This story was published Wed, Sep 8, 2004 HERMISTON -- This morning the first M55 rocket containing sarin gas is
to be destroyed at the Umatilla Chemical Depot. Workers at the depot 30 miles south of the Tri-Cities moved the first
pallet of 15 rockets into the incinerator at noon Tuesday, said spokeswoman
Mary Binder. A forklift picked up the pallet from inside a depot storage igloo, loaded
it into a special steel container on the back of a flat-bed truck, then
drove it to the incinerator facility less than a mile away. Each rocket will be drained, chopped and burned in a process that takes
about 45 minutes. The chemical agent, officially known as GB, will be stored in a separate
container until enough has been collected to burn in one of the plant's
two liquid incinerators. Officials estimate it will be about a month before
that occurs. Anyone interested in seeing a video of the first rocket being taken apart
can go to the Army Outreach Office, 190 E. Main St., Hermiston, from 3 to
6 p.m. today. Photos of the first pallet of rockets being moved are available by clicking
on the "current events" icon at www.csepp.net. Updates are available
at 1-888-866-5928. The facility's start up, initially set for Aug. 18, was delayed three
weeks after surrogate chemical agent was detected beyond the carbon filters
in the ventilation system during a test of the facility's second liquid
incinerator. The six banks of carbon filters deal with air flowing through the facility.
A second set of filters handles air from the incineration furnaces, Binder
said. The incineration carbon filters are the subject of lawsuits filed
by GASP, a local group opposed to the incinerator. Binder attributed the detection partially to the liquid incinerator being
tested so close to start up, when monitors on the plant's stacks were working.
Other sites, and even tests done on the first liquid incinerator at the
Umatilla Chemical Depot, were not done at that state of readiness. Depot staff kept the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality Chemical
Demil Program, which oversees the facility's operating permits, informed
about the steps taken in testing the filters, said DEQ Administrator Dennis
Murphy. Those steps included testing the filters' absorption capacity, changing
the first banks of filters and flushing out the facility with air to remove
the surrogate agent from the system. "I am comfortable with it starting tomorrow," he said, noting
the agency has not gotten an increase in calls from concerned citizens because
of the delay. Steve Meyers, manager of the Army Outreach Office in Hermiston, also
said there hasn't been a flood of concerned callers. "I would say there
was a mild concern expressed by members of the community." Generally, people have been accepting of the notion of starting only
when the facility was ready, he said. Nor has the Umatilla County Chemical Stockpile Emergency Preparedness
Program received more calls, said spokeswoman Cheryl Seigal. Community presentations about the depot always have included information
about why there are delays, she said. People understood and appreciated
safety as a top priority, she said. Most of the questions her staff handled dealt with people making last-minute
preparations, like getting a tone-alert radio or shelter-in-place kit, Seigal
said. April Kowalski-Milbrodt, who lives in Stanfield and works in Hermiston,
said the delays didn't worry her. "I know the people who work out there
and the hours they put in." Kowalski-Milbrodt, whose husband worked on the depot, pointed out that
the same start-up process has taken place at other incineration sites. And longtime Hermiston resident Debbie Myers said delays were part of
any operation. "You trouble-shoot and that's how it goes." Copyright 2002 Tri-City Herald. All rights reserved. This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Depot set to burn today