logologo

Easy Branches allows you to share your guest post within our network in any countries of the world to reach Global customers start sharing your stories today!

Easy Branches

34/17 Moo 3 Chao fah west Road, Phuket, Thailand, Phuket

Call: 076 367 766

info@easybranches.com
Regions United States

Opinion: I know the heartbreak of radiation exposure. Our government has a moral obligation to make it right.

Before filmmaker Mark Shapiro came to interview me a few years ago for his film about the long shadow of nuclear testing in Nevada, “Downwind,” I sat on the floor of my office surrounded by piles of articles — some I had written — press clips


  • May 24 2024
  • 46
  • 10587 Views
Opinion: I know the heartbreak of radiation exposure. Our government has a moral obligation to make it right.
Opinion: I know the heartbreak

Before filmmaker Mark Shapiro came to interview me a few years ago for his film about the long shadow of nuclear testing in Nevada, “Downwind,” I sat on the floor of my office surrounded by piles of articles — some I had written — press clips, studies, obituaries and photographs. I sat in those piles sobbing because in the more than 30 years I had been working to fix the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA) nothing had changed for those of us it excludes.

In comments to the press earlier this month, Utah Sen. Mitt Romney implied that all those who were affected have been covered. No. We have not. We have been abandoned by our government and left to bear the cost of toxic radiation exposure alone.

Only 10 counties in Utah and a handful in Arizona and Nevada are currently covered. Salt Lake City, where I grew up, is not included even though we received levels of radioactive fallout as high as counties that are covered in southern Utah. Nor are so many other communities throughout the West, including New Mexico where the first atomic bomb was exploded. Nor is Guam, which suffered from fallout from U.S. nuclear testing in the Pacific. Nor is Missouri, where nuclear waste from the Manhattan Project is stored near St. Louis and is still leaching into creeks and making people sick. Nor are uranium miners who worked after 1971, most of them on tribal lands, without protective gear and whose land and water is still contaminated with uranium that is making them and their families sick.

I know the heartbreak of a cancer diagnosis. I know what it’s like to watch so many loved ones get sick and die. I suffered thyroid cancer and underwent surgery and radiation treatments in my late 20s. I stood with my family and my sister’s children around her hospital bed as she took her last breath at age 46 after suffering for nine years with Lupus. Another sister had to move to the East Coast a few years ago to be treated for a rare stomach cancer. Our youngest sister has been plagued by autoimmune disorders.

I’ve counted too many people in my childhood neighborhood who developed cancer and other radiation related illnesses. Many didn’t survive. I was lucky. I got better. My cousin, who lost her husband to colon cancer, likes to remind me that “your story didn’t end tragically so that you could carry the tragic story forward.” I feel an incredible responsibility to see that justice is served for all of them.

Last week in Washington, I got to publicly thank Senators Ben Ray Lujan (D-N.M.) and Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), Representatives Theresa Leger Fernandez (R-N.M.), James Moylan (R-Guam) and Cory Bush (D-Mo,) as well as affected community members — some who drove all the way from New Mexico at their own expense — for working so tirelessly to expand RECA and correct the injustices of the past. They give me hope and inspire me to carry on when my own delegation has failed to champion us, instead pushing a two-year extension of RECA that merely delays doing the right thing yet again while more people die waiting.

Even Utah Sen. Mike Lee admits that affected areas should be covered, that it is the right thing to do and that cost should not be the deciding factor. Likely feeling pressure from constituents, Sen. Lee on Thursday introduced a fast-track bill requiring unanimous approval on the Senate floor to extend RECA and include Utah and parts of New Mexico and Missouri. This was baffling, given that the Senate has already passed the far more inclusive S.3853 with strong bipartisan support. Why introduce a much more limited bill that was doomed to fail, which it did, instead of supporting the existing bill and encouraging Utah representatives in the House to do the same? The best thing he could do for Utah and our country is support S.3853.

function onSignUp() { const token = grecaptcha.getResponse(); if (!token) { alert("Please verify the reCAPTCHA!"); } else { axios .post( "https://8c0ug47jei.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/dev/newsletter/checkCaptcha", { token, env: "PROD", } ) .then(({ data: { message } }) => { console.log(message); if (message === "Human

Related


Share this page

Guest Posts by Easy Branches



all our websites

image