Oregon Herald Bureau, October 24, 2002
By Karen Zacharias Oregon Herald bureau PORTLAND - Environmentalists accused the Army of "rigging a ruse" to obtain a state permit to burn dangerous chemical weapons stored at Umatilla Chemical Depot, near Hermiston. A trial that could potentially result in the in revoking the incinerator burn permit began Wednesday in Multnomah County Circuit Court in Portland.
Three anti-incineration groups - GASP, Oregon Wildlife Federation and the Sierra Club -- along with 20 Umatilla and Morrow County residents are seeking to stop the burning of about 3,700 tons of deadly VX, sarin and mustard agent. They also insist that burning the stockpiles of rockets, bombs, and other munitions is a threat to the public and the environment. Richard Condit, the Portland attorney representing the anti-incineration group, told Judge Michael Marcus that the Army's incineration program has been plagued with problems, putting workers and nearby communities at significant risk. "There's been a grossly deficient assessment of the risks," Condit said. He also said the Army purposely set out to deceive Oregon regulators when it applied for the permit. Condit pointed out that numerous components of the incinerator don't work and that the Army knew about the problems, including issues dealing with hazardous waste water, when it applied.
By delaying decisions on how deal with such problems, Condit
said, "We cynically believe this has been done in order to
ensure that the Army received the burn permit, not to ensure public
safety and health." The Army and state regulators have "failed
miserably" to account for toxic substances produced by the
incineration process, he said. The judge asked Condit if he
conceded that there was a risk to the public by continuing to
store the Cold War chemical munitions, some of which have been
leaking deadly nerve agent such as sarin. "This risk of storage
card has been heavily played and is grossly overstated,"
Condit replied. Storage problems should not be used by the state
and Army as a "trump card" to approve a dangerous disposal
method, he argued. Stephen Bushong, an assistant attorney general
for the state, said he plans to prove during the five-week trial
that the state was not involved in any decepiton. "The state
agency is doing their job. They have given appropriate attention
to the risks of public safety, health and the environment,"
Bushong argued. He insisted Oregon's Department of Environmental
Quality and the Environmental Quality Commission had been diligent
in reaching a decision to allow the Army to burn the deadly chemical
weapons. "There is a weighing of risks here," Bushong
said. "Nobody is suggesting that with tons of chemical weapons
stockpiled there isn't " But, he added," There are no
risk-free answers" to the problem. Michael Berringan, the
Washington, D.C. attorney representing the Army, argued that incineration
is the "only game in town" to destroy the stockpile
in a timely and safe manner. He insisted the Army has never lied
about the risks factors of burning the weapons. Besides, he said,
any means of destroying the stockpile has its own inherent flaws.
"There is no silver bullet" for destroying the stockpile,
Berringan said. But, he added, "We can't return to Eden.
We have a stockpile. We have to get rid of them."