|
The story was told how, a couple of
decades ago, a company was looking to settle in the Anniston area. Representatives
met with community leaders, everything seemed settled, but just before the
papers were signed, a company official confessed that the product they made
had PCBs as a byproduct.
To which one Annistonian replied, “We got nerve gas just west
of here. We’re not scared of PCBs.”
The story may be apocryphal, but it makes the point that,
having lived with stored chemical weapons so long, local folks hardly gave
them a thought — until we set out to dispose of them. As plans for the Anniston
Chemical Agent Disposal Facility went forward, the community debated whether
it should be constructed, but the argument that the agents were more dangerous
stockpiled than being destroyed prevailed. The incinerator was built and
the burning began.
On Wednesday, the last load of sarin-filled projectiles is
scheduled to be disposed of. These are the most dangerous weapons out there.
Then the facility will be refitted to handle the next agents to be destroyed.
So far, the process has gone remarkably well, and we have
every reason to believe that it will continue to do so. Soon it will all
be over. The community will be safer. The county will be safer. The region
will be safer.
And then we expect the government to keep its promise and
dismantle the facility. That was the deal. The people of northeast Alabama
expect and deserve no less.
|