A Call to Cancel “Experience Pohakuloa Day 2023” and fund a comprehensive, independent health study at PTA

A Call to Cancel “Experience Pohakuloa Day 2023” and fund a comprehensive, independent health study at PTA

kevin.e.cronin.mil@mail.mil

cc: amy.phillips.civ@army.mil

usag.hawaii.comrel@army.mil.

usarmy.jbsa.imcom-aec.mbx.nepa@army.mil

Gardner, William R CIV USARMY IMCOM PACIFIC (USA) <william.r.gardner127.civ@mail.mil>

Jessica.Cho.mil@Army.mil

 

Feb. 18, 2023

Aloha LTC Kevin Cronin, PTA Commander, 

In light of your 2023 “Experience Pohakuloa Day” scheduled for April 20, 2023, at Pohakuloa, where school children and the public from all over the island are invited to Pohakuloa, I share the material below with you for your serious consideration.  The material includes an email I sent to the PTA former commander LTC Borce in 2019, and a Viewpoint piece of 2017 in Honolulu Civil Beat by an MD, and three PhDs on “the Health Risks of Depleted Uranium in Hawaii” and specifically Pohakuoa. In my view, nothing has changed in the years since.  We still need an INDEPENDENT, COMPREHENSIVE study to determine possible health effects from DU and other toxins at PTA.

$858 Billion is spent on the US military but where is the funding for such a study?  In light of no such study, I urge you out of caution, to cancel “Experience Pohakuloa Day 2023.” 

Mahalo.

Jim Albertini

President

cc. copies to government officials and news media

-- 
Jim Albertini Malu 'Aina Center For Non-violent Education & Action P.O. Box 489 Ola'a (Kurtistown) Hawai'i 96760
Phone 808-966-7622 Email ja@malu-aina.org Visit us on the web at www.malu-aina.org

PTA Commander Lt. Col. Borce and Deputy commander Flemming,    April 27, 2019

When myself, Rev. Ron Fujiyoshi and Danny Li met with you in Sept. 2018 at PTA one of the specific requests we made to you was not to have school kids come to PTA before there is comprehensive independent testing and monitoring to determine the full extent of DU contamination at PTA. Such a study has never been done. In fact, for years the military repeatedly lied that DU had never been used at PTA. It was only when peace groups found documents in court proceedings that the military had to admit DU had been used, How much is still in question not only at PTA, but Schofield, Makua Valley, Kaho’olawe, and possibly other sites? But your own Army Colonel Howard Killian testified before the Hawaii County Council that based on the number of people trained to fire the Davy Crockett nuclear weapon system, upwards of 2000 DU spotting rounds were fired at PTA alone. And what about other possible DU rounds by the Army and other branches of the military beyond Davy Crockett? The US military spends $32 million per hour, every hour of every day on war and you can’t find a million dollars or so to do such a study to determine DU contamination at PTA that has the confidence of the community? Something is seriously wrong. By having school kids come to PTA on April 18, 2019 you ignored our request and in effect used the kids in an unethical human experiment subjecting them to possible inhalation of unknown DU oxide particles and a wide range of other toxins from 75 years of bombing the ‘aina. For what? Using kids for military PR. While you put forward the military efforts at recycling you failed to tell the children that the US military is the greatest polluter on the planet. Stop the charade!

Below is an article by an MD and 3 PhDs on DU at Pohakuloa written before you became commander of PTA. We have seen a lot of commanders come and go, but we are stuck with the long-term health consequences of your toxic abuse of the aina.
Look in your files at PTA. We have asked hundreds of questions that have gone unanswered for decades. You are the present commander and I asked you today at the Merrie Monarch parade –How many live rounds are fired annually at PTA. You didn’t know. The last figure I saw was 14.8 million rounds during the Stryker hearings more than a decade ago. Are B-2 strategic nuclear bombers (at a cost of $2 billion each) still flying non-stop from Louisiana, Missouri and Guam to bomb Pohakuloa in training for nuclear war? Such flights were once a month a few years back. How many B-2s are now deployed at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam? How often do they bomb PTA? Do you and your wife, who is Native Hawaiian, personally find it offensive that one of the B-2 nuclear bombers is named “Spirit of Hawaii?” Isn’t aloha suppose to be the Spirit of Hawaii? Where is the aloha in a nuclear bomber?

It is almost one year that you have been the commander at PTA. Show us by your actions that you are different. We are still waiting.

— Jim Albertini Malu ‘Aina Center for Non-violent Education & ActionP.O. Box 489Kurtistown, Hawaii 96760Phone 808-966-7622email ja@malu-aina.org < Caution-mailto:ja@malu-aina.org > visit us on the web at Caution-www.malu-aina.org < Caution-http://www.malu-aina.org > sign up on our website to automatically receive our posts

-- 
Jim Albertini Malu 'Aina Center For Non-violent Education & Action P.O. Box 489 Ola'a (Kurtistown) Hawai'i 96760
Phone 808-966-7622 Email ja@malu-aina.org Visit us on the web at www.malu-aina.org

 

Depleted uranium, or DU, is a serious threat to health in Hawaii, where it was introduced through military activity.

During escalating tensions of the Cold War in the 1960s, the U.S. Army tested some forms of atomic weapons at Pohakuloa Training Area on Hawaii Island and at Schofield Barracks on Oahu.

The Army acknowledged testing the Davy Crockett weapon system, a battlefield uranium-based atomic bomb.  The part tested in Hawaii was a “spotting round,” fired to check the sighting accuracy of the main weapon. On impact, it detonated an explosive charge to release smoke. The spotting round was made of uranium in which some fissionable uranium had been removed, hence the term “depleted uranium,” or DU.

Today in Hawaii the Army is still allowed to possess DU only at the Pohakuloa Training Area on the Island of Hawaii and Schofield Barracks on Oahu. The use of DU weapons in military practice exposes both military personnel and the public to health risks.

This 2014 training exercise at the Pohakuloa Training Area involved Marines firing a Howitzer. The training area also holds expended munitions containing depleted uranium. Wikimedia Commons/Lance Cpl. Aaron Patterson

“When DU is used as conventional weaponry, it burns rapidly upon impact, creating a ‘dust’ of inhalable DU oxides,” according to Lorrin Pang. “The specific hazards of inhaled DU oxides are that: 1) radiation is internalized beginning in the lungs, and 2) DU oxides have a slow clearance from the body that is about 50 times longer than clearance of DU non-oxides.”

Mike Reimer, a retired nuclear geologist, adds that health messages to the public have not always differentiated between risks of radiation exposure to naturally occurring forms of uranium as opposed to man-made products of DU. This is important because an aerosol derived from natural materials may lodge deep in the inner region of the lung for weeks to years and yet contain only a few atoms of uranium. Yet a similar aerosol derived from a DU source, such as a Davy Crockett spotting round, can contain millions of DU atoms, increasing radiation exposure to lung cells perhaps a million fold. Consequently, there is a markedly elevated health risk from DU exposure.

Doug Rokke, a retired Army major who served on the DU Assessment team during the Gulf War says, “Once DU is released into the environment, it will never be safe at all, no matter what is done.”

According to Rokke, “DOD documents confirm that a broad spectrum of potential health effects include: lung cancer, respiratory, eye, skin, and genetic abnormalities.”

The VA reports DU has also caused sleep problems, neuropsychological and respiratory tract symptoms, chronic fatigue, immune system dysfunction, skin rash, hair loss, aching joints, headaches, abdominal pain, light sensitivity, blurred vision, menstrual disorders, gastrointestinal symptoms, chemical sensitivity, and birth defects in children whose parents were exposed.

The Army has acknowledged that Davy Crockett spotting rounds were used in training at PTA and Schofield Barracks. Ongoing military operations, especially the use of high explosives, allow for re-suspension of DU particles.

The known hazards of DU and potential risks from re-suspension during additional military operations are the reasons why Army Regulation 700-48 requires that “any area containing any amount of contamination must be secured, identified, labeled, isolated, and steps taken to complete thorough environmental remediation.”

The regulation also states that the “identified area shall not be the site of any future military operations and no one shall be allowed to traverse through the area.” However, the Army is not following the regulation.

More than 50 years of bombing at PTA, increased traffic on the new Saddle Road passing through PTA, combined with strong winds in the area and occasional flash flooding have provided increased potential pathways of public exposure to DU aerosol particles and potential transport of DU around the island. Furthermore, military and civilian work forces are possibly exposed daily, families and visitors picnic in the area, and a county park and Girl Scout camps are nearby.

DU oxides, with their dangerously long half-lives, are created when DU munitions impact their targets and burn/explode. Also, in the cases of PTA and Schofield Barracks, unburned/exploded metallic fragments, including the original “spotting rounds,” will certainly burn/explode when impacted by fragments of conventional weapons and bombs.

Lack Of Transparency

For many years, the military denied any use of DU weaponry at Hawaii training sites. Then it was discovered that Davy Crockett spotting rounds, including DU to increase weight, were used in munitions to establish trajectory validation. Those spotting rounds were, in fact, used at Schofield Barracks on Oahu and Hawaii Island’s Pohakuloa Training Area since the early 1960s.

Since initial records were untrue, citizens asked for a survey of the area in case there was more extensive use not documented in records. Even if only non-incendiary DU spotting rounds had been used, subsequent conventional bombing of the DU metal bits could ignite them and create DU-oxide dust. There have been 2 fires on Hawaii’s military training sites in the past year, one of which was in the impact area.

Designing And Carrying Out Needed Actions

We advocate partnership in designing and carrying out preventive actions. Comprehensive, independent testing and monitoring should be done at military expense, in cooperation with groups wishing to cooperate with the Army and State to determine the full extent of radiation contamination related to training sites.

The military and state should offer 24 hour DU urine tests to military personnel and citizens, DLNR and other long-term workers working or traveling near training sites who are concerned about possible exposure.

We strongly urge that studies of excess relative risk from DU exposure, guided by sound scientific principles, be carried out; that health professionals be made aware of possible symptoms caused by DU exposure; that DOH actively participate in preparation of accurate training materials and alerts for health care professionals; that DOH take a firm position in requiring stringent and transparent testing, as well as monitoring and cleanup of DU on military installations in Hawaii in partnership with community members.

Further, investigation of other present and former military ranges in the state, such as Makua military reservation and Kahoolawe Island, should be carried out for possible exposure to DU. Partners must ensure that testing and monitoring is done by effective methods as agreed upon by representatives of affected communities, health professionals, and the military.

It should be noted that the Hawaii County Council in July 2008, by a vote of 8-1 passed resolution 639-08, calling for stopping all live-fire at PTA and cleaning up the DU present. The Army should comply with this resolution per AR 700-48 section 2-1a and Task number: 031-503, stating that federal, state and local laws have precedence during peacetime. We hope this article will assist in building partnership in addressing serious health impacts of DU.

The late Dr. Rosalie Bertell, well-known expert on health and environmental costs of militarism pointed out that in recent wars in Iraq, Kosovo and Afghanistan, the U.S. and UK used weapons made with depleted uranium, “prolonging the mutilation and killing for generations after the war is over.”

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Jim Albertini Malu 'Aina Center For Non-violent Education & Action P.O. Box 489 Ola'a (Kurtistown) Hawai'i 96760
Phone 808-966-7622 Email ja@malu-aina.org Visit us on the web at www.malu-aina.org