From: | CPEO Moderator <cpeo@cpeo.org> |
Date: | 3 Feb 2004 04:32:37 -0000 |
Reply: | cpeo-military |
Subject: | Army lax on site cleanup |
Utah DESERET MORNING NEWS Army lax on site cleanup '99 orders targeting Utah, other states weren't carried out By Lee Davidson February 2, 2004 WASHINGTON -- A group camping in 1986 on Utah's Hurricane Mesa, unaware it was once an impact area for Army mortars and grenades, found something that looked a lot like an old artillery shell. A camper threw it into the campfire -- and discovered it was indeed a real shell when it exploded and injured several of them. The Army, tired of such horror stories of discovering unexploded or forgotten ordnance nationwide, in 1999 issued directives designed to force current and former ranges to better track their cleanup efforts, better record ordnance use, improve security, reduce environmental damage and improve sustainability of ranges. But inspectors now say those directives were never implemented, according to documents obtained by the Deseret Morning News through a Freedom of Information Act request. Worse, investigators said even if they had been implemented, they were seriously flawed by not requiring reviews needed to ensure Army and National Guard ranges were truly complying and meeting goals. This article can be viewed at: http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,590040320,00.html ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ CPEO: A DECADE OF SUCCESS. Your generous support will ensure that our important work on military and environmental issues will continue. Please consider one of our donation options. Thank you. http://www.groundspring.org/donate/index.cfm?ID=2086-0|721-0 | |
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