Massive
Woolsey Fire Began On Contaminated Santa Susana Field Laboratory,
Close to Site of Partial Meltdown
12
November, 2018
Electric
Substation at SSFL Tripped 2 Minutes Before Fire Reported
For
Immediate Release: November
12, 2018
The
tremendously destructive Woolsey Fire has been widely reported as
beginning “near” the Santa Susana Field Laboratory (SSFL or
Rocketdyne), but it appears that the fire began on the Rocketdyne
property itself. Cal
Fireidentifies
the fire location as E Street and Alfa Road, a location that is in
fact on SSFL. It was recently reported that the “Chatsworth
electric substation” experienced
a disturbance 2
minutes before the fire was reported, but that
substation is in fact on SSFL, near
that location. A photograph
posted on Twitter from
KCAL9’s Stu Mundel shows the fire starting Thursday afternoon near
the same location, which is only about 1,000 yards away from the site
of the 1959 partial nuclear meltdown of the Sodium Reactor Experiment
(SRE) reactor.
The
location of the smoke plume and fire from the above photo is shown in
the pre-fire Google Earth image below.
A
report filed with the California Public Utilities Commission by
Southern California. Edison states that the “Chatsworth substation”
suffered an outage at 2:22 pm Thursday, two minutes before the
Woolsey fire is reported to have begun. The
Chatsworth substation is located “within the larger Boeing
Rocketdyne Santa Susana complex,” according to a CPUC
document (see
bottom of page C-15 or page 17 of the pdf.) The electrical
substation (marked with a pin in the photo above and a circle in the
photos below, and enlarged in the last photo) is a few hundred yards
to the west of where the fire is shown in the Thursday aerial photo
as starting, and a few hundred yards to the east of the SRE complex,
where the reactor suffered its accident. The substation had been
built in part to provide electricity from the reactor, which was the
first reactor to produce commercial electricity for the commercial
grid, before it became the first such commercial reactor to suffer a
partial meltdown.
Chatsworth
substation, between apparent site of start of fire to the right and
location of SRE reactor partial meltdown to the left.
“Though
we must wait for fire authorities to conclude their investigation, it
is ironic that an electrical substation built for a reactor that
melted down six decades ago now may now be associated with a
catastrophic fire that began on the SSFL site that is still badly
contaminated from that accident and numerous other spills and
releases,” said Denise Duffield, Associate Director of Physicians
for Social Responsibility-Los Angeles (PSR-LA.)
Cal
Fire maps indicate
that much of SSFL is within the fire boundaries.
Decades
of nuclear and rocket-engine testing activity, including nuclear
reactor accidents and other toxic spills and releases, have resulted
in widespread contamination throughout SSFL’s 2,850 acre facility.
Federally-funded studies indicate higher cancer incidents associated
with proximity to the site. The California Dept. of Toxic
Substances Control (DTSC), which has regulatory oversight over
the parties
responsible for cleaning up the contamination – the Dept. of
Energy, NASA, and the Boeing Company – signed legally binding
agreements to fully cleanup the contamination by 2017. However, the
cleanup has not even begun and DTSC is considering vastly weaker
cleanup plans. “If DTSC and those responsible for polluting SSFL
had not broken their cleanup commitments, we wouldn’t be facing the
prospect of contamination now being driven off site by the fire,”
said Duffield..
“The
Woolsey Fire likely released and spread radiological and chemical
contamination that was in SSFL’s soil and vegetation via smoke and
ash,” said Dr. Bob Dodge, President of Physicians for Social
Responsibility-Los Angeles. “All wildfire smoke can be hazardous to
health, but if SSFL had been cleaned up long ago as DTSC promised,
we’d at least not have to worry about exposure to dangerous
radionuclides and chemicals as well.”
A
statement released by DTSC approximately 10 hours after the
fire began said the agency doesn’t believe the fire caused the
release of hazardous substances. Mohsen Nazemi, Deputy Director
for DTSC’s Brownfields & Environmental Restoration Program,
participated in a community meeting Sunday night in Woodland Hills,
repeating the same unfounded denials and leaving without taking
questions.
“We’ve
learned not to trust anything DTSC says, so we’re demanding
independent testing and air monitoring for radiation and chemicals
from SSFL,” said Melissa Bumstead, a West HIlls resident whose
daughter has twice survived leukemia that she believes was caused by
SSFL. Bumstead’s Change.org
petition urging
that SSFL cleanup commitments be upheld has been signed by over
430,000 people. “DTSC has made one broken promise after another,
and it wasn’t truthful about SSFL’s contamination long before the
fire started.” said Bumstead. “Why would we believe DTSC’s
statement that the fire caused no additional risk, when they know
they’re the ones responsible for SSFL still being contaminated in
the first place?”
Marie
Mason, Simi Valley resident and co-founder of the Rocketdyne Cleanup
Coalition, agrees. “We’re outraged that after all these years,
decades of foot-dragging by DTSC, an agency that is captured by
polluters, may have resulted in even more toxic exposures. We’ve
always worried about a fire at SSFL, and now a massive wildfire has
started on site itself. SSFL could have and should have been cleaned
up a long time ago.”
PSR-LA’s
Duffield said, “While we must await the final investigation of the
cause of the fire, the presently available evidence indicates it
appears to have begun on the Santa Susana Field Lab, and the failure
to clean it up has significantly increased risks to the public
nearby.”
# #
#
Physicians
for Social Responsibility-Los Angeles (PSR-LA) is the largest chapter
of the national organization Physicians for Social Responsibility and
has worked for the full cleanup of SSFL for over 30 years.. PSR-LA
advocates for policies and practices that protect public health from
nuclear and environmental threats and eliminate health disparities.
Parents
vs. SSFL is a grassroots group of concerned parents and residents who
demand compliance with cleanup agreements signed in 2010 that require
a full cleanup of all radioactive and chemical contamination at the
Santa Susana Field Laboratory.
The
Rocketdyne Cleanup Coalition, or RCC, is a community-based alliance
dedicated to the cleanup of the Santa Susana Field Laboratory (SSFL),
commonly known as Rocketdyne.
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