|  | May 21st, 2000  7. Family Fighting Illness 
 
 
        
          
            |   Tammy (left) and Marleen work on a customer's
            hair. After surgery to remove a brain tumor,
            Marleen is unable to work long hours. (Susanville,
            California) |  
 
        
          
            | Sick Wife and Daughter Suing the military to halt explosions
 |  
 Sisters Tammy Pastor (34) and Marleen Norvell
      (30) run a beauty salon in the main commercial
      building in downtown Susanville, California.
      They are quite skillful at cutting hair and
      pleasant conversation. 
 
  Needs a cane to walk 
 In February 1998, Marleen underwent surgery
      at a hospital in Reno, Nevada, to remove
      a brain tumor. The damage that accompanied
      her surgery means she must take drugs for
      the rest of her life to make certain organs
      work normally.
 
 While the two sisters served customers, I
      sat in a room behind the salon interviewing
      their parents Jack (59) and Sally Pastor
      (57). Five years ago, Sally's fingers began
      to curl inward and she experienced severe
      joint pain. Today, she has difficulty walking
      without a cane.
 
 "Before I got sick I used to roller
      skate and play golf. I was so healthy people
      were jealous of me." Sitting in a chair,
      she looked at the stiff, curled hand on her
      knee. "After a bunch of tests, they
      found high levels of uranium."
 
 The Pastors and their four children moved
      to this area from the outskirts of Sacramento
      in 1981. Jack was transferred here by his
      employer, a telephone company. "The
      kids were surrounded by nature. We were all
      so happy. We really thought we had come to
      God's country."
 
 Jack retired in 1991. He became a successful
      developer, building homes and other buildings
      around the town. In 1987, he was president
      of the local Chamber of Commerce. In 1993,
      when rumors arose that the Sierra Army Depot
      in Lassen County might be closed, he went
      as president of the county Economic Development
      Commission to the depot to make a strong
      appeal for its survival.
 
 "More than a thousand people right around
      here were working at that base. I was thinking
      about economic development and securing jobs,
      but now I wonder what in the world I was
      doing. I am ashamed of myself for unknowingly
      sacrificing the health of my family and other
      residents."
 
 
  Listening and beginning to question 
 In 1995, Jack began to question the role
      of the military facility. During live TV
      coverage of Congressional hearings about
      the diseases afflicting the Gulf War veterans,
      he heard military officials testify that
      toxic substances from explosions can travel
      over 40 miles (64 kilometers) in the smoke.
 
 It is less than 30 miles (48 kilometers)
      from the disposal site to Susanville. Furthermore,
      the town is at the bottom of a bowl surrounded
      by high mountains. Smoke from explosions
      floats into town frequently.
 
 During his own investigation targeting the
      most obvious conventional weapons, he learned
      that the explosions were releasing lead,
      mercury, beryllium-a total of eight carcinogenic
      substances. In addition, the facility was
      disposing of DU, a highly toxic heavy metal
      that carries the additional danger of radioactivity.
 
 Lassen County has nearly twice the state's
      average cancer rate, including leukemia,
      brain tumors, lymph cancer, and breast cancer.
      And a conspicuous number of people have the
      same autoimmune symptoms as Sally.
 
 
  Doctor: "You're in danger." 
 After work, Marleen joined our conversation.
      "The population of Susanville is only
      15,000, but my doctor is always operating
      on people from here with cancer. She told
      me, 'Living in Susanville is too dangerous.
      If I were you, I'd get out quick."
 
 Tammy, who is single and has had high levels
      of heavy metals detected in her body, plans
      to move to a safer place in the near future.
 
 In mid April 2000, I received an e-mail from
      the Pastors. Jack's 800-member Residents
      Against Munitions had joined forces with
      the Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe, who live downwind
      of the facility, and with the Rural Alliance
      for Military Accountability headed by Ms.
      Grace Potorti. They filed suit on April 13
      to force the army to halt open-air destruction
      of obsolete weapons. "And we're trying
      to get an expert to help us do a more detailed
      study of the impact of DU." Beneath
      the magnificent, expansive Sierra Nevada
      Mountain Range, the struggle of the people
      of Lassen County to recover their safe and
      beautiful environment has just begun.
 
      =Part3 end= 
        
          
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