| Utah won't get
more chemical weapons By Tiffany
Erickson In a reverse move, after
months of controversy, the Pentagon has abandoned plans to ship chemical weapons
to Utah. The weapons will be destroyed
on-site at depots in Colorado and Kentucky rather than being hauled to incinerators
in Utah and elsewhere around the country. "This is really good news
for Utah and for all of our citizens who won't see leaking weapons transported
through their communities," Rep. Jim Matheson, D-Utah, said Tuesday night
through spokeswoman Alyson Heyrend. "I am pleased that Utah's senators, our
governor and my office were able to work together to accomplish this." In a letter released Tuesday,
Defense Department undersecretary Michael Wynne told Congress the agency
will move ahead with the design and construction of facilities that will
destroy the dangerous weapons on-site at the Pueblo Chemical Depot in Colorado
and the Blue Grass Depot in Kentucky. Until now, the money had been
held up while the Defense Department studied the possibility of shipping
chemical weapons from places like Colorado to Utah. The Kentucky-based Chemical
Weapons Working Group, a coalition of organizations across the country working
for the safe disposal of chemical weapons, first uncovered plans to study
the possibility of transporting weapons from various sites to places like
Utah in January. But, according to Jason Groenewold,
director of the Healthy Environment Alliance of Utah, fierce public and political
opposition to the plan resulted in the about-face by defense officials. The decision will free up
around $300 million that will be used to construct chemical neutralization
plants in the two states during 2005. Utah Congressional representatives
— including Matheson, Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Utah, and Sen. Orrin Hatch,
R-Utah — and Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. had opposed the plan to ship more than
780,000 chemical weapons filled with more than five million pounds of mustard
agent to Utah from Colorado. Groenewold said Utah started
with the largest cache of chemical weapons with more than 42 percent of the
national stockpile. "Bottom line, we have done
more than our fair share of being on the receiving end of toxic waste," Groenewold
said. "Suggesting that we should open our doors to more is insulting, and
we are extremely appreciative that the Utah delegation worked to make sure
we were not on the receiving end of this." Tammy Kikuchi, spokesperson
for the governor, said Huntsman's office had yet to hear the news. "If it is indeed the case,
the governor will be thrilled. . . . It is in line with what he has lobbied
for while he had been in Washington, D.C.," said Kikuchi. "The Pentagon's decision is good news for Utah and it underscores our effort to block additional chemical weapons from coming to the state," said Mary Jane Collipriest, spokeswoman for Bennett.
Contributing: Jerry D. Spangler, The Associated Press E-mail: terickson@desnews.com |