Re: [CTRL] [Fwd: washingtonpost.com Cheney's Home Sending Bad Vibrations]

2002-12-09 Thread Prudy L
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In a message dated 12/8/2002 12:11:16 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


"I just got back from Connecticut," said Warner. "When I mentioned this to my nephew, he said maybe [Cheney] is drilling for oil." 


Maybe a shelter that will withstand an atomic blast. Mr. Cheney wants to be really safe. Gives the term government security a whole new meaning. Prudy
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[CTRL] [Fwd: washingtonpost.com Cheney's Home Sending Bad Vibrations]

2002-12-08 Thread goldi316
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nc wrote:


"I
just got back from Connecticut," said Warner. "When I mentioned this to
my nephew, he said maybe [Cheney] is drilling for oil."
What do
they know that they aren't telling the citizens..?Cheney's
Home Sending Bad Vibrations
Construction Blasts Have D.C. Folks Shuddering, Speculating
By David Nakamura
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, December 8, 2002; Page A01
One man thought the noise was a sonic boom.
Another guessed he was hearing rolling thunder.
When a woman feared it was a bomb or an earthquake, she called the police.
But they had no answers, either.
No one in the Massachusetts Avenue Heights neighborhood of Northwest
Washington knows what is going on at the house of their neighbor, the vice
president of the United States.
But one thing is certain: They're tired of the daily blasting at the
Naval Observatory that has shaken houses, rattled windows and knocked mirrors
off the walls.
"None of the neighbors object to any construction that is necessary
in the Navy's view," said Nancy Nord, a community activist who lives on
Observatory Circle. "What we do object to is that there is no sense of
the magnitude, no warning about something so intrusive to our lives and
no clear sense how long this is going to go or when it's going to stop."
The blasts, which last three to five seconds apiece, have been going
off two or three times a day -- as early as 7 a.m. and as late as 11 p.m.
-- for nearly two months, residents say. But neighbors have received so
little information from government officials about the top-secret project
that speculation is running wild.
The leading theory: A security bunker is being built for Vice President
Cheney. The second most-popular guess: The government is digging tunnels
to spy on nearby embassies. In third place: A helicopter hangar is under
construction.
As the government roots out terrorists around the globe and gears up
for a possible military confrontation with Iraq, nothing is out of the
realm of possibility, neighbors say.
"After 9/11, when you hear a big blast for the first time, you wonder
what is going on," said Iza Warner, who had a mirror fall off the wall
of her home on Davis Street, a few blocks away from the construction site.
Warner called the police after guests at a dinner party became frightened
by the racket.
"One guest said, 'Oh, my God, what is going on -- an earthquake?' "
Warner recalled. "She said it sounded just awful. I called the police,
and they looked around but they couldn't tell us anything."
Thus far, the federal government's only response to the residents has
been a three-page letter that the observatory's superintendent, David W.
Gillard, sent to the advisory neighborhood commissioner, Rosalyn P. Doggett,
on Nov. 20.
The blasting could last eight more months, Gillard said in the letter,
but the Navy has attempted to limit noise by silencing backup alerts on
trucks and removing most diesel-powered electric generators from the construction
site.
He did not disclose the nature of the project, however.
"Due to its sensitive nature in support of national security and homeland
defense, project specific information is classified and cannot be released,"
Gillard wrote. "In addition, please understand we are severely constrained
by operation requirements to perform this project on a highly accelerated
schedule; therefore, it will not be possible to limit construction activities
to the daytime as you request."
Doggett said the letter raised as many questions as it answered. "I
got back an information sheet that I thought was just not pertinent," she
said. "They do not have to tell us exactly what is happening, but they
do need to minimize the impact."
The matter has alarmed D.C. Council member Kathy Patterson (D-Ward 3),
who said she has asked Deputy Mayor Margret Nedelkoff Kellems to press
White House officials to work out a resolution.
"If the federal government is not being a good neighbor, we'll elevate
the issue to a level where something can be done," Patterson said. "We
want to know what we can know about what they're up to and if they are
able to be a bit more responsive."
The Naval Observatory, which opened at 3450 Massachusetts Ave. in 1893,
houses many of the Navy's precious instruments used for measuring time
and astronomy. The house on its grounds was designated as the vice president's
residence in 1974.
If residents' speculation is accurate and construction workers are digging
deep into the ground, the project would be going through about 35 feet
of common sand and gravel, according to federal officials at the U.S. Geological
Survey. Anything beyond that depth would hit tonalite, an intrusive igneous
rock similar to granite and common to this area.
Phyllis Bonanno said her 89-year-old mother, who lives with her on Observatory
Circle, is "quite upset when the boom goes off."
"Everybody appreciates that there's always national security issues,"
Bonanno said. "On the other hand, this is a neighborhood. We're