Tri-City Herald
May 3, 2002

Pressured workers mishandled nerve gas, woman says

By the Associated Press

WASHINGTON- Managers at the nation's only chemical weapons incinerator encouraged workers to cut corners so a deadly nerve agent stockpile could be destroyed before the Winter Olympics in nearby Salt Lake Cky, a plant employee says.

Brenda Mugleston, who has worked for eight years at the Toocie Chemical Agent Disposal Facility, told the Associated Press workers were promised a $750 bonus for meeting the deadline. She said they felt pressure from managers to increase productivity and they sometimes mishandled weapons

Mugleston said she feared workers and the public were being endangered and told managers but nothing was done.

She also reported the problem to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.

Stuart Young, attorney for EG&G Defense Materials which runs the incinerator for the Army, said Mugleston's allegations are being investigated and "at this point we don't have my reason to believe there are any immediate health, safety or environmental concerns."

Mugleston said she has reported the problems to OSHA and provided a letter saying the
agency is investigating. Agency spokesman Big Wright said whistleblower laws preclude him from identifying complainants.

Army spokeswoman Nancy Ray said the Pentagon is pleased with the work EG&G has done. "It's absolutely a professional operation."

Tooele, 40 miles west of Salt Lake City, is home to the Pentagon's incinerator, created to
destroy 13,616 tons of the chemical weapons stockpile. Other incinerators are being built in Anniston, Ala, Umallita and Pine Bluff, Ark.

The incinerator was forced to shut down for several months in the summer of 2000 after a tiny amount of GB nerve agent escaped from its emissions stack.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the amount was small enough that it did not endanger the public. Plant managers say it is the only time nerve agent was released.

Mugleston's allegations come as the plant prepares to process VX agent. which the CDC Protection Agency say is 36 times more deadly than the sarin gas the facility has been handling and much more difficult to detect.

"Basically, we have been told that when we go into VX we're going to be living in our masks." Mugleston said.

Mugleston said she is concerned what will happen when VX incineration begins because she has witnessed problems that undermined worker safety, including:

She provided internal documents to support her claims.

Company officials declined to comment on the allegations and said their investigation is ongoing.

Mugleston said more problems surfaced late last year as a workers rushed to finish before the Olymplics began in February. Tooele was shut down during the Games as part of security precautions.

Canisters with artillery shells leaking tiny amounts of sarin gas should have been placed in special airtight containers before being transferred from storage bunkers to the incinerator. Instead, to save time, managers allowed the canisters to be covered only with plastic before being moved, Mugleston said. The canisters then were unpacked by workers not wearing proper protection, she said.