DIETERICH
(Resident, 4830 Glenbrook Road): There is a really immediate direct
risk to our property — much more than anyone else in the neighborhood
... The Army Corps in the mean time has twice rejected our request — we
are getting only "no's," so we ask for your support to be relocated. I
don't want our children to be in that house when the Army is digging for
chemical weapons just yards from our property ... There are enormous
risks, there are enormous uncertainties about what they're going to find
... Things go wrong. It's a marginal risk. Not a high one, but a
marginal risk when it comes to highly poisonous substances is too big a
risk for my children.
WHISNANT
(Principal, Horace Mann Elementary School): We certainly have been
promoting walking to school ... and they're walking access is along
Glenbrook Road. We have been in touch with AU about the possibility of
using their back gate as an alternate route or that is something that
can be disbanded The presence of those two children across the street
cannot be easily rerouted and disbanded unless, I think, this
Restoration Advisory Board has a voice that says (I don't know how you
talk about "acceptable risk" when there is no acceptable risk)
remove them and support their removal.
Spring Valley RAB Meeting
Christine Dieterich, who lives directly across the street from the site at 4825 Glenbrook Road with two children, said she is worried about adverse
effects from chemicals will harm her family during the construction.
The Army Corps denied her two requests for the Corps to pay for her
temporary relocation because the construction would be monitored and
precautions were in place.
“Systems
fail, things go wrong and engineers are human, not God,” Dieterich said
during the Spring Valley meeting on Sept. 11. Dieterich appealed to
the board, but members said they could not make a decision until they
had more evidence of the site’s risks. However, only Corps Headquarters
would be able to overturn the current decision. Dr. Peter deFur, an
environmental scientist who served on the National Research Council
Board on Environmental Studies and Toxicology, will release a study on
the construction site’s chemical risks.
The Eagle
September 20, 2012 (pg. 6)
The house to be demolished at 4825 Glenbrook Rd is approximately 45 feet from the near edge of Glenbrook Road, the road is about 30 feet wide, for a total distance of about 75 feet from the house to the property boundary across the street ... The Corps makes assumptions about the worst that might happen, termed the Maximum Credible Event -- what might occur if the containment failed with a chemical release, in this case a liter of arsenic trichloride. The Corps estimates that a person needs to be more than 161 feet from such a release in order to experience only minor discomfort from the release. For distance less than 161 feet from a release, a person needs to take precautions to remain safe in the event of a release.
September 18, 2012
Sep 18, 2012
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2 comments:
I was there in 1993. There were several things we were 'forbidden' to mention either in verbal or written form. Our initial 16 page brief was cut to 1-1/2 pages. We did find several situations that were anomalous to the original WWI burial techniques. We encountered evidence that somebody knew about the site long before 1993.
Thank you for posting.
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