If I were a developer I'd be looking into the records tri valley cares have kept on all the radioactive releases and what materials were found far away before I spent any money building anything where you thought your buildings and people wouldn't get contaminate. Look for releases around 2003 or do a goggle search for LLNL radioactive releases. There are two URL and you can even get the reports.
If I were a developer I'd be looking into the records tri valley cares have kept on all the radioactive releases and what materials were found far away before I spent any money building anything where you thought your buildings and people wouldn't get contaminate. Look for releases around 2003 or do a goggle search for LLNL radioactive releases. There are two URL and you can even get the reports.
5 comments:
all 600+ acres from llnl should go into the lvoc. only then it would be a better use of taxpayer dollars
If I were a developer I'd be looking into the records tri valley cares have kept on all the radioactive releases and what materials were found far away before I spent any money building anything where you thought your buildings and people wouldn't get contaminate. Look for releases around 2003 or do a goggle search for LLNL radioactive releases. There are two URL and you can even get the reports.
If I were a developer I'd be looking into the records tri valley cares have kept on all the radioactive releases and what materials were found far away before I spent any money building anything where you thought your buildings and people wouldn't get contaminate. Look for releases around 2003 or do a goggle search for LLNL radioactive releases. There are two URL and you can even get the reports.
do a goggle search for LLNL radioactive releases.
June 1, 2013 at 9:00 AM
Why? Are the records underwater?
Who knows but this is a great one and my bet is a lot more has been released they haven't told you about with more to come
http://www.radioactivist.org/LLNL%20final%20report.pdf
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