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            | The penetrators in the DU shells that the
            US military first used in combat in the Gulf
            War were produced by two munitions factories
            in Massachusetts and Tennessee. These radioactive
            weapons used by the US overwhelmed the Iraqi
            tanks. However, through radiation exposure
            and chemical toxicity, these same weapons
            also seriously impaired the health of US
            soldiers. The effects of radioactive pollution
            on the environment and on human bodies have
            cast a dark shadow on the residential communities
            near these production sites. (Story and photo by Akira Tashiro, senior
            staff writer) |  April 24th, 2000  1. Careless dumping 
 
 
        
          
            | Polluting factory near residential area Disposal in the ground for 40+ years
 |  I found Starmet Corporation, manufacturer
      of DU penetrators, about 30 kilometers (about
      19 miles) northwest of Boston, Massachusetts,
      in the southwest tip of Concord, the historic
      town that launched the American Revolution.
      Concord's population is about 18,000, and
      Starmet is one of several factories located
      in a quiet, wooded, otherwise residential
      area. 
 "The state government has designated
      this factory one of the state's most toxic
      waste disposal sites." Jack Scotnicki
      (57), a volunteer teacher who was my guide
      that day, talked as he turned his car into
      the road leading to the factory. "
 
 For decades, DU sludge and polluted water
      were dumped into the holding basin and marshland
      behind the factory, and DU particles emitted
      by the smokestacks."
  The drinking water in the suburbs 
 A major road runs in front of the factory,
      which stands on a small hill. Beyond the
      road flows the Assabet River. Parking the
      car on a side road next to the river, Scotnicki
      said, "This river provides the drinking
      water for Billerica, Massachusett, a town
      that lies downstream. If this were contaminated,
      we would be in serious trouble." His
      expression was grim as he looked at the river.
 
 Starmet Corporation was founded in 1958 as
      Nuclear Metals Inc. (NMI). The original leaders
      of Nuclear Metals, Inc. were professors at
      nearby Massachusetts Institute of Technology
      (MIT). They researched methods of using depleted
      uranium (U-238), a radioactive waste product
      generated in the nuclear weapon production
      process. Former President John F. Kennedy,
      then a US senator, helped celebrate the founding
      of this company by attending its opening
      ceremony.
 
 "At first, the company was also researching
      uranium 235, a fissile material. We know
      this because uranium 235 has been detected
      in the waste," said Scotnicki.
  No shield for the holding basin 
 Full-scale production of DU penetrators to
      fulfill a military contract began in the
      1970s. At its peak in the 80s, the company
      had more than 600 employees. NMI's focus
      was on raising production. The liquid radioactive
      waste it generated in the process was summarily
      dumped on site into a natural kettle hold
      in the ground. Referred to as a "holding
      basin," the radioactive sludge pit lacks
      even a concrete lining. By 1985, more than
      181 tons of DU, 317 tons of copper, and upwards
      of 360 kilograms of uranium 235 had been
      dumped into that hole.
  Investigation by local residents 
 "Can you believe it?" Scotnicki
      raised his shoulders in an exaggerated gesture.
      "These facts began to come out when
      local residents started a environmental study
      of NMI in 1989."
 
 Seeking to alter its image, NMI changed its
      name in 1997. By September 1998, under the
      guidance of the state Department of Environmental
      Protection and with $6.5 million provided
      by its contract partner, the US Army, the
      newly named Starmet Corporation had spent
      $8.2 million to remove roughly 6,100 cubic
      meters of sludge from the basin and transport
      it to a low-level radioactive waste storage
      facility in Utah.
 
 "It was too late," said Scotnicki.
      The polluted water that seeped from the highly
      toxic radioactive sludge had already polluted
      the surrounding soil and underground water.
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            |  Jack Scotnicki stands next to the Assabet
            River, which he fears may be contaminated
            with DU. (Concord, Massachusetts)
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