Wednesday, February 18, 2009

"A Daughter of Radon Remembers" Lake Elliot and Uranium

In April, 2008, we brought you a post on the retirement community, Elliot Lake Retirement Living (Ontario, Canada), a bit of which we've repeated below for easy reference. Elliot Lake had once been known as the "Uranium Mining Capital of the World".

http://sccagainsturanium.blogspot.com/2008/04/home-sweet-radioactive-home-uranium-and.html

In their ethically questionable reclamation of the abandoned mining community as a retirement community, one company vice president observed, "Senior Citizens have faced numerous hardships during their lifetimes, wars, depression, inflation. So what's a little low-level radioactive waste?"

The original post here (link above) also contains a comment from an SVAUM blog reader who shared her fears about her in-laws' decision to retire to Elliot Lake.

From our origininal post:




Centre for Excellence in Retirement Living

Up until the late '80's, Elliot Lake was known as the "Uranium Mining Capital of the World". As the mining era drew to a close, the City of Elliot Lake recognized the need for revitalization.

All the circumstances presented a unique opportunity for Elliot Lake to remake itself as a retirement haven.

Created in 1987, Elliot Lake Retirement Living began attracting its first retirees to this picturesque community nestled in the beauty of Northern Ontario.

Since then, Elliot Lake Retirement Living has been successful in its goals and has become known as the Most Affordable Retirement Program in the country and Elliot Lake, as a centre of excellence for retirement living.

This site consists mostly of pictures of some of the retirement buildings and opportunities in Elliot Lake, now the "Jewel in the Wilderness".


As an update and follow-up to our entire original post, we bring you a recently posted entry from NuclearFreeNB.org called "A Daughter of Radon Remembers". Its author grew up in the mining town of Elliot Lake. Her story, and pictures, further dramatize what happens to an area, and its inhabitants, when uranium is mined there. And her story is a further sad underscore to the apparent contradiction that is now "Elliot Lake Retirement Living".

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http://nuclearfreenb.org/2009/02/17/a-daughter-of-radon-remembers/


If Poplar Road looks like any street in suburban Canada, it should. The street, like the town where it’s located, was the product of a 1950s planning model that was applied to countless cities and towns across Canada. Two shopping plazas, precursor to malls, were at the center of the town’s suburban-like sprawl. At its peak in 1960, the town had 25,000 residents and the distinction of being one of the largest single industry mining communities in Canadian history. This was Elliot Lake.

Within a decade of its emergence from Ontario’s northern wilderness, the population plummeted to 6700, only to bounce back in the 1980s. The town’s population would rise and fall with every boom-and-bust cycle in the industry. Each cycle created a large turnover (up to 50% in 1981) of residents.

Elliot Lake wasn’t just any mining town. It billed itself as the “Uranium Capital of the World” (a title now claimed by Saskatchewan). At the town’s entrance, visitors were greeted by a giant model of a uranium atom. Between 1956 and 1966, there were 11 mines operating in the Elliot Lake-Blind River area. Two of those mines, Milliken Lake and Stanleigh, were less than three kilometers from Poplar Road.


Author Inka Milewski and her brother on Poplar Road circa early 1980s.
(Photo: Inka Milewski)

Gus Froebel was a uranium miner. He lived with his wife and children at 32 Poplar Road. In the early 70s, he developed lung cancer. At the time, the Workmen’s Compensation Board (WCB) and the uranium industry wouldn’t acknowledge there was a link between exposure to radiation in the mines and lung cancer. As far as the WCB, the industry, the Atomic Energy Control Board, and government-funded cancer research agencies were concerned, smoking among miners was the major cause of lung cancer. With thousands of men working in uranium mines, reversing this mind-set would have had huge policy and financial implications. Gus and the union who represented him were in for a long fight.

Forty years earlier, two Czech scientists and physicians published a landmark study in the American Journal of Cancer (Pirchan and Sikl 1932). They linked miners’ lung tumors with radon exposure in Czechoslovakian mines. Ten years later, Wilhelm C. Hueper, a world leading expert on lung cancer and founding director of the environmental cancer section of the U.S. National Cancer Institute, came to the same conclusion. He reviewed 300 years of radon data on European miners and found that radon gas produced lung cancer that killed more than half of all miners 10-20 years after their employment. He issued warnings worldwide, including in Canada. These were largely unheeded.

Declassified documents from the 1950s show that the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission told Hueper that references to occupational cancers among uranium miners were “not in the public interest” and “represented mere conjecture”(Nikiforuk 1998). Forty years after the Czech study was published and thirty years after Hueper’s warnings, a 1974 Ontario Royal Commission on the Health and Safety of Workers in Mines found that Elliot Lake uranium miners were experiencing twice as many lung cancers as expected. The report was filed the same year the WCB would hear Gus Froebel’s case.

Deadly Daughters

Uranium is a heavy metal, in fact the heaviest. Unlike any metal, uranium is radioactive. Trapped in ore and in the ground, uranium is relatively harmless unless it leaches into aquifers and contaminates drinking water or its deadly radioactive by-products (thorium-230, radium-226, radon-222, and the radon daughters: lead-210, bismuth-210 and polonium-210) escape through rock fissures and collect in the atmosphere or in homes.

Uranium deposits in Elliot Lake were low grade. It took one tonne of ore to extract one kilogram of uranium. The miner drilled, blasted, and mucked (excavated) the ore and mill operators crushed it. Through these processes, toxic radon gas and its deadly daughters were released. The gas is easily inhaled and exhaled. The daughters, however, lodge in the lining of the lungs and bombard the delicate tissues with radiation. As for the by-products, millions of tonnes of radioactive leftovers or tailings, they gave off 10,000 times more radon gas than undisturbed ore.

In 1932, the federal Department of Mines (as Natural Resources Canada was then known) knew from its own studies in Port Radium that “a hazard may exist in the breathing of air containing even small amounts of radon”(Nikiforuk 1998). The federal government would not set radon standards until 1967.

Tailings area for Stanrock mine (Elliot Lake). A wall of radioactive sand 10 metres high holds back the tailings.
(Photo credit: Robert Del Tredici, 1987).

Gus Froebel won his battle with the Workmen’s Compensation Board in 1974. It was hailed as a landmark victory. Lung cancer in uranium miners would now be recognized as being caused by exposure to radiation. Even so, making a claim wouldn’t be a simple matter. Miners filing claims would often have to jump through many hoops to prove their eligibility. It was a long, sometimes expensive, and not always successful process.

Not long after his victory, Gus died of his disease.

My father was also a uranium miner in Elliot Lake. Like Gus Froebel, we lived on Poplar Road just four doors away. Like Gus, and hundreds of other uranium miners, my father died of lung cancer that eventually spread to his brain. Despite having chest x-rays every year (as required for all miners), a lung biopsy, being hospitalized several times, breathing difficulties, and finally collapsing in the mine, local doctors attributed his condition to all kinds of diseases except work-related lung cancer. Convinced my father’s case was eligible for compensation, we sought second and third medical opinions, hired a lawyer, and eventually won. Not all miners and their families were as determined.

And, like Gus, my father didn’t live long after his victory.

While the last mine in Elliot Lake closed in 1996, the toxic legacy of uranium mining lives on in the miners, the majority of whom with their families are scattered across Canada. Any meaningful assessment of the true health impacts of uranium mining on Elliot Lake residents is almost impossible because of the high turnover in the population over the decades. The massive uranium tailing areas are legend. They are the subject of hundreds of studies, documentaries, books, and photos and support an army of scientists and engineers that are trying to figure out how to contain the contamination.

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Information Sources and Additional Reading
(all sources available online)

Edwards, G. 1992. Uranium: The Deadliest Metal. Perception 10(2).

Leadbeater, D. 1998. The Development of Elliot Lake, “Uranium Capital of the World”: A background to the layoffs of 1990-1996. ELTAS Analysis #1A19, Laurentian University, Sudbury. 51 p.

Lewis, R.K. 2006. A history of radon 1470-1984. Proceedings of the 16th National Radon Meeting. Frankfort, Kentucky.

Nikiforuk, A. 1998. Echoes of the Atomic Age: Cancer kills fourteen aboriginal uranium workers. Calgary Herald, March 14

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