Publication For Employees November 1972 inside EPA Women Seek Fair Job Treatment The women of EPA—and quite a few men— observed Women's Week last month with a variety of meet- ings and discussions, employment- ratio reports and firm resolves to make some progress before next year's observance. Administrator William Ruckel- shaus, who attended a two-hour as- sembly in Washington Oct. 19 open- ing the first Annual Conference for Women in EPA, said he was totally committed to the drive for upgrad- ing the status of women in the Agen- cy, for expanding their representa- tion in higher-grade positions, and for equitable salaries and treatment. He noted, however, several ob- stacles, including the fact that EPA's higher-grade positions are predominantly in engineering and the physical sciences for which he said relatively few women are trained. Ruckelshaus also made a video- tape for Women's Week that was presented at assemblies in Cin- cinnati, Ohio; Durham, N.C.; and Montgomery, Ala. In other EPA installations across the country, sim- ilar meetings were held under the leadership of women's program co- ordinators organized by the Office of Civil Rights and Urban Affairs. Women want to be "considered as human beings, as individuals" rather than stereotypes facing an "invisible wall of resistance against recognition of what we really are and what we have the right to be- come," said Ms. Charlie K. Swift, head of the Women's Programs Di- vision, who planned and presided over the Washington meeting. Ms. Swift acknowledged that women are "biologically different," but she said, "I hope never to hear again 'Vive la difference!'' "What is wrong is the assump- tion that the traditional woman's role is enough for all women, that this satisfies all their needs, and that in the profoundly changing world, the contributions of their minds and talents and skills are not of equal importance to society." Other speakers at the meeting in- cluded Carol M. Thomas, director of the Office of Civil Rights and Ur- ban Affairs; Judy Kaufman, staff as- sistant to the President; Anita Perl- man, national chairman of the B'nai B'rith Commission on Youth; and James C. Spry, executive assistant to the Civil Service Commission. The meeting opened with music by the Marine Band and presenta- tion of the colors by a Marine Corps color guard. The session closed with an interpretive dance by a group of women students from Gallaudet Col- lege. The morning assembly was fol- lowed by small-group discussions, which continued through the follow- ing day, on "Job Statistics and Counseling," "Hiring and Recruit- ing Women," "Women in Leader- ship Roles," and "Career Develop- ment Programs for Women." Panelists included Allie Latimer Weeden, General Services Adminis- tration; Barbara McKee, Atomic (Continued on page 5) —photo by Ernest Bucci First Annual Conference on "Women in EPA," held Oct. 19 in the GSA hall, highlighted the Washington staff's observance of Women's Week. ------- Scuba Divers Work in Water Pollution By John S. Farlow Edison, NJ., Water Quality Research Laboratory Much has been written about the romance of scuba diving, and who has not watched Jacques Cousteau's colorful TV documentaries of ma- rine wonders? Yet how many peo- ple know that the gear worn by a diver weighs about 135 pounds in air? How many know that within the EPA a small group has been diving to perform some of the dirty and strenuous tasks associated with water pollution abatement work? As far back as the early 1960s it was recognized by those in Region V's Great Lakes—Illinois River Ba- sins Project that their measurement of water currents in the Great Lakes could not be efficiently carried for- ward unless divers" services were available. From this beginning a combination of in-house and com- mercial divers have been used for a whole variety of tasks. In Lake Michigan, Frank Mc- Gowan (now with the Corps of En- gineers), Roscoe Libby, and I were the first Public Health Service scuba divers. Early in the Lake Michigan water current study some of the large marker buoys began to come adrift. Diver inspection of the re- mainder soon revealed that wave ac- tion caused the 40-pound counter- weights attached to the buoy bridle 10 feet below the water surface to wear out critical cotter pins, whose loss permitted the buoy line fasten- ings to come apart. Once the prob- lem was defined, a solution was easily found to prevent further loss of the $15,000 instrument clusters. A number of the "lost" current- meter stations, (i.e., stations whose surface buoys had come adrift) were recovered through the combined ef- forts of USPHS and commercial divers and the "sea scanner," a high frequency sonar. The sonar was used to locate the current-me- ter string (suspended between an anchor and a subsurface buoy) to within about a 75-foot radius, and —photo by Jack Farlow Wet-suited scuba diver prepares to work on bottom of Boston Harbor, checking current meter stations and other underwater equipment. a marker buoy was anchored. Div- ers descended the marker buoy line to the bottom and swept a hundred foot radius by swimming the outer end of a piece of parachute cord in a circle about the marker buoy an- chor. If the marker had been an- chored in the correct place, the cord would wrap around the buoy line. Visibility averaged about eight feet, which prevented visual searches. Having that cord hit the missing in- strument string produced feelings similar to winning the Irish sweep- stakes! Scuba divers were also used to evaluate the influence of wind on the surface marker of a submerged current cross. The latter device was used to measure diffusion to esti- mate the "dilution of pollution," and it was important that wind effects be minimal. Divers released small amounts of dye near the cross and observed the motion of the cross relative to the dye, which was influ- enced only by water motion. These observations confirmed the calcula- tions for equipment used in Great Lakes studies involving the simul- taneous use of three vessels and an airplane. In EPA Region I scuba divers Carl Eidam, Pete Nolan, Joe Di- Cola, and I carried out a program of current meter observations in Boston Harbor in 1969 and 1970. Divers attached marker lines be- tween the current meter station an- chors and the anchors of nearby Coast Guard buoys. Divers later scrubbed and scraped marine growth off moving parts of the current me- ters and helped retrieve the meters at the close of the project. In Region II Pete Douglas (now with the National Marine Fisheries Service) and I set and retrieved bi- ological substrate samplers at a na- tional water quality network sta- tion in the Delaware River, cut fouled lines from the propellers of various EPA vessels and dug a stubborn anchor out of the bottom of Raritan Bay. In addition, a scuba diver was employed to wash a tem- perature recorder out of the bot- tom of Barnegat Bay with a water jet one windy February day. Vari- ous biologic benthic (ocean bottom) surveys have also been made. This brief sampling lists only a few of the jobs that scuba divers have been doing to further the cause of water pollution abatement. Other divers in other regions have been performing equally valuable tasks under similarly difficult conditions. Ask around; there are probably some working near you! — 2 — ------- 16 Awarded EPA Scholarships Sixteen sons and daughters of EPA employees have been awarded scholarships totalling $5,550 for col- lege study this year. Checks for the scholarships, in varying amounts up to $500, are being individually presented to the winners by the senior EPA officials at the laboratories or offices near- est their homes. The EPA Scholarship Fund comes primarily from honoraria and fees offered to agency officials for speeches and magazine articles. Federal regulations forbid the ac- ceptance of such payments when an official is speaking or writing as an EPA representative, but voluntary charitable contributions may be re- ceived instead of such fees. The Fund also receives individual gifts, mainly from agency officials, and the Internal Revenue Service has ruled that such gifts are tax deducti- ble, according to Robert F. McDon- ald, Fund manager. Scholarship applicants must be children of career employees hav- ing at least three years of service, and must be full-time students at an accredited college or junior col- lege. Children of deceased or dis- abled employees are also eligible. The scholarships are renewable, depending upon the student's aca- demic performance and the availa- bility of funds. The winners, their parents, and colleges are as follows: NERC—Research Triangle Park, N.C.—Susan Margolin, 18, a soph- omore at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, daughter of the late Emanuel D. Margolin, su- pervising chemical engineer, Office of Air Programs. NERC—Cincinnati, Ohio—Mar- tha Piepmeyer, 20, sophomore at the University of Cincinnati, daugh- ter of Mrs. Virginia R. Piepmeyer, personnel clerk. Mary L. Wilson, 35, who is start- ing her studies for a degree at the University of Cincinnati, daughter of Ward Fleshman, Sr., chemist in the Odor Control Systems Division at NERC-RTP. Susan M. Kamphake, 17, and Thomas F. Kamphake, 18, fresh- men, and Jeffery L. Kamphake, 19, sophomore, all at the University of Cincinnati; their father is Lawrence J. Kamphake, research chemist at the Taft Water Research Division. NERC—Las Vegas, Nev—Bar- bara E. Rizzardi, 17, who will start at the Univesity of Nevada, Las Vegas, in January; she is the daugh- ter of Charles J. Rizzardi, techni- cal writer-editor. Nina Dee Suter, 20, freshman at the University of Nevada, daughter of Mrs. Martha Lindsay, switch- board operator. Region IV EPA Office, Atlanta, Ga.—Mary Jo Reid, 21, senior at Georgia Southern College, States- boro, daughter of Mrs. Hannah J. Reid, secretary, Office of Economic Analysis. Indiana District Office, Evans- ville, Ind—Philip Regalbuto, 20, sophomore at the University of Wy- oming, Laramie, son of Constan- tino J. Regalbuto, chemist. Eastern Environmental Radiation Laboratory, Montgomery, Ala.— Aleice F. Belser, 19, sophomore at Alabama State University, Mont- gomery, daughter of Charles J. Bel- ser, biological laboratory technician. Chamblee Toxicology Labora- tory, Chamblee, Ga.—Susan Parks, 18, freshman at DeKalb Commu- nity College, Clarkston, Ga., daugh- ter of Mrs. Christine E. Parks, clerk-stenographer. Region VII EPA Office, Kansas City, Mo.—Mary Jo Poskin, 18, freshman at the University of Mis- souri, Columbia, daughter of Joseph D. Poskin, inspector in pesticides regulation. Northwestern Water Laboratory, Gig Harbor, Wash.—Regina Anth- ony, 18, freshman at Green River Community College, T a c o m a, daughter of Nathaniel C. Anthony, laboratory technician. Region IX EPA Office, San Fran- cisco, Calif.—Linda L. Massie, 17, freshman at the College of San Ma- teo, daughter of Mrs. Shirley J. Massie, administrative assistant. Wheeling Field Office, Wheeling, W. Va.—James Bradac, 20, sopho- more at Ohio State University, Co- lumbus, Ohio, son of Charles J. Bradac, chemist. Applications for next year's scholarship awards may be made any time before June 30. Applica- tion forms are obtainable at any EPA personnel office. Fund trustees include Deputy Administrator Robert W. Fri; As- sistant Administrators Thomas E. Carroll and John R. Quarles Jr.; James Barnes, special assistant to the administrator, and Mr. McDon- ald. Symposium Discusses Water Environment More than 125 persons attended a two-day symposium on "The Aquatic Environment" at the Water Programs Office in Arlington, Va., last month. The conferees, about evenly di- vided between EPA and university scientists, discussed the latest re- search on the role of water-borne bacteria in the cycling of such nutrients as nitrogen, carbon, phos- phorus, and sulfur; the modeling of aquatic ecosystems; and implications for water quality management. Among the EPA participants and panelists were R. K. Ballentine, R. C. Gentry, Dr. Leonard J. Guarraia, Lowell E. Keup, Kenneth Mac- kenthum, and Robert L. Sansom, all of EPA's Washington headquar- ters; and Dr. Donald Lear of Region III. Proceedings of the symposium will be published. ------- Remedial Work Starts On 'Hot' Mine Tailings The recent agreement between the Federal Government and the State of Colorado to take joint ac- tion to protect the residents of Grand Junction, Colo., from radio- active mine tailings marks a new phase of EPA's work on this envi- ronmental radiation problem. The Agency's responsibility is ex- pected to shift from helping deline- ate the problem to assisting in mon- itoring progress in two- to three-year program of remedial action. The action program is based on a series of EPA studies, made in co- operation with the Atomic Energy Commission and the Colorado State Health Department, to measure the extent of the hazard and to test various protection techniques. The tailings are a sand-like waste material from uranium mining. Long before anyone realized they might be dangerous, the tailings were used as fill material under homes and other buildings and as a handy sub- stitute for sand in concrete. Hundreds of buildings in Grand Junction were involved: homes, schools, stores and offices. Uranium tailings were also used in other min- ing communities in Colorado and other western states, but not on the scale of Grand Junction. Then scientists found that the tailings were still emitting low levels of radiation and small amounts of radon, a radioactive gas. No case of illness from this radiation has been positively identified, but in some of the Grand Junction build- ings the radiation levels have ex- ceeded the purposely conservative Federal guidelines, and state health officials are concerned about the possibility of cumulative, long-term effects. EPA grants and technical assist- ance in delineating the problem have amounted to about $600.000, ac- cording to Paul Smith, chief of the Programs Support Branch in the EPA Region VIII office in Denver. The remedial work to start this fall will include actual removal of tailings, application of sealant coat- ings and shielding material, and im- proved ventilation systems. The methods will vary according to the types of structures and the local levels of radiation. About 1,500 structures will be involved, one state official said. Buildings with the most radiation will be worked on first. Congress has authorized $5 mil- lion as the Federal Government's share, at a 75-25 split with the State. This could bring the total cost to $6.7 million. The AEC is the Fed- eral agency in charge. Whether and to what extent EPA radiation experts will be involved has not yet been determined. Charles Weaver of the Office of Ra- diation Programs in Washington is EPA's representative on the Federal State Advisory Board established by the AEC under the contract. EPA SEWER AID TOPS $1.3 BILLION In the first 19 months of EPA's existence, the Agency disbursed $1.3 billion to help States and cities build sewage treatment facilities. This figure was announced last month to summarize the largest budget category in EPA's pollution control programs. Waste water treatment has been the object of Federal aid since the passage of the Water Pollution Con- trol Act of 1956. Amendments since then have broadened the incentives and benefits. Communities in every State are now employing EPA's construction grants to build new sewer systems and upgrade exist- ing ones. The $1.3 billion includes all new grants from December, 1970, when the Agency was established, through June, 1972. During this period an additional $571 million was award- ed for projects begun under the Federal Water Quality Administra- tion, an EPA predecessor agency. The grants ranged from $1,310 for Grapeland, Texas, to $33 mil- lion for Detroit. The average amount was just under $640,000. Lab Dedicated at Kansas City More than 300 persons attended the dedication of Region VII's new laboratory in Kansas City, Kan., Oct. 25. Rep. Larry Winn Jr., congress- man from the third district of Kan- sas, and Administrator William Ruckelshaus were the principal speakers. Ruckelshaus said the new facility exemplified EPA's research function, often overlooked by the public in its concern over enforce- ment of environmental laws. The one-story building contain- ing 25,000 square feet of working space combines scattered laboratory operations formerly carried out at the University of Kansas Medical Center, the Olathe Naval Air Base, and a waste treatment plant in Jackson County, Missouri. Actual operations at the new building started last summer for a 30-man staff of biologists, bacteri- ologists, chemists, and engineers un- der Garry Fisk, head of surveillance and analysis for Region VII. The lab equipment includes a gas chromatograph mass spectrometer for very precise detection and meas- urement of pollutant substances, and an electronic computer for rapid and accurate data handling. Storage is provided for the Re- gion's truck-mounted mobile field laboratory and several boats used in obtaining water samples from riv- ers and lakes. — 4 — ------- First Annual Conference on 'Women in EPA' Speakers included, from left, Charlie K. Swift, Carol M. Thomas, and White House aide Judy Kaufman. (Continued from page 1) Energy Commission; Barbara Jones, Civil Service Commission; Priscilla Ranshoff, Department of Defense; and Jean Lightfoot, Kate Stahl, Howard Messner, Albert Dimcoff, Ruth Mondschein, Marie Wilson, Stanley R. Williams, and Harvey Wiener, all of EPA. A new publication, "Women in EPA," was issued shortly before the Women's Week observance and served as an information resource for many of the discussions. It gives statistics on the employment of women in the Agency by type of position and grade. Data are given for all EPA employees as of June, 1971, and for all regional employes as of March, 1972. photos by Ernest Bucci Gallaudet College dancers ended the conference with an original ballet. Many Agencies Involved in Environmental Study Environmental protection can benefit from the knowledge and skills of dozens of Federal agencies beside EPA, as well as from a va- riety of national research labora- tories, computer facilities, and other "centers of excellence" in science and technology. This was the theme that domi- nated a three-day interagency con- ference held in Livermore, Calif., last month under the sponsorship of EPA and the Atomic Energy Commission. A dozen EPA scientists described the Agency's current research and monitoring efforts, with emphasis on the cutting edge of unsolved prob- lems: better modeling of ecosystems, bstter instrumentation, and means for storing and using large quanti- ties of complex data. The modeling of ecosystems— duplicating in the laboratory or on a computer the changes that take place in living systems as their en- vironment changes—is a very useful tool, said Dr. A. F. Bartsch, in a paper co-authored by Dr. Norbert A. Jaworski, both of EPA's NERC- Corvallis. But no single "master model" is likely to meet the needs of all users, even if one could be con- structed, he said. EPA speakers included Stanley M. Greenfield, Peter Johnson, Del- bert S. Barth, A. W. Breidenbach, William N. Fitch, Warren B. John- son, Ronald A. Venezia, George Morgan, Alphonse F. Forziati, John D. Koutsandreas, Gaorge F. Wirth, and James R. Hammerle. ------- Strip Mines Serve Double Purpose Strip-mined land with its open trenches and piles of "spoil" mate- rial often can be used as landfill sites, serving a dual purpose of safe, attractive solid waste disposal and reclamation of the gutted land. An EPA-sponsored demonstra- tion of this technique at Frostburg, in western Maryland, has attracted wide attention from city planners and engineers, according to Leonard Lion of the National Environmen- tal Research Center at Cincinnati, EPA engineer for the project. Visitors have come from South America, Europe, and many States to inspect the Frostburg project. Charles Kenealy, chief of the State's Division of Solid Waste Control, said the State had held three con- ducted tours of the area and issued an illustrated brochure about it. Waste from two cities, Cumber- land and Frostburg, with a com- bined population of 50,000, and half a dozen industrial plants are handled at the site, which is oper- ated by Allegany County. Since the project began five years ago, aided by a grant from EPA's predecessor agency in the Public Health Service, another strip-mine site near Westernport, Md., has been opened to serve six smaller communities in Allegany and Gar- rett Counties, Maryland, and Min- eral County, West Virginia. These landfills replace scores of scattered, burning dumps, Lion said, including 33 in the two Maryland counties alone. Nearly half of these dumps have been permanently closed, and the remaining ones are being phased out. The demonstration site has been supported for five years by grants totalling $293,000 from EPA and its forerunner agencies. The State, the County, and the two cities con- tributed $207,000. Total costs of the landfill, including capital invest- ment, operation, and maintenance, average $1.45 per ton of waste, compared to the range for non-mine sites of $1.50 to $4 per ton. An av- —photo by Don Moran Old strip mine near Frostburg, Md., a model landfill for five years, has attracted visitors from many States and foreign countries. erage of 270 tons per day is depos- ited in the Frostburg trench, com- pacted, and covered with earth from the adjoining spoil pile. EPA's interest in strip-mine land- fills involves many other factors than efficient waste disposal and land reclamation. The Agency has performed and supported research at Frostburg, and at smaller sites in the area, to determine how such landfills affect ground and surface water supplies and whether acidic water from old mines can be filtered by landfills. Advantages of strip-mine sites for landfills, Lion pointed out, in- clude: » No initial excavation required; the trench or pit is already there. • Cover material close at hand. • Access roads already construct- ed. • Low costs for leasing or buy- ing the land. The United States has close to five million acres of strip-mined land, according to Ernest P. Hall, chief of EPA's Mining Research Section. Not all of this acreage is from coal mining; many other minerals are mined by surface methods, includ- ing sand and gravel, limestone, phosphates, copper, and zinc. Old strip-mine sites are close to many communities in most parts of the country and within short rail-haul distance from such large cities as Chicago, Philadelphia, and New York, where nearby landfill sites are getting scarce. The Frostburg demonstration site is expected to take about 20 years to fill up, but Allegany County should have little trouble finding another. Western Maryland and ad- joining parts of West Virginia are scarred by thousands of abandoned mines. Inside EPA, published month- ly for all employees of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agen- cy, welcomes contributed articles, photos, and letters of general interest. Such contributions will be printed and credited, but they may be edited to fit space limits. Van V. Trumbull, editor Office of Public Affairs Room W239, EPA Washington, D.C. 20460 Tel. (202) 755-0883 — 6 — ------- BANK ROBBERS CUT TELEPHONES TO EPA OFFICES An attempted bank robbery in Arlington, Va., last month cut off telephone service to EPA's water programs people in the Crystal Mall complex for nearly a week. The bandits entered an under- ground vault and severed all the cables in sight, presumably to crip- ple the bank's protection systems and enable them to enter the bank's inner office posing as telephone re- pairmen. The cables contained 15,000 tel- ephone lines to the high-rise office and commercial center, including 600 lines serving EPA. Agency officials rented a room in a motel across the street, where the phones were still work- ing, and set up emergency radio links to the phoneless building. Walkie-talkie sets were used to re- lay messages to and from the water programs offices and the outside world. Outgoing calls were made from the rented room or from the motel's pay-phone booths, which were in continual use. Using borrowed equipment, a special radio-telephone link was es- tablished between the Crystal Mall office of Louis DeCamp, acting di- rector of Water Programs Opera- tions, and Robert Sansom, assist- ant administrator for Air and Water Programs, across the Potomac in Washington. The cables were cut at 10 o'clock on a Wednesday morning. By Mon- day, service had been restored in 60 to 70 percent of the EPA of- fices, according to William Elder, communications officer. The bandits fled without any money after shooting and killing the bank manager and a policeman. Four days later, men answering their descriptions hijacked an air- liner in Houston, Texas, and es- caped to Cuba after killing an air- line employee. Two EPA Oil-Spill Workers Injured in Helicopter Crash Two EPA men were seriously in- jured last month while working to contain and clean up an oil spill in southern Utah. They are John Cunningham, 26, of the Oil and Hazardous Materials Division in Washington, and Mi- chael Streiby, 27, of the Region VIII office in Denver. Both were passengers in a helicopter that crashed near Kayenta, Ariz., on the evening of Oct. 18. Cunningham suffered fractures of the legs and extensive back injuries, with possible nerve damage, and was reported in serious condition. Streiby suffered a broken ankle, fa- cial cuts, and other injuries. Both are hospitalized in Albuquerque, N.M. The pilot of the Army Ranger helicopter and a Coastguardman passenger were also injured, but less seriously. They were discharged after several days in the hospital, ac- cording to Kenneth Biglane, direc- tor of the Oil and Hazardous Mate- rials Division. Biglane said Cun- ningham was in surgery for seven hours on Oct. 24. The men had been working on an oil spill in the San Juan River val- ley in the Glen Canyon Recreation Area of southern Utah, resulting from a pipeline break near Ship- rock, N.M. More than 120,000 gal- lons of crude oil poured down the valley and into Lake Powell, an empoundment of the Colorado Riv- er. Emergency teams from many government agencies were working to contain the spill. Before the crash, the men were plucked by the helicopter from their working posts—Cunningham at the boom site and Streiby from a moun- tain top where he was acting at a radioman—and carried to the Mon- ument Valley air strip, Biglane re- ported. The crash occurred after the pilot took off again to make room for another aircraft coming in for a landing. The men had stayed in the helicopter because of the darkness and pouring rain. Auto Use Curbs Studied EPA-supported studies now un- der way in 16 cities will help State and local officials determine how to reduce air pollution from vehicles by "alternative control strategies." Such measures include various schemes to reduce the use of cars and trucks in congested urban areas, where emission controls on the ve- hicles are expected to be insuffi- cient to achieve the national air quality standards by 1975. The studies will consider such al- ternative strategies as parking bans and other traffic controls, staggered working hours, encouragement of car pools, mass transit systems, and vehicle inspection systems in relation to each particular city. Under the Clean Air Act of 1970, each State last January submitted to EPA a plan to implement the na- tional air quality standards. States with urban traffic problems were given additional time, until Feb. 15, 1973, to come up with the technical details and time schedules for the alternative strategy portions of their plans. Two consulting engineering firms are performing the studies under EPA contracts: TRW, Inc., Mc- Lean, Va., for $166,360; and GCA Corporation, Bedford, Mass., for $201,000. Cities being studied by TRW are: Dayton, Denver, Houston/Galves- ton, Los Angeles, New York, Phil- adelphia, and Phoenix; by GCA: Boston, Baltimore, Minneapolis/ St. Paul, Pittsburgh, Salt Lake City, Spokane, and Seattle. — 7 — ------- 74 Labs Are Closed as Fire Hazards More than one third of the labora- tory operations in EPA's big new building at Research Triangle Park, N.C., were closed down for safety reasons last month by Dr. John F. Finklea, director. All "high-hazard" operations— chiefly those involving volatile gases and chemicals—were halted in 74 of the building's 200 laboratories fol- lowing a month-long, inch-by-inch inspection launched by Finklea when he took over as director in Septem- ber. Previous safety checks, both by EPA officials and outside experts, had indicated serious deficiencies in the building, which has been in use for about a year. Center officials are looking for other, nearby space in which to house the displaced operations, Dep- uty Director Jack Thompson esti- mated in might take two months before all of them can be resumed. Meanwhile, work will continue on the affected projects' non-laboratory phases: collation of data, report writing, and experimental planning. The $10.5-million, 300,000- square-foot building is leased by the Federal government from a private owner at an annual rent of $1.175 million. Some of its fire hazards were noted in a study made last spring: lack of fire walls in some laboratories, single exits in others, Typhoon Olga Halts Work On Island Radiation Survey A typhoon in the Pacific Ocean last month interrupted the work of five EPA radiation specialists on Eniwetok atoll. The men from the National Envi- ronmental Research Center at Las Vegas, Nev., were among more than 100 persons from many Fed- eral agencies and their contractors laying the groundwork for the pos- sible return of the native popula- tion, evacuated 25 years ago so the remote island could be used for nu- clear weapons testing. The NERC team—Charles F. Costa, William E. Moore, James R. Martin, Dwayne Rozell, and Jack E. Thrall—had been making a ra- diological survey of the main atoll and about 40 nearby islands, test- ing soils and structures and taking environmental samples to help de- termine what cleanup work should be done. They were working for the Atomic Energy Commission, in cooperation with specialists from AEC's Lawrence Livermore Labor- atory and the University of Wash- ington. The team had been on Eniwetok for about 10 days when Typhoon Olga—15th in this year's series of Pacific tropical storms—approached the island. On the evening of Oct. 23 all were evacuated in an Air Force cargo plane and taken to Kwajalein atoll, about 400 miles away. Olga struck the next day, putting the island's power plant out of com- mission. The survey had to be post- poned, and the five left Kwajelein the next day. The EPA team expects to return early in January to complete the survey, and Costa is looking for- ward to it. "It's very hard work there," he said, "lugging all that heavy equipment . . . and hacking through the jungle. The climate's very hot and humid. A couple of the guys came down with heat pros- tration. But it's beautiful, the is- lands and the lagoons." The Eniwetok natives also want to return, and the Federal govern- ment hopes the island can be made habitable by the end of next year. The return of the natives is a joint project of the AEC, the De- partment of Defense, and the De- partment of the Interior, which ad- ministers the Pacific Trust Territo- ries. sealde windows, unprotected ceiling beams that could buckle under in- tense heat, and interconnected fume ducts that could spread a fire rapid- ly from one lab to another. Corrective measures were initi- ated immediately after the closing order, and about 50 separate proj- ects are completed or underway. The building was designed for the National Air Pollution Control Ad- ministration before EPA was estab- lished in December, 1970, and with- out knowledge that EPA's expanded air pollution research would involve many high-risk operations. Finklea listed three main difficul- ties with the building: • Location away from fire fight- ing services. • The Agency's need for "certain analytical research procedures not suitable for this facility." • "Piecemeal consolidation" at Research Triangle Park of research projects that have increased the fire hazard. Plans had already been made, Finklea said, to move most of these operations next June. However, the inspection revealed such imminent danger that the shutdown was or- dered immediately, before new space could be found or the necessary building alterations made. Moving the high-risk operations six months before the planned June date, will entail only "marginal ad- ditional cost" to the Government, Finklea said. Pressurized cylinders of hydro- gen, acetylene, and other gases have been moved out of the building, as have storage drums of volatile chemicals. Burton Levy, director of admin- istration, said the decision to limit use of the building to low-risk projects was deliberate, "based on our own analysis of what the build- ing could tolerate and not prompted by an accident." "There have been no personal injuries or damage here because of explosions or fire," he said. ------- |