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US Radiation Detectors Under Construction, Out Of Service

By GARANCE BURKE and NOAKI SCHWARTZ   03/26/11 04:01 AM ET   AP

Radiation Detectors Out Of Service

SAN FRANCISCO -- Parts of America's radiation alert network have been out of order during Japan's nuclear crisis, raising concerns among some lawmakers about whether the system could safeguard the country in a future disaster.

Federal officials say the system of sensors has helped them to validate the impact of nuclear fallout from the overheated Fukushima reactor, and in turn alert local governments and the public. They say no dangerous levels of radiation have reached U.S. shores.

In California, home to two seaside nuclear plants located close to earthquake fault lines, federal authorities said four of the 11 stationary monitors were offline for repairs or maintenance last week. The Environmental Protection Agency said the machines operate outdoors year-round and periodically need maintenance, but did not fix them until a few days after low levels of radiation began drifting toward the mainland U.S.

About 20 monitors out of 124 nationwide were out of service earlier this week, including units in Harlingen, Tex. and Buffalo, N.Y. on Friday, according to the EPA.

Gaps in the system – as well as the delays in fixing monitors in some of Southern California's most populated areas – have helped to prompt hearings and inquiries in Washington and Sacramento.

"Because the monitoring system ... plays such a critical role in protecting the health and safety of the American people, we will examine how well our current monitoring system has performed in the aftermath of the tragic situation in Japan," said Sen. Barbara Boxer, a California Democrat who chairs the U.S. Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, which plans a hearing in the coming weeks on nuclear safety.

EPA officials said the program effectively safeguarded the country against a threat that did not materialize. They said they put portable monitors in place as backups and repaired the permanent ones in Los Angeles, San Bernardino, San Diego last weekend.

"The network as a whole continues to detect even the slightest traces of radiation in the air," the agency said in a statement to The Associated Press.

The EPA's independent watchdog, Inspector General Arthur Elkins, told the AP he is considering reviewing the agency's emergency response planning, including the agency's RadNet system.

The network, launched after the Cold War and upgraded following the 9-11 attacks, measures radiation nationwide through dozens of monitors that suck in air samples periodically and pump out real-time readings about radioactive isotopes.

The EPA's data, as well as samples that numerous federal agencies are collecting in Japan, is sent to the Department of Energy's National Atmospheric Release Advisory Center in California. Teams there check it against sophisticated computer models that predict how releases at Fukushima could spread across the Pacific.

To save money, EPA relies in part on trained volunteers to regularly change out air filters on the RadNet monitors and mail them to a federal lab in Alabama where the data gets a detailed analysis a few days later. Volunteers are also tasked with alerting EPA if something goes wrong with the machine.

"It sounds sort of loosey goosey, but we already operate our network on a very rigid schedule so we just sort of fit it into our lifestyle," said Eric Stevenson, a director of technical services who oversees operation of the monitor from his office at the Bay Area Air Quality Management District near San Francisco's domed city hall. "We've been operating this thing for years and no one has really said boo about it. Something like this comes along and all of us realize `Hey, gee, that's a relatively smart program.'"

One RadNet monitor in Fontana, Calif. stopped transmitting data in November, and regional air quality officials alerted EPA, said Philip Fine, an atmospheric measurements manager with Southern California Air Quality Management District. The repairs happened last weekend, when EPA made fixing California monitors a priority, he said.

In San Diego, an air district official who oversees one RadNet monitor, said they "babysit" the machine for the EPA and were unaware it had problems until agency officials showed up to fix it last weekend.

"We thought it was running," said Bob Kard, the air pollution control officer for the San Diego Air Pollution Control District.

EPA officials say the system has more than enough monitors to detect any radiation problems even if individual machines break down.

"We have plenty of data coming in across the country to see the potentials on health and safety," said Ron Fraass, who directs EPA's National Air and Radiation lab in Montgomery, Ala. "If you were going to keep your pc operating outdoors in all weather, it's going to break once in a while."

California lawmakers have questioned the adequacy of the EPA monitoring, noting there are no sensors along the coast between San Francisco and Los Angeles.

"The question remains unanswered as to why we have gaps," said California Senate Majority Leader Ellen M. Corbett, (D-San Leandro), who chairs the state committee on earthquake and disaster preparedness "The radiation monitors that we do have in California must be properly checked and maintained."

Daniel Hirsch, a nuclear watchdog who lectures on nuclear policy at the University of California, Santa Cruz, said he was uneasy about malfunctioning monitors.

"The fundamental concern is that we're being offered bland assurances that everything is ok but much of the monitoring system was broken," Hirsch said.

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SAN FRANCISCO -- Parts of America's radiation alert network have been out of order during Japan's nuclear crisis, raising concerns among some lawmakers about whether the system could safeguard the cou...
SAN FRANCISCO -- Parts of America's radiation alert network have been out of order during Japan's nuclear crisis, raising concerns among some lawmakers about whether the system could safeguard the cou...
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07:29 AM on 04/08/2011
Does anyone know how to interpret the EPA numbers being referenced? From my understanding if cpm levels were 100 that would be cause for concern. There are numbers above 400 cpm? Is this a concern or still within safer levels?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:11 AM on 03/29/2011
Just like in Japan:
No DATA = No Problems to report!
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dhhh
02:05 AM on 03/28/2011
Do the republicans want to cut the EPAS Earthquake and tsunamis detection so the American People wont know a thing and thus suffering will be minimized when Giant Earthquakes and tsunamis strime the USA????
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Halter
06:56 PM on 03/27/2011
Sensors need to be functioning not only near major population areas, but also near agricultural areas that provide a substantial percentage of our country's food.
03:57 PM on 03/27/2011
As a California resident, I feel so safe.
Especially after finding out that the cooling system at the Diablo Canyon Nuclear power plant were shut down for 18 months because "the valves were stuck?" What is the friggin point of having a cooling system if it does not work? Complacency will destroy us all.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Joyce Louden
12:42 AM on 03/27/2011
I WANT TO KNOW what kind of radiation, and its half life that is making it to the US, state by state.
03:59 PM on 03/27/2011
The half life is not a couple of weeks or months or years. Some of it is 500,000 years, other types are 50,000 years. It does not just go away or evaporate. It stays around for a very long time. Even at Chernobyl, the shell they have built around it will only last one hundred years. Someone is going to have to continue to build shells for a very long time into the future.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Joyce Louden
04:50 PM on 03/27/2011
I have not heard what is exactly blowing in the wind, and where is it falling.
Why is that info not being reported?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lilipilicious
12:05 AM on 03/27/2011
Does that surprise anyone? I mean even now - as we speak - there are people posting here claiming that nuclear power is super safe actually and that Japan was a fluke- just like Chernobyl, and 3 mile island...and ...well, pick your nuclear power plant failures.

So does it surprise anyone that monitors to detect radiation have been neglected and dont work for years?

Also, forgive me if I dont believe it when politicians tell us that no dangerous levels of radiation have reached U.S. shores. Coming from them, it cannot be true. I mean we all know the ethics politicians have - it is like a notch underneath child molester.

I also find it amusing that a) they claim it is safe or that nothing has reached the US when half of their equipment isnt working and that b) they never make any mention of any numbers. Generally when you talk about harmless levels or dangerous levels, you provide the public with a range, on which they can orient themselves, and then you state the numbers that were detected (which in this case are supposedly "minuscule"). However, has anyone noticed that in this case no numbers have been published? They just say "it is minuscule" and we are supposed to take their word for it? Are they kidding? How stupid do they think the public is?
11:35 PM on 03/26/2011
Y'all reckon the nation's nuclear radiation detection system works better than the federal levees did in New Orleans in 2005?

Don't need either often, but when you do need them, you REALLY need them.
04:00 PM on 03/27/2011
Even if it worked, I do not trust that we would get correct information.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MrDOB
10:45 PM on 03/26/2011
Go figure you politicians spend endless amounts of cash on spying on the American public and do nothing to actually safe guard us.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LavishTantrums
Lawyer, Writer
10:09 PM on 03/26/2011
The lackadaisical, it-will-all-be-fine tone of the EPA responses to public inquiry regarding the radiation monitoring system is particularly striking, in light of the fact a Japanese researcher warned in 2009 that a tsunami might strike the northern Japan nuclear facility. No one listened to him, apparently, even though his research showed that such an event had happened before (albeit, not with nuclear issues). There seems to be a trend wherein the tragedy of major natural disasters is compounded by the failings of those who ignored serious, intellectually-savvy and scientifically-sound concerns about safety (Hurricane Katrina and the limited protection of the levy system, BP Oil Disaster and the low-cost safety equipment no one bothered to use ... to name only a recent few). The above article is farcical, with the EPA stating, "EPA officials said the program effectively safeguarded the country against a threat that did not materialize." Ummmmm, what? In this internet age, citizens are capable of putting the pressure on those in charge, and we must see this debate through, before this nuclear tragedy happens here. And if we tear down our nuclear facilities, we tear them down; and if we don't ... well, why don't we? Money and lack of motivation.

Source:
Researcher Warned 2 Yrs Ago Of Massive Tsunami Striking Nuke Plant
http://e.nikkei.com/e/fr/tnks/Nni20110326D26JF120.htm
04:01 PM on 03/27/2011
The EPA was hampered by the Bush years and now it is hampered by the republicans in Congress who want to defund it. I have a relative who works for the EPA and I have heard many stories about cases that go to Washington and are not acted upon. The rich, the wealthy, the corporations who own this country have so much clout that it is almost impossible to even fine anyone these days.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
EbineezerLemonSqueezer
09:51 PM on 03/26/2011
So,

there are GAPS in the safety designs of these monoliths of poison,

there are GAPS in our ability to fix anything when it inevitably goes wrong,

there are GAPS in the confidence and reliability of the information being fed to the public

there are GAPS in the governments responsibility to accurately monitor the magnitude of these failed systems

and there are now GAPS in my belief than anyone really knows what they are doing.
04:05 PM on 03/27/2011
If the utilities in this country were run by government agencies and our health care was run by government agencies, there would be a vested interest in protecting the health of the nation. As it stands now, most utilities are privately owned, thus run for profit. Most people have private insurance and if they get sick, they can get dropped. The new health care bill should prevent that, but republicans are Hell-bent on defunding and destroying it.

The same holds true in Europe where health care is given to everyone, taxes are higher to do that, and the government monitors the food supply much more closely because they have a vested interest in keeping the public health and not sick. Pure common sense.

Private enterprise has no business in the health care business. It is a screaming conflict of interest.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tjconkster
Occupy the Voting Booth 2012!
08:37 PM on 03/26/2011
No need to worry here...let's all just join hands and stick our heads in the sand....just like the RepubliCorp/Republican Tea Party politicians who will want to de-fund...nuclear early warning devices...because if we don't know the nuke plants are leaking radiation....or causing health risks....then we can build more nuke plants....and RepulbiCorp/Republican Tea Party politicians can line their pockets with more corporate cash...at the expense of our health and safety...
04:06 PM on 03/27/2011
Do what the Japanese government told their citizens to do.
Breathe though your mouth.

Sounds familiar. I was one of those kids who was told to "duck and cover" if an atomic bomb dropped on our city. Sure.
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Voltaire911
Beware of the Kabuki Dance of Opposition
08:13 PM on 03/26/2011
The US is no better prepared for a nuclear disaster than Japan is. We had better act now and shut down the plants on the west coast before the next tsunami wipes them out and we have to evacuate California for a thousand years.
04:07 PM on 03/27/2011
We are less prepared.
07:57 PM on 03/26/2011
Republican Response-"Why waste money on these things? If people knew there was a high radiation level, it would just make them "worry." And besides, all they do is indicate radiation levels, they can't fix the problem."
11:39 PM on 03/26/2011
Republican Darling Ms. Ann Coulter's response (for real): "Radiation is GOOD for you!"
04:07 PM on 03/27/2011
Republicans just submitted a bill to defund the tsunami warning systems on the West Coast. I guess that is a good way to get rid of those folks in a blue state.