Interview with Trisha Thompson Pritikin.
Author of "The Hanford Plaintiffs"
Trisha Pritikin’s The Hanford Plaintiffs was the winner of the
General Non-Fiction category at the 2020 New England Book Festival. But
it’s really a horror story about the abuse suffered by victims of
radiation poisoning at the hands of the US government during its push to
develop atomic weapons during World War II, with a particular locus at
the Hanford reactor in Washington state.
In the book, we hear the oral histories of people who were affected by
the radioactive leakage from the plant and the debilitating impact on
their health. It’s equal parts astonishing and scary, and it’s a
well-researched tale of government malfeasance when it comes to making
things right for those victims.
Pritikin’s book is available through the University Press of Kansas or
at Amazon.com. We asked her questions about the book’s impact and
whether we should be concerned about other issues that are potentially
being covered up.
Q: There is much written by others about the banality of evil. What
are your thoughts on the government, based on the book? Are they
malevolent, or is it a bureaucracy that is just CYA.
TRISHA PRITIKIN: Throughout the wartime Manhattan Project and
decades of the Cold War era that followed, the Hanford nuclear weapons
facility in southcentral Washington State secretly released over 800,000
curies of airborne I-131, a radioactive isotope of iodine, along with a
vast range of other radionuclides, throughout much of the Pacific
Northwest. The Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) did not inform people in
communities downwind of Hanford that they were in harm’s way, within the
path of undetectable radioactive fallout.
During the Manhattan Project and frenetic US Cold War nuclear weapons
production and testing program that followed, the AEC knowingly
sacrificed the health of civilians downwind and downriver of Hanford.
Many people, exposed to radiation released from the Hanford facility
during Manhattan Project and Cold War years, were later diagnosed with
cancers, autoimmune disease, reproductive disorders, and other
significant health issues likely caused by those exposures. It is not
possible to definitively prove which of the downwinders’ diseases were
caused by these exposures. However, based on epidemiologic studies of
populations exposed to I-131 and other airborne radionuclides released
from nuclear weapons tests and reactor accidents including the Chernobyl
nuclear disaster, it is more probable than not that thyroid cancer,
thyroid disease, parathyroid disease, autoimmune diseases and a number
of cancers related to airborne radiation and to the radionuclides dumped
by Hanford operators directly into the Columbia River were the result of
exposure downwind and downriver of Hanford.
It would have been feasible as well as humane for the AEC to introduce
simple, cost-effective measures to protect the health of downwind and
downriver communities, even if national security concerns prevented the
government from publicly revealing that the Hanford site manufactured
plutonium and released the radioactive byproducts of production to air
and water offsite. Local radioactive milk and milk products could have
been confiscated and destroyed as they were following partial meltdown
of the Three Mile Island Unit 2 reactor on March 28, 1979 near
Middletown, PA, when 18-21 curies of I-131 were released downwind. Local
dairies could have been compensated for these losses of product.
Non-radioactive milk and other dairy products from areas outside of
Hanford’s fallout region could have been imported for consumption within
the Hanford area, even if the reason for doing so was not publicly
disclosed.
Non-radioactive iodine or iodized table salt, which were simple,
cost-effective public health measures that would have protected the
thyroid against the damage caused by ingestion and inhalation of I-131,
could have been provided to Hanford’s downwind communities. In 1945, a
secret Hanford memo recommended that the public be advised to use
iodized salt or that only iodized salt be made available in area stores,
and that Hanford workers be given a dose of nonradioactive iodine during
their monthly medical examinations. These recommendations were rejected
by the AEC over concern that these measures might provoke “undue alarm”
amongst workers and members of the public.
Finally, if the AEC had informed downwind and downriver communities that
they were in harm’s way, within the path of radiation released from
nuclear weapons production and testing sites, federal assistance could
have been provided to relocate families to safe areas outside fallout
zones. Members of downwind communities, sharing the fear of most
Americans at the time over potential Soviet nuclear attack against the
United States, would have likely been willing to relocate, both for
their own safety and out of a sense of patriotic duty.
Historians advise that the actions of government must be judged within
the context of the politics and pressures of the times. This is not to
say that the failure of the AEC to protect the health of civilian
populations downwind and downriver of nuclear weapons production and
testing sites should be excused in light of political pressures of
wartime and the ensuing Cold War nuclear arms race. Instead, instances
of government failure to introduce measures to protect public health
must be evaluated individually. What specific protective measures were
available and how easily could they have been introduced? If these
measures had been introduced, would they have caused actual detriment to
national security? If so, how did the level of potential detriment to
national security weigh against the ethical and moral implications of
failing to protect the health of families downwind of nuclear weapons
production and testing sites?
Did the AEC’s failure to protect the public from Hanford’s radiation
releases constitute malevolence on the part of the US government? My
answer is yes. I believe that the AEC’s failure to protect the public
satisfies the second definition of malevolent as described below.
Webster’s Dictionaryi defines “malevolent” as 1) having, showing, or
arising from intense often vicious ill will, spite, or hatred; or 2)
productive of harm or evil. The AEC’s failure to introduce even the
simple measures I have discussed above in order to protect the health of
Hanford downwind and downriver civilians was not the product of vicious
ill
will, spite, or hatred. This failure, was, however, “productive of
harm,” the second definition of malevolent.
The question further asks whether the AEC engaged in CYA behavior in its
relentless efforts to amass a Cold War nuclear stockpile at all costs? I
do not believe this was CYA behavior so much as the product of
“consequences-be-damned” fast-forward momentum in an intense Cold War
arms race against the former Soviet Union, a powerful adversary seen as
capable of launching a devastating nuclear attack against our country at
any time.
Q: Would the downwinders have been helped by the internet?
TP: In order to answer the question of whether public availability
of the internet during wartime and Cold War Hanford operations would
have helped the downwinders, two possible scenarios must be considered.
The first scenario is that of an internet in which public access was
unrestricted; and the second is that of an internet with tight
government controls over what could be publicly shared. The level of
control in the latter scenario would have been equivalent to the secrecy
and compartmentalization in place during the Manhattan project and Cold
War US nuclear weapons production and testing program.
In the first scenario, providing unrestricted public internet access, we
can assume that technology allowing the public to detect airborne
radiation would likely also have been developed and publicly available,
as it is today. It is very doubtful, under these circumstances, that the
Atomic Energy Commission could have released radiation throughout the
Pacific Northwest and into the Columbia River without members of the
public, using this technology, detecting these releases. This
information, in turn, would have been widely disseminated via the
internet. Public protest would likely then have resulted in
congressional inquiry, and potentially, in a court-issued injunction
against further radiation release from nuclear weapons production and
testing facilities until the safety of these releases could be assessed.
If the internet had been available without restriction to the
downwinders, it would have allowed these communities to widely share
local health information through online maps tracking incidence of
disease. A hand-drawn kitchen table map, created by Hanford area farmer
Juanita Andrewjeski in the early 1980s, plotted the incidence of heart
attacks in young men who worked the fields on area farms along with
cancer diagnoses in members of communities across from Hanford. Such a
map could have been shared online, making the public widely aware that
something was amiss in the region around Hanford.
The internet has empowered the public in many ways. Online news accounts
have documented increased incidence of cancer in people living around
radioactively contaminated Cold Water Creek, MO along with accounts of
health issues potentially related to contaminated drinking water in
Flint, Michigan. The internet serves as a
powerful and cost-effective ally to grass-roots community groups trying
to get the word out about patterns of disease observed in their
communities. The internet also allows communities to locate and contact
residents in order to watch for developing disease patterns that might
be related to toxic exposure.
If the internet had been available during Manhattan Project and Cold War
years with national security claimed by the AEC as justification for
strict controls over what people could share, there is little chance
that the downwinders would have benefitted unless they could have
devised means to circumvent these governmental controls.
Q: What would have represented true justice to you for the various
cases?
TP: The mass toxic tort litigation known as In re Hanford Nuclear
Reservation Litigation (In re Hanford) initially involved around 5,000
personal injury downwinder plaintiffs. Toxic tort injuries are more
complicated than injuries described by traditional tort scenarios. In a
traditional tort injury, A might hit B, causing injury to B. In this
case, causation is clear. In a toxic tort involving radiation injury, A
might expose B to radiation. B doesn’t know he or she has been exposed,
and doesn’t develop radiation-related cancer or other disease until
several decades later, after passage of a latency period that can last
for several decades. This makes proving causation in toxic tort cases
very complicated. It is extremely difficult for a toxic tort plaintiff
to prove that a specific exposure caused his or her specific disease, in
part because other potential causes of the disease could have occurred
during the extended latency period. As the result of the challenges of
proving causation in toxic tort cases, many In re Hanford plaintiffs who
now suffer from cancer or other disease were not able to prove by a
preponderance of the evidence that radiation exposure caused their
specific disease. As the result, a large number of Hanford downwinder
plaintiffs did not receive monetary settlement, even though their cancer
or other disease may well have been caused by exposure to Hanford’s
radiation. Those plaintiffs who did receive monetary settlement often
received meager sums that did not cover relevant medical expenses, let
alone loss of earning potential due to disease-related disability, or
pain and suffering.
This is not justice.
In The Hanford Plaintiffs, I describe my vision for government response
to the plight of health-damaged civilian downwinders, a response that I
feel is both equitable and compassionate. I propose that a national
compensation program be created, treating civilians who lived downwind
or downriver of US nuclear weapons production and testing sites during
periods of release of radioactive fallout from those sites in the same
way nuclear workers are treated under federal law (EEOICPA, or Energy
Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act). Under my
proposed plan, if downwind or downriver civilians:
a) develop any of the cancers or other diseases recognized as radiogenic
(radiation-caused) for nuclear workers under the EEOICPA,
b) and they lived for at least a minimum defined period of time downwind
or downriver of a designated nuclear weapons production or testing site
during documented offsite radiation release,
c) they should receive compensation for their cancer or other disease at
levels comparable to the compensation received by nuclear workers.
Under the EEOICPA, Hanford nuclear workers and workers at many other
nuclear sites are considered to be part of “special exposure cohorts”
(SECs). As members of SECs, these workers are not required to provide
documentation of their specific radiation exposure dose in order to
prove that their individual cancer or other disease was caused by their
exposure to radiation. These nuclear workers are, in other words, given
the benefit of the doubt- the assumption is made that the disease in
that worker was caused by radiation exposure. I believe that civilian
downwinders should also be considered to be part of an SEC. The
government intentionally failed to monitor civilians’ radiation exposure
levels. It is therefore wholly unjust as well as virtually impossible to
document the exposure dose they received. Furthermore, while nuclear
workers signed on for work within the nuclear weapons complex, work that
they knew posed certain exposure health risks (although they may not
have known the full extent of the risks involved), civilian downwinders,
many of whom were exposed during infancy and childhood, did not
voluntarily assume the risk of radiation exposure.
Finally, it would also be highly appropriate for the US government to
issue a long-overdue official apology to US downwinders and to civilians
exposed to fallout from atomic tests conducted by the US within the
Pacific Proving Grounds for cancers and other radiogenic diseases that
are the result of these exposures.
Q: Is there still danger in the Hanford area? Radiation lasts a long
time.
TP: It is not within my expertise to assess the current hazards
posed by the Hanford site. NGO watchdog groups that track these issues
can provide current information on these questions as well as on the
clean-up efforts, successes as well as the failures, underway at
Hanford.
Q: How has writing this book affected you? Do you feel the same way
about doctors and/or the government?
TP: People often ask me how I felt about meeting people with the
cancers and other serious health issues suffered by the individuals
whose stories appear in the book. My reply is always the same. The
people I interviewed have many of the same health issues as my own
family. In fact, my family’s story is included in The Hanford
Plaintiffs, as our health was significantly impacted by Hanford
operations, and we were, as the result, also personal injury plaintiffs
in the litigation.
You ask how writing the book has affected me. I can say that I do not
feel depressed as the result of interviewing so many people injured by
Hanford’s radiation releases. Rather, I feel empowered. My goal was to
join our stories together as one voice, as our stories together are far
more powerful than they are individually. Seeing our stories together
now within this published book, I know that my goal has been realized. I
also believe that the only way for the public to understand the human
toll of Hanford operations is to hear from the people who lived downwind
and downriver and who now suffer with a range of cancers and other
serious diseases identified as radiation-caused. Because these are the
stories of everyday people, readers can easily identify with them and
with their suffering.
This question asks whether I feel the same way about doctors and/or the
government. While I’m not sure exactly what this question is asking, I
can say that I do trust my own doctors, and that they are respectful of
my work on Hanford and have been very helpful to me in my efforts to
cope with the difficult challenges of diseases, including autoimmune
thyroiditis and hypoparathyroidism, resulting from my years of exposure
during childhood to radioactive iodine. As to whether I trust the
government, that is a totally different question. In question #1, above,
I address the question of whether the Atomic Energy Commission was
malevolent in its actions towards the downwinders.
Q: You focused on Hanford, and at the end of the book, mentioned the
other areas that could have DoE radiation problems. How are those being
addressed, if at all?
TP: In The Hanford Plaintiffs, I wanted to make readers aware of the
larger population of civilians who lived downwind of US nuclear weapons
production and testing sites, or who were exposed from their work in the
uranium industry. Many of these people suffer today from the same
cancers and other radiogenic (radiation-caused) diseases as the Hanford
downwinders.
The response by the US government, responsible for placing these
civilians in harm’s way, has been inefficient, inequitable and
piecemeal. What I mean by this is that while certain subgroups of
downwinders have received compensation and health care, others have not.
For instance, certain groups of health damaged Nevada Test Site (NTS)
downwinders who lived in counties close-in to the NTS are currently
eligible for compensation under the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act
(RECA), while others, in geographic areas that have been found to have
even higher fallout deposition from above-ground tests conducted at the
NTS, are not eligible for compensation or care under RECA. Congressional
representatives with constituents in NTS fallout areas outside of RECA
eligibility, including downwind of the Trinity Test Site, have
repeatedly introduced failed bills in Congress to expand RECA to their
constituents.
Manhattan Project and Cold War production sites around the US differ as
to the amount of radiation released offsite. They also differ as to the
public health response by the US government to any health issues
reported by people who lived downwind of those sites.
There are also sites where radioactive waste from Manhattan Project and
Cold War weapons production is stored, some of which has leaked offsite
or into nearby streams. People who live near these storage facilities
for a minimum defined period of time, and who develop radiogenic cancers
and other diseases following documented leaks of radioactive substances
from these sites, should be included within any federal compensation
program, as discussed in my response to question #3, above.
Q: How easy or difficult was it to get people to talk about their
cases?
TP: The downwinders whose stories are included in The Hanford
Plaintiffs responded to a letter I sent out in late 2015, as the final
cases were settled, inviting former In re Hanford plaintiffs to
participate in this project. About a third of the former plaintiffs I
invited decided to be interviewed. Several later decided not to
participate. Two of those who did participate decided not to use their
full names.
I have worked for over thirty years on Hanford issues, and during that
time, I have met many people who are afraid to speak publicly about
health issues that they feel may have resulted from their exposure to
Hanford’s radiation. The reasons for this vary. Before Obamacare
provided protections against denial of health insurance coverage for
pre-existing conditions, many people worried that, had their insurance
carriers learned of their earlier radiation exposure, any disease that
might have resulted from that exposure would be excluded from coverage
as a pre-existing condition. This kept many people from speaking
publicly about their exposures and health issues.
The stigma of radiation exposure must also be acknowledged as it often
causes people to hesitate to talk about their exposure. While not as
major an issue in the US as it is in Japan,
There is still stigma attached to radiation exposure in US culture, in
that people perceive exposure as potentially resulting in genetic
mutations in the offspring of those exposed. It is not often possible to
prove one way or the other whether a birth defect or disease in a child
was caused by the parent’s exposure to radiation. From what I have
learned from people who work with Japanese Hibakusha (survivors of the
bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki) and with people downwind of the
Fukushima Daiichi reactor accident in 2011, the stigma against both the
Hibakusha and Fukushima downwinders in Japan is much more severe than
anything experienced by radiation survivors in the U.S.
Q: How aware of this history are the medical professionals in the
Hanford area?
TP: I currently live in northern California. I have been surprised
over the years by the level of awareness of Hanford’s radiation releases
by physicians and other medical professionals in the SF Bay Area. All of
the health care providers who currently treat my health issues relating
to childhood exposure downwind of Hanford know about the facility and my
exposures. Many have treated other Hanford downwinders, as quite a
number of Hanford downwinders now live in California and other parts of
the country.
In the Hanford area, and across the Pacific Northwest, the level of
awareness of Hanford and Hanford’s radiation releases is very high,
particularly for endocrinologists who treat patients with thyroid and
parathyroid disease (the primary diseases seen in many Hanford
downwinders) and for oncologists, who often treat downwinders with
thyroid cancer and other cancers.
I have found that many of the medical professionals I have met are
aghast at the levels of radiation covertly released onto the public from
Hanford. I am thinking that part of this high level of sympathy comes
from the fact that these health professionals end up treating some very
aggressive cancers in the downwinders, and they see the extreme levels
of suffering we endure.
I do recall that, in 1986, just after the Department of Energy
declassified early Hanford operating records revealing Hanford’s decades
of secret radiation releases throughout the Pacific Northwest, it took a
few years before physicians and other medical professionals were able to
understand the broad scope of endocrine cancers, disorders, and other
diseases they were seeing in the downwinders. I am thinking that the
severity and extent of the injuries to the people of the Pacific
Northwest was hard to fathom. This is still the case for those who have
just learned of the injustices committed against the downwinders.
Q: These problems were caused by radiation and were covered up. Did
writing this book cause you to wonder about other things going on that
may also be deleterious to health that are either not being talked about
or covered up? We hear about 5G, chemtrails, etc. Without getting too
paranoid, should we be concerned?
TP: I learned almost forty years after my childhood exposure that
the government had placed my family in danger as our country jumped
headlong into the new science and technology of nuclear weapons, without
assessing the health implications to the public of producing and testing
these weapons.
I would advise people to be concerned over any new technology that might
potentially pose a health hazard. It is impossible to know whether new
electrical or digital products or other technology is safe until that
product or technology has been used for some time and either reveals a
track record of safety or, in the alternative, health issues begin to be
associated its use.
Due to the harm suffered by my family and many like us when the new
science of the atom and atomic weapons was ushered in to American life,
I now hesitate when new technologies are introduced and touted as safe,
better, and what everyone needs and wants. The latest example of this is
5G. If one watches the ads on TV, one thinks 5G will make things faster,
better, and that 5G is something we all need. Yet, I am currently
reading a book by a physician who points out the negative health
implications of 5G networks. Our home has only ethernet (wired)
connections rather than WiFi in order to try to minimize exposure to
EMFs, every cell phone we use has a radiation deflection
cover, I insist upon the use of earphones on cell phone calls, with an
EMF deflecting bead on the headset cord, and I take quite an array of
protective antioxidants daily. My friends who are not downwinders do not
take anywhere near as many health protective actions as I do. I am
thinking that what I have experienced as a health-damaged downwinder has
resulted in a combination of hyper-vigilance and skepticism over the
safety of new technologies, along with possibly a touch of mild PTSD for
having been involuntarily exposed to and damaged from a barrage of
undetectable radiation as a child.
Q: Obviously, the legal system is long and slow, and justice is
sometimes delayed or denied. What, short of revolution, can be done to
make the system work better?
TP: In answer to this question, please see my detailed discussion,
describing my proposal for a comprehensive, more equitable national
compensation program for health damaged civilian downwinders, in the
answer to question #3, “What would have represented true justice to you
for the various cases?” above.
You can check the author's
website here.
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