http://www.toledoblade.com/deadlyalliance/intro.html
The Blade, Toledo Ohio

Special report: Deadly Alliance

 Bradner, O., resident Marilyn Miller would die
 soon after this photograph was taken. She died
 of beryllium disease, a lung illness that has
 affected scores of workers locally and
 nationwide. Government and industry records show
 that many of these illnesses and deaths have not
 been strictly accidental.

           How government and industry chose weapons over workers

 It is a substance many people have never even heard of. Yet for more than
 50 years it has been one of the most critical materials to the U.S.
 government.

 The substance: beryllium, a magical metal that is lighter than aluminum and
 stiffer than steel.

 It makes missiles fly farther, jet fighters more maneuverable, and nuclear
 weapons more powerful.

 But there is a catch: Workers who manufacture this rare material often
 contract a deadly lung disease from inhaling the metal's dust.

 An estimated 1,200 Americans have contracted the disease, and hundreds have
 died - some in the Toledo area.

 And many of these illnesses and deaths have not been strictly accidental.

 A 22-month investigation by the Blade shows that the U.S. government and
 the beryllium industry have knowingly allowed thousands of workers to be
 exposed to unsafe levels of beryllium dust. This has occurred year after
 year, for more than 40 years.

 And it continues today.

 At the local beryllium plant outside Elmore, O., workers continue to be
 overexposed to beryllium and continue to be diagnosed with beryllium
 disease.

 A recent study found 1 in 11 workers at the plant either have the disease
 or an abnormal blood test - a sign that they may very well develop the
 illness.

 Some of these workers, documents show, were clearly overexposed and
 inadequately warned.

 Time and time again, plant owner Brush Wellman Inc., America's leading
 beryllium producer, misled its workers - and deceived safety regulators.

 When safety regulators tried to protect workers, they ran up against an
 overwhelming alliance: the beryllium industry and the U.S. defense
 establishment.

 This alliance, records show, slowly undermined the regulators' safety
 efforts, and before it was all over, the government had cut a secret deal
 with Brush Wellman. The government got its valuable beryllium for years to
 come, and Brush got more money and a virtual monopoly.

 Workers got more of the same: overexposure to beryllium dust.

 The Blade investigation was based on tens of thousands of court, industry,
 and recently declassified government documents. In this series, we detail
 our findings.

 * In Part 1, we show how the government has sacrificed workers' health in
 the name of national security.

 * In Part 2, we document how industry and defense officials twisted a plan
 to protect workers into a deal protecting themselves.

 * Part 3 and Part 4 lay out Brush's actions - how the company has
 downplayed hazards, concealed documents, covered up its checkered past, and
 systematically tried to control the public's knowledge of beryllium.

 * In Part 5, we tell the story of Marilyn Miller, who contracted the
 disease while working as a secretary at a Brush plant. We follow her final
 days, and final hours.

 * Part 6 explores how public officials have been quick to give Brush
 Wellman tax dollars but slow to raise health concerns.

 Throughout the series, we'll take you to places across the country where
 the disease is a problem, from an aging Pennsylvania coal town to a former
 Colorado weapons plant.

 You'll meet 7-year-old Gloria Gorka, killed by air pollution outside a
 beryllium plant; Butch Lemke, a former worker who has spent 15 years tied
 to an oxygen tank, and Carol Mason, who has the disease even though she
 never worked a single day in a beryllium facility.

            Stories by Sam Roe    [Image]    Blade senior writer


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------


                            toledoblade.com home

              � Copyright 1999 The Blade. All rights reserved.
  The Blade, 541 North Superior St., Toledo, OH 43660 USA. (419) 724-6000





Reply via email to