ML19321B040

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Responds to Re D Mattson Concerns About Encl Article in Paxton Herald on Problems Affecting Farm Animals Near Facility.Issue Under Investigation.Field Studies Completed & Data Being Evaluated.Rept to Be Issued Soon
ML19321B040
Person / Time
Site: Crane 
Issue date: 07/10/1980
From: Kammerer C
NRC OFFICE OF CONGRESSIONAL AFFAIRS (OCA)
To: Heinz J
SENATE
References
NUDOCS 8007250190
Download: ML19321B040 (7)


Text

__

j W ETu UNITED STATES

.f' o.

NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION h

WASHINGTON, D. C. 20555

  • /

July 10,1980 Docket No. 50-320 The Honorable John deinz United States Senate Washington, D.C.

20510

Dear Senator Heinz:

I am writing in response to your note of May 14, 1980, to NRC's Office of Congressional Affairs regarding the letter from your constituent, Ms. Darlene Mattson. Ms. Mattson submitted an article from the Paxton Herald that discusses problems that have been affecting farm animals in the vicinity of Three Mile Island (TMI).

NRC's Terrestrial Resources Section, 03fice of Nuclear Reactor Regulation, is currently conducting a study of possible health effects on farm animals in the vicinity of TMI.

This study is examining both the radiological effects of the TMI-accident and possible links between cooling tower operation at TMI and animal pathology in the area.

The investigating team has met with many area farmers and veterinarians.

Field studies have been completed and the data is curre'ntly being evaluated. The investigating team plans to issue a report of its findings, which will be available to the public, in mid-summer.

They will send you a copy of the report when it is completed.

I trust that the report will adequately address the concerns raised by Ms. Mattson and by the Paxton Herald article.

Sincerely, V'

t

[ { Office of Con Carlton 'anmerer, Di ctor nal Affairs

^e THIS DOCUMENT CONTAINS P00R QUAUTY PAGES 0/E soo725 g

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M 0 ;? ?h. 11 S OC April 17, 1980

'The Honorable H. John.Heinz, III United States Senate 443 Russell ~ Building Washington, DC 20510

Dear Senator Heinz:

Enclosed is an article entitled "Those TMI Related Animal Reports -- Are They True?" from The Paxton Herald of February 27, 1980 which I just' recently read.

My reasons for sending you this article are two-fold.

^

My first request is that you investigate these instances and delve into-repotts or. lack of cooperation in obtaining reports and discover the truth and then have your report written up in The-Paxton Herald as well.as other local newspapers, and also given cn1 TV'and radio.

It seems to me that this would be a logical way to deal with this situation.

The ' mental and emotional states of the people have been re-ferredi to a; great deal recently.

Can you imagine the frustration

-of these people, as well as us, the readers of these articles?

If

- you can, I am certain you will want to get to the bottom and ' then have the.results released.

If the results indicate that the vari-

,ous problems were not caused dy TMI - that should be said.

On the other hand, if these instances are related to TMI - then you will

.want to honestly let the people know and take-action to save the fpeople;- who I,Lin my'value system, place first on the listing of l priorities.

We do not want the same cover-up here as took place out west.

Articles appearing in periodicals do cause the readers to re-act.

-I feel'this article had a very' frightening effect.

I also

~

feel that responsible reporting is so important - especially at this time.

Having read ~ many ~ articles on this-subj ect, as well as other: subjects, I~have-found articles are-not always' accurate. 'If I-were to point-these. situations out:- I would really be kept busy.

The Honorable H. John Heinz, III April 17, 1980 United States Senate I am sorry to say, I do not trust the reporting, either in the newspapers, TV or radio.

This brings me to my second item.

How do you as an official in our government, and I as a citizen communicate, efficiently, on matters of such great importance?

I am requesting that you gentlemen have a regular - TV, radio press conference, opening with a statement, clearly outlining the facts that need to be presented, and then be free for ques-tions from the press and commentators afterwards.

This should be done during evening prime time - and not, for example, on Sunday a.m. when many concerned persons are worshipping their God in Church.

We, the people, will then be able to hear what you have to say and form our own opinions.

We will not need to have someone come on af ter the presentation to interpret your comments to us.

Instead, the time will be used for you and the question and answer period.

Should we, the public have questions, we can write, as I am doing now - to use another means of communication, or cou d call a number for direct questions on the air.

In closing, I want to reiterate my first concern, and that is -- I want to know if these animal problems are related to TMI.

If they are, let's admit it and do something about it.

Let's be honest - let's put people above the almighty dollar.

If the animal problems are not related to TMI - what is causing them?

(In terms we can understand)

I look forward to hearing from you' Thank you for your commitment to your fellowman tp serving the people as you do in your position in government.

Sincerely, Darlene E. Mattson 409 Longmeadow Road Lancaster, PA 17601 DEM/rme Enclosure cc:

Governor Richard L. Thornburgh The State Capitol Harrisburg, PA 17120

.y..... -

7.

cc:

Congressman Robert S. Walker

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1028 LHOB-Washington, DC 20515 The'Paxton Herald' 1

101 Lincoln Street Harrisburg, PA-17120-Lancaster Newspapers,.Inc.

8. West King Street j

Lancaster, PA 17601 i

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? ' mile radius of DH, farmers have hen having sfM.L.

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'}WFM' -Tfdl.WAS ADMITTEDLY SPEWING FORTHAT c

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-within 1 mile of TAU, told us that their troub a.,'El h Charla C5nIey, whMO -farm. W-

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f.;j[ad m% 1 SS"W'P V;m mde :'Ff;irh?r5 sis /p$

d1%%7,d,L Around the spouts that carry the rain off their house W..

no grass will Jrow anymore.Thei.-OC

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and bam roefs, f their fims got so weak that thew;;;L

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ged themselvs around until they deiAnima.

er imm diarrhea andweaknemThe vierinarian'jB

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a q N Y' p % @g'g ~M,Wp%g'p@kg' sis,gg

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tv.N.k ' 's A asinfo.nned them that they must feed their, stars.ly;-g?

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d cxtra mmoralsm order to have 15 Qc M. u,Te-w.4 is msting them 2% timeathe normal amounticr fad'@4

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'g p The vet abo said if the Tninem! loss in the ground'.v 25c. p ~f7~ $q.i.

.Y 1-mntinues, the farme-will be unable to grow bay.-..GD:i.i.

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?last summer 10 kittehs fmra two separate lit crs all:c,-d.:

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'gy - y-Mg ' ' died.One kition unableto tum his head la the fa'},ia C '.^?pW J-W

  • ".'. C.ig& tim 3NyGN":d. MIN 4.hunkr bmught a pare h ; Th*Ib-Q.

v-ASSS MFew, farm, but some time later the cat got stek and dial ;., -g-4/W yM.. 5. @. yM...--e Mrs.Coth *hmdfsaysshe"hasn th

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Mr~dDiherCOUn30ri13 hd~slilliiilrn C2lllf% un Mrs ConleysaidSW N T 4-:

..-2camy,nr' 3. age' W-NFARMER:!MOVESqy1PACCIDENTJLAST

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$p% : Mis.~Conley-t3! dis'th,atn!ati es of DiBis t NJ afterK 4,

_Utheir 60 head of cattle and moved out the d dy p fr the TMI-acddent beauselheir stock was D

7..sevae acrvous disordcq so muc
' experiendngirprodudion'pmblemscwso that it was C 2, newssary to hobble their ht;s in orderto milk them
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' - #.The accident was thelast straw. A white substanm W was aho'accumula '

' overnicht. and when eitried to swwp itout,itMQ t tumed'maky white Sheidso told us that a cm sin of Mic w.

'. her's, who is a dauy farmer inlancaster County has

' ban hadng tmuble..with his milk cows gettingG.,2,

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g;. Jump,sintheirlegsSA;MJU. -f4-4R:.%.N

- ' Mr.&hTitz erald wholiveinEtterihavehad "F.,

@two calves bom bknd and with softbones,onewhose
G.

. h.' both hi ible explanatiord.F.

? a.They%ps h.oke with no discerntook parts of

l. : CenterinKennettSquare Pennsylvania,forex

. nation after the calva died. The nsults that came back were wriuen in ruch a wsy that Mr. Fh. gaald, ie. who teache Agriculture, and thelocalWe.norian -

. muld not understand them.Thisis partof the report-Rickets categorizcd byper. -

  • (Costochondral inpdion)dmcytm mto metaphys c5 sistant twpcrtmfluechen Vascolar mvasion of physer.1 cartilq;e is marl dly irregular. A broad zone of fibmpfasia fibrocartikge f and cartilege formation approxunately I an. from

- the physis is compatibfewith a spontaneous fractura 9 severe o'sleoporosisD Cortex (humorus bone)largeresorption cavitics.5.'

charactenzed by numerous throughout the artex." Mrs. Fitzgerald said they ~'~'

.,. neve had any of thee pmbicms beforeTMI and 4

" ' since it has bmn shut down, she has gutten two more W*,

calvm, who seem to have no pmb! cms ~.

- PROBLEMS' %T1113. GOAT,. RABBflW.[ ANDS.

S1IEEP 'IDO :.-g %t.rt. AW : <.... rz.e.;.:.

  • Mrs H srdicon,wil' has a farm nearMiddMown L.,

o 5 she raises goats,shwp, and rabbits,isR > 5 upm w'.

brightnow.&rgoatswon'tdilatefor N; -

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whichnsu!!edinmultinletractures whichwouldnot resmnd to treatment.Samphs of2ead animris sent, n. ;

4 to the University of Pennsylvania for. tests came.

.back with the diagnosis of Seve e dc5ciency". Dr.h d,..

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Weber, anxious to Lnd out what therevere de6ciency '. ' -

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...'was. said he has " asked repeatally for soil studies to?be dona"InJune he was mformed that a

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~ been approved for the stup but Dr. Weber said he. r."q;n.,'

':Dr. Weber had many stillborn animals. lie mntacted 6. p' Q "has heard nothing sinm..; After the TM1 aaddent

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l mmpletely unfounded as the wind 90% of the time-QXb ' blows

' Md Ed about the problem but was told the stoiy was v

  • Wder this~may be tmein good wea,therwhen yapors M. :. c.

-v 7-dismninate over a large area. But in rainy weather ;4..,.% ;. (.

Y from the mohng towers ride high in the area and vi 't.; -

g{f. the wind changes and the yapon hang over the 1r;.;,

s?. immediate area and mme lack. tn the gmund fall - t c

. strength----. - - fy;&m. & - -

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  • M The aboG hroblemiseemed to have^dIGp'f'aded. i '.O-
since last summer but now a new prob!em has so m T '."

shwp and gnats will not delate wben b'.rthing. Dr.

m;.,

. Weber said this does happen omassionally but an TM

' injationwillstartupdilatiortNowanin~ationislike T.'i? '

a.- injating wate. Opwations must be onned tode V

  • 4 live kids and lamis wheriplacentas lomenc Dr.1 T'

. ; Weber said.but thse latest proRems seems to be P'* 2

-Earlie prut fems were limited to a five.CJ

  • : mile area, f spreading out to a 10 mile radium -

d.W.,f.. UP*

O Dr. Weber reported one farmer'rMI accident.His whose alvs all G.* 7 j

-cows, after cahing, muldn't get up for dayt The #:.b

. wen born without horns after the 5

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farmer moved to Chambersburg sinw, and has had F '

t

'no p:ublems sinoa After Christmas, Dr. Weber talked

' with the farmer and he had his first calf tom with'

~

- }'

homs Dr. Weber finished by statingThere definitely

.o.is a pmblem in this area.",,,,.,, _,

m,_

J One of the facts to be considered l

here, is that all through history, na-ture tries to warn the human race.

i when something is amiss. Unless one IIstens to nature

  • sooner or later the i

human race is nffected,*as we have I. seen in the problems associated with tts:.ie wa:Acs. Ia, the sw en ament going to wait until it is too late berdre doing

. anythirv? IlopefullyNnd out exactly-some action l soon will be taken to

!Just what is going on here.

p

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l unt cut n hen'to mvatw>e.TL3. td.k b of

[* dad?' ave tan expencn I

,b b!es knSs cbing when seveNdhprocucticn tmu-the soil, fal. hay and wata last Ji y, but to th s old, and one la ah was h2m with only one eve a!!sincetheinstal-he has not heard a wont hir. Fishu said that when

./.- - lation of TMI. After the acriden,t, one adult iemale the water runs off his roof thne is a two to thne foo:

s path over ten feet long mat will not grow, nn.s I

.. shp died which was p ant; mree fambs, two to grass. Under his metal fenw, where the motstun thrw hours old and y formed dhxf; one preg.

drips offon the grass is abo a three inch path w hen nant female goat di carrpng four kids and three kids had to be bottle fed Excause the rnoth;ers had ao no grass will cmw. lhently his goats, who shouh' i

have had ten Gds, delivend ordy two LastTumdav.

i milk. Thrw mc.ther rabbits, one bred twice, each deli-a stillbrn kid was'delivcml, fu!Iy deve! opal Mr l

vered eight rabbits per litter, and all the baby rabbits Fisher domn't know what the answer is but hir

~

died. One of her lambs was born deformed in the biggest gripe is that the stat e won't give frim am l

front shoulders, and she had to teach it to walk. Mrs, l

. Ilardison,whose farm looks straight out on TMI's ? hcIp m findingout w;hatthe pmblem it.IIefee

p. advised, muld not stay in the day of the acrident, as. lit is "

., towera nn. cahl the Governor's ion Center, and was tok'

, bmause her anunals were birthing, and,th a :

that they'll et the answws. A lady with a Doctor's

.hcabf up wi open cut she had on her arm degrcestudbewould ettheanswasevenifshehai

.jg s range spongelike effect.- e a deposit of mmerals caus,1fer, doctor said it mul to go to Washington. fater she cal!ed back and s

'she couldn't get any answas at all, and suggested :

Ovey dicouraged, since she says no one will pay lot of Aches in his musc!cs and ' ints oflate. He sak W.any attention to these problems or give her anyW9/--3 his farm has been in the for 210 years anc'

'Jiranswers. c-;,%...-n...

there has never been problems e this befom

. '$. PROBLEMS %TITI RABBfIS, DEFORMITIES;it 6 MORE ANIMAL PROBLEMS.

9-l

-dyi Four and 9/10 rnits frorsTMI Glenn@and Alice.

V.QBREEDLNG, ETC.. ~.F.: c.

' On the Jeremiah Fishir farm h '

b!

~ Sp;j; Wilt raise rabbits They starta! ex,teiencing 1977.Tney hava w ing prob! ems in 1978. Rabbits bred either producrd. -also ban havmg prob!ans with their du

' ^ no rmults aborted or hadfalsepregnandes. After23 ' s 70 eggs laid byTour fema!e ducks, only seven J

n klings developed in 197& One was a mutation, tha Mbab3! rabbits died following buE the Wilts sent a Ynever fully devefond Tha feathers were brinle an en to Ohio labratory for testing.Nine months noresults,on!v thatt'hespm'meni-frozen and. stood gut. UcncatS the feathers was a hard bo

-9.s

  1. .K*will e examined. The Wilts ist 13 rabbits in the l sinicture very
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.' was fed the same fea!, supplemented with minerals fin.wekk following the TM1 accident, all between nineand ten waks okt This is an cond;given extra attention to keep it alive and ton never showed '

t and six month-

- 4.;as most baby rabbits die usua!Iy three to fourweeks.,11ater it died. In May of 1 wit]

- T.Tcafter birthif somethingis wrong.Thewwk in Febm. -

h the emissions oocurred at TMI, the Wats. -the same symbtoms was rn but' died two kst four more rabbits.The Wilts are also mnmrned. ' later. In Ifr18, tTieFisha's petca

  • Q:-dgiary w en
g

~ barn loft. Smce rigor mortis had not set m'. the ca

,with the mutations that have bwn oxuring.Rabbitsor hind J;was taken to the vet for an autopsy. The fl,.Lp Are being born without Icgs, without ear

-Td' uarters mmbetely gons Mrs Wilt said $'ey were _b cibed the tion. Death'was due to some type ofpmsoning w hic!

I r.n hasmmefroiri'ahunterwhoshotarabbitInhunting s. he,was unable to name, and depite the sym r

  • ^W' # season iri-the Middletown vidnity which he des.p poisonmg.hefound noposonnuxedwit lh

-. NJcribed as appearing like " Casper the Ghost.",Mrs. ; 2n'her stomach.When a saWilt feels the whole situation is mmpletely hopeless..' n usuaEy a raidue of the poison nuxed uith th 12"Nobody cares", she said.They never had any" stomach contents Right after the acddent, a nanrt J f.+ ' rabbits die before the installation ofTM i.*Onef C dy they're fine, the next day th a sti!I-born a week old calf had to be she goat had,ds caved m, it couldn't walk or cat. h i

s bmaue si f 'gexclaund One rabbit thatwas Dieir favorite petjust. differnt litten of mts bom after the amident,11 dici Era died one da with no apparent cause. They have. -'Only one kitten. survived, which appears to hav artment of A culture aski 'ofra ;

ne on their rabk'ts,but Mrs.dne said -damage to its nervous rystem. It can only take a fes

  • y calhi the

@M. ?;. study to b'e steps and then at Dops over whereby it earned th che vas infc-mad that the Department on!v tated :

name I upFlop. Thee is a definite,weaknss in th dmil'c they don't have time to tst animals Mrs. Wilt - hindquartus and eati

,must stabilizeitse!

it's food like.

'.. said that the call fmm the Paxton lierald was the chicken. While eating, M F firstm11shehas everhadonherpmblems;shedidn't - under socnethmg three in es off the Coor or othe-

..g.

TU ! 'IheKauffman whoalsolivenearTMI,ha'vg,. wiseitwilllosemntmlandflipoverbackward

W.'think anyone mred. v 2ng m its back. In August another litter of kitten

, / kn having roblems with theirstee slos ngmntml were born, all in differentstages ofdevelopmen Wi of their hin[ quartes. Their cats are aH suffering,

F fmmthe'samesymtokveryillandunabtetoget ub. smauer with no fur waslom mth furwhichdk thenext mer fets e never had any troub stage. The Fishers are also havmg brealing pml l, 9 Mrs Kauffman said, lived here' until that thing all the years we lems with their mws, Some of the mws have eithe

"'. )e (Dil) came here?-. PARALYSIZED STEERS ON TIIIS FIRM x,

~

e we, n tbred aborted,hadstillboms,an havedes

. Mr. Fisher wh6 has a farm on the west side ofTM2.

iceburg", as many farmers are of revealin

. has a'.so k,n expenencmg brmimg pmbfuns and their prob! ems because of the economier lone problems with lus stms In July, a litter of four consequences.

kittens all died.Two of his goats aborted. Ile has lost-On other farms there' aho have,bn reports,<

"five stes, an of which bmame unable to stand be anunals wath can developmgsoresthesu l

  • th ' I Th ould li M) eggs withouta sing' amYn[f arabm$' ix to eighweedwhen thei[ ofhalfdollars,d,ucks usual ha 19 ea pigs and 100 goose egg hearts and livers would dderiorate and th au died.

wv o y me atching w d,,.

. One steer, Mr. Fisher fed selenium to an7the steer Mr. Weber, the veten, nan,an that serves mnst oftl.

remvered. Mr. Fisher is mnvinced that sorrahow le on the western s,ide of the nver, said,There:

there is a problem with a mineral derdency in the pe.mitely a pmblem Prob!rms wath arumals in th:

steers and the soil from the poIIution from 'IhU. Mr.

particular area started in 1976 cluedy among youn

. F6her said he has appealed to at least a half a dozas state agendes without any satisfaction. Ile even ah,,. adves fmm pealat to Mr. Gemey, h,is legislator, wh,o prompt w

ee e e en