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Follow the Money, Follow the Attitude: Column

LaRocco to Otter, Risch: No Contaminated Sand to Idaho


By Jill Kuraitis, 5-05-08

On Monday, U.S. Senate candidate Larry LaRocco asked Gov. C.L. (Butch) Otter and Lt. Gov. Jim Risch to stop 150 rail cars loaded with radioactive sand from entering Idaho. His staff hand delivered letters to each office.

In Idaho, the story of the shipment was first published here on NewWest.Net/Boise.

“I am asking you to stop this dangerous shipment of radioactive material bound for Idaho, for the sake of a clean environment, for the sake of precedent and for the safety of our children,” LaRocco wrote in his letter to Otter and Risch. Risch is LaRocco’s likely Republican opponent for the Senate seat now held by Larry Craig.

The U.S. Army is shipping 6,700 tons of contaminated sand to Idaho from Kuwait.  It will arrive at American Ecology in Grandview, Idaho, sometime in May. The sand is from Camp Doha in Kuwait, a former Army warehouse complex used by Army Forces Central Command.  The sand absorbed depleted uranium when some spent ammunition was caught in a fire during the first Gulf War.

LaRocco said the Kuwaiti desert is a better place for the sand, which contains lead and depleted uranium.

“Accepting this waste in the United States is poor public policy and environmentally unsound for Idaho,” LaRocco writes. “Let’s not turn Idaho into the world’s dump.”

LaRocco also notes past leaders, former Gov. Cecil Andrus and former Gov. Phil Batt, took firm stances against bringing hazardous materials to Idaho. He urged Risch to put aside partisanship and follow their examples.

In November 2007, American Ecology’s PAC gave $2,300 to Jim Risch’s Senate campaign. The PAC had previously given $1,000 to Risch’s 2006 race for Lt. Governor.  Since 2002, the AE PAC has given more that $20,000 to the campaigns of Otter, Risch, Senators Larry Craig and Mike Crapo, and Reps. Bill Sali and Mike Simpson.

“Let’s stop this now,” LaRocco writes. “It’s time for sound public policy to trump powerful special interests that hold sway over Idaho.”

I’ve called called American Ecology nine times since May 30 and asked to speak to their communications director, Chad Hyslop, but he has never returned a call.  Several times, I was put on hold and told, “He’ll be right with you,” only to have someone else pick up the phone and tell me “he isn’t available,” a line which was repeated no matter what I said or asked. I also called the company’s landfill site and left a message for its director; the call is unreturned.

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