Decision says Dugway is no risk to environment
By Lee Davidson
Deseret Morning News
After five years of deliberation, the Army has decided that continuing chemical
and biological defense tests at Dugway Proving Ground will not hurt the Utah
environment.
Deseret Morning News
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The Army gave public notice Wednesday that it has adopted a "programmatic
environmental impact statement" that it began in 2001 to look at cumulative
effects of such testing at numerous sites nationally, including Dugway. It
finds no dire impacts.
But critics say the new document may be designed mostly to help the Army
avoid detailed future study of any new testing and missions that it may propose
at Dugway.
Steve Erickson, director of the Citizens Education Project, said the Army
can now refer to findings in that newly adopted document to allow simple,
additional "environmental assessments" on new proposals instead of much more
intensive "environmental impact statements."
"But they've been doing that anyway in recent years. This is an attempt to
paper over their backside. But it's not like they've ever done a good one
(environmental study on impacts) anyway," said Erickson, a longtime critic
of Dugway.
The Army said in a record of decision that environmental impacts of continued
biological and chemical defense testing at Dugway and other sites nationally
"will be negligible to minor and mitigable."
In reaction, Erickson said sarcastically, "Gee, they've never had problems
at Dugway before, so why should they in the future?"
Several problems have occurred there, ranging from a 1969 nerve gas accident
that killed 6,000 sheep in nearby Skull Valley (which some ranchers say also
led to health problems for their families) to disclosures that the base secretly
aimed some biological arms at human volunteers to test effects.
The Deseret Morning News also disclosed in recent years that scientists at
Dugway designed at-sea tests that exposed many Vietnam-era sailors to biological
arms, and Dugway spread toxic chemicals from airplanes nationwide to simulate
how more deadly chemical and biological arms might disperse in winds.
The new document, however, said, "All practicable means to avoid or mitigate
environmental harm . . . have been adopted."
For example, it notes that Dugway now uses "simulants" in outdoor tests instead
of actual, deadly chemical and biological agents against which it is testing
defenses.
"Simulants are required for outdoor . . . testing, because the release of
biological or chemical agents to the open air is strictly prohibited by law,"
the new study says.
It said that any biological simulants used are those "commonly found in nature
that have been determined to present minimal risk to humans or the environment."
Laboratory testing at Dugway -- where actual deadly chemical and biological
agents are still used -- presents little environmental impact, the study
said, because of tight security, state-of-the-art filtering and careful handling
of agents.
It said any use of human volunteers in testing is also closely regulated and
subject to laws designed to protect and fully inform volunteers.
The newly adopted study says the Rhode Island-size Dugway base in Tooele County
is the Defense Department's "major range and test facility base" and "primarily
serves as a chemical-biological testing center."
It notes that Dugway also holds a license for radiological testing and may
use radioactive substances as tracer materials. It says the base also uses
open-air laser testing, noting that many detector systems use lasers.
E-mail: lee@desnews.com