the cliff during rainstorms and that piled around former truck-loading areas on the valley floor remained hazardous to occupants of nearby homes.

“It was spreading out,” EPA cleanup coordinator Jason Musante said, “basically by the flow of water.”

His team rebuilt the tram, this time with the intent of returning contaminated rock and soil to the mesa top for burial in a polyethylene-lined, covered dump. The tribe prefers removal of wastes from its land, but EPA chose on-site isolation to avoid trucking loads through the nearby Navajo community of Oljato, Utah.

Musante also directed blasting and widening of a Jeep trail on the back of the mesa, to fit dump trucks and heavy loaders needed for the project. Twenty people worked the cleanup, using three dump trucks and several excavators. Needing water for dust control, they filled a tank at a well 5 miles away on the valley floor, then trucked 3,000 gallons at a time to another tank from which they pumped it in a new pipeline up the mesa.

The $8 million cleanup started in November 2010 and wrapped up in October 2011.

That was just one mine, with 30,000 cubic yards of waste. GE’s Northeast Church Rock Mine, one of the biggest cleanups facing the reservation, contains 130,000 cubic yards waiting to be trucked away— a volume that would fill nearly 6,500 belly dump trailers.

Hundreds more mines have no cleanup dollars or plans. The Anadarko fund covers only 49 of the abandoned mines on the reservation. Another $3 billion or $4 billion likely will be needed, said Dave Taylor, an attorney with the Navajo Department of Justice.

“What we’ve got is we’ve got a good start,” he said. But, he later added, “All we got is a good start.”

One of the biggest problems is that out of 521 mines, the government only knows who is responsible for 78 of them.

The EPA is working to track down more, and to reach more cleanup settlements. But EPA regional administrator Jared Blumenfeld said it’s likely that the paper trail on some mines won’t lead to companies that can pay for cleanup. More cash will be needed, perhaps using “legal theories” targeting uranium’s “end users.”

The end user of most of this uranium was the national nuclear-weapons program, a supply complex that the Department of Energy inherited when it was established.

“Our goal is to make sure that we do find responsible parties for all of them,” Blumenfeld said.

Essentially, whatever cleanup costs the responsible parties don’t pay for would have to be paid by federal funds approved by Congress, or possibly, in a scenario raised by Blumenfeld, from a lawsuit requiring the Energy Department to pay. The EPA would administer the cleanup.

An Energy Department spokeswoman said the agency could not comment. An EPA spokeswoman said in an e-mail that the agency asked for Energy Department help with the highest-priority mines but learned that the department lacked congressional budget authority.

The cleanup also affects the neighboring Hopi Tribe, whose boundary is close to the contaminated Tuba City dump. That dump, along with wastes from an old Tuba City uranium mill, threatens groundwater flowing into the Hopi Reservation.

Federal and tribal officials are working on plans to contain or remove it so the plume won’t reach drinking wells.

 

[…]

While much of the reservation’s unwanted waste languishes, to the north, the Energy Department already has moved nearly 7 million tons of uranium from the banks of the Colorado River at Moab, Utah, by train to an engineered and covered dump on the desert. That cleanup, near the entrance to Arches National Park, is expected to top $1 billion on its own. It sends a 34-car train full of tailings north four days a week.

Taylor, the Navajo Nation attorney working on cleanup issues, suggested it’s happening faster there because the Colorado supplies water to Los Angeles, a political force. Navajos, it seems, have less clout.

“We think that’s a horrible environmental-justice issue,” he said.

Unlike the Moab dump, where solid shale 2,400 feet deep shields the waste from groundwater, the plan at Church Rock is to pile waste onto a tailings heap that threatens both groundwater and downstream communities during heavy rains, said Paul Robinson, research director for the Southwest Research and Information Center, an environmental and public-health group in Albuquerque.

The Moab cleanup occurred because Utah’s congressional delegation demanded it, he said. White leaders also demanded and, by the 1990s, got full removal of tailings piles from Durango and Grand Junction, Colo., and from South Salt Lake, Utah, he said. Most of the reservation’s waste remains where it was dug or milled.

“There’s science and then there’s politics,” Robinson said.

One “unfortunate silver lining” from mining is that the cleanup will provide jobs on Navajo land, said Blumenfeld, the U.S. EPA official. For the 43 priority projects alone, he said, he expects there will be 1,000 positions. The EPA has invested in a hazardous-materials training program in Albuquerque to prepare Navajos for the work.

“My personal goal is to make sure as many of these jobs go to the (Navajo) nation as possible,” he said.

At Church Rock this spring, 58-year-old Peterson Bell sat on a folding chair outside his shack gazing east into the sun’s reflection off the Quivira waste pile.

A great-nephew who he considers his grandson, Kravin, ran circles around him and the home, randomly squeezing a squirt pistol at skittering sheep, or at unseen foes on the desert. He was one of three siblings living in Bell’s little house, along with their parents.

The youngest, a week-old girl, rested in her mother’s arms inside Bell’s little house.

“This is the next generation,” he said, referring not just to his family but to kids who hop the school bus up and down the road. “Most of these young kids have asthma.”

He worked in the mine within view of his doorstep, as a cager or elevator man from 1974 to 1982.

“We went in there for the money,” he said while seated in the same outdoor chair on another day this spring, “because it was the only place with money coming out of it.”

He’s unsure whether the radiation contributed to his diabetes. At any rate, the federal law that provides compensation to early miners has a 1971 cutoff date, so his tenure isn’t covered.

[…]

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ref. Skyline Abandoned Uranium Mine (AUM) via United States Environmental Protection Agency On-Scene Coordinator

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Uranium Mines Dot Navajo Land, Neglected and Still Perilous via New York Times

CAMERON, Ariz. — In the summer of 2010, a Navajo cattle rancher named Larry Gordy stumbled upon an abandoned uranium mine in the middle of his grazing land and figured he had better call in the feds. Engineers from the Environmental Protection Agency arrived a few months later, Geiger counters in hand, and found radioactivity levels that buried the needles on their equipment.

The abandoned mine here, about 60 miles east of the Grand Canyon, joins the list of hundreds of such sites identified across the 27,000 square miles of Navajo territory in Arizona, Utah and New Mexico that are the legacy of shoddy mining practices and federal neglect. From the 1940s through the 1980s, the mines supplied critical materials to the nation’s nuclear weapons program.

For years, unsuspecting Navajos inhaled radioactive dust and drank contaminated well water. Many of them became sick with cancer and other diseases.

The radioactivity at the former mine is said to measure one million counts per minute, translating to a human dose that scientists say can lead directly to malignant tumors and other serious health damage, according to Lee Greer, a biologist at La Sierra University in Riverside, Calif. Two days of exposure at the Cameron site would expose a person to more external radiation than the Nuclear Regulatory Commission considers safe for an entire year.

The E.P.A. filed a report on the rancher’s find early last year and pledged to continue its environmental review. But there are still no warning signs or fencing around the secluded and decaying site. Crushed beer cans and spent shell casings dot the ground, revealing that the old mine has become a sort of toxic playground.

“If this level of radioactivity were found in a middle-class suburb, the response would be immediate and aggressive,” said Doug Brugge, a public health professor at Tufts University medical school and an expert on uranium. “The site is remote, but there are obviously people spending time on it. Don’t they deserve some concern?”

Navajo advocates, scientists and politicians are asking the same question.

The discovery came in the midst of the largest federal effort to date to clean up uranium mines on the vast Indian reservation. A hearing in 2007 before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform led to a multiagency effort to assess and clean up hundreds of structures on the reservation through a five-year plan that ends this year.

Yet while some mines have been “surgically scraped” of contamination and are impressive showpieces for the E.P.A., others, like the Cameron site, are still contaminated. Officials at the E.P.A. and the Department of Energy attribute the delay to the complexity of prioritizing mine sites. Some say it is also about politics and money.

“The government can’t afford it; that’s a big reason why it hasn’t stepped in and done more,” said Bob Darr, a public relations specialist for the environmental consulting firm S.M. Stoller, which does contracting work for the Department of Energy. “The contamination problem is vast.”

If the government can track down a responsible party, he said, it could require it to pay for remediation. But most of the mining companies that operated on the reservation have long since gone out of business, Mr. Darr said.

To date, the E.P.A., the Department of Energy and other agencies have evaluated 683 mine sites on the land and have selected 34 structures and 12 residential yards for remediation. The E.P.A. alone has spent $60 million on assessment and cleanup.

Cleaning up all the mines would cost hundreds of millions of dollars, said Clancy Tenley, a senior E.P.A. official who oversees the uranium legacy program for the agency in the Southwest.

Some say the effort has been marred by bureaucratic squabbles and a tendency to duck responsibility. “I’ll be the first to admit that the D.O.E. could work better with the E.P.A.,” said David Shafer, an environmental manager at the energy agency.

Determining whether uranium is a result of past mining or is naturally occurring is “a real debate” and can delay addressing the problem, Mr. Shafer said. He cited seepage of uranium contaminants into the San Juan River, which runs along the boundary of the reservation, as an example. “We need to look at things like this collectively and not just say it’s E.P.A.’s problem or D.O.E.’s problem,” he said.

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