Consider This from NPR - Generations After The First Nuclear Test, Those Sickened Fight For Compensation
Episode Date: March 7, 2024On August 6, 1945, a stone-faced President Harry Truman appeared on television and told Americans about the atomic bomb being dropped on Hiroshima. The attack on Hiroshima marked the first time nuclea...r power was used in war, but the atomic bomb was actually tested a month earlier in the Jornada del Muerto desert of New Mexico. At least hundreds of New Mexicans were harmed by the test's fallout. Radiation creeped into the grass their cows grazed, on the food they ate, and the water they drank. A program compensating victims of government-caused nuclear contamination has been in place since 1990, but it never included downwinders in New Mexico, the site of the very first nuclear test. This week, the Senate voted to broaden the bi-partisan legislation that could compensate people who have suffered health consequences of radiation testing. Now, the bill will go to a House vote.Generations after the Trinity Nuclear Test, will downwinders in New Mexico finally get compensation? For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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On August 6, 1945, a stone-faced President Harry Truman appeared on TV screens across America.
A short time ago, an American airplane dropped one bomb on Hiroshima and destroyed its usefulness
to the enemy. That bomb has more power than 20,000 tons of TNT.
It was the first time most Americans had heard such a thing existed.
It is an atomic bomb. It is a harnessing of the basic power of the universe. The force from which
the sun draws its power has been loosed against those who brought war to the Far East. The attack
on Hiroshima marked the first time nuclear power was used in war.
But the atomic bomb was actually tested a month earlier
in the Jornada del Muerto desert of New Mexico.
We knew the world would not be the same.
That's J. Robert Oppenheimer, the lead scientist of the project
and subject of the film Oppenheimer, which is up for a number of Oscars.
Few people laughed.
Few people cried. Few people cried.
Most people were silent.
I remembered the line from the Hindu scripture,
the Bhagavad Gita,
now I am become death,
the destroyer of worlds.
But the movie Oppenheimer leaves out the story
of the people who lived downwind of the Trinity test.
It was a top-secret operation.
None of the locals knew what was coming.
A group of adolescent girls were at a summer dance camp about 40 miles away.
It was 10 young girls around 13, 14 years old.
They were jarred from their beds when the blast went off at 529 that morning.
That's Leslie Bloom, who spoke to NPR in 2021
about her reporting on the survivors of the Trinity test.
She said the young girls thought the ash falling from the sky
was snow in the middle of the New Mexico desert.
The apparent sole survivor of that episode described to me
that they were so excited that they got into bathing suits
and played in a nearby river and were pressing the snow
into their faces, into their skin, and that it absorbed really quickly.
Only one of those girls lived to tell the story. Others died from various illnesses.
At least hundreds of New Mexicans were harmed by the test's fallout.
Radiation creeped into the grass their cows grazed on, the food they ate, the water they drank.
High radiation exposure has the power to mutate DNA and leave cancer in the body.
I'm a cancer survivor, so I'm the fourth generation in my family,
and there's a fifth generation now.
I have a 24-year-old niece who was diagnosed with thyroid cancer at the age of 23.
Oh my goodness.
And so, yeah, this is not something that's going away anytime soon, Ari.
That's Tina Cordova.
For decades, Cordova and her community have been fighting to get compensation from the federal government
for suffering the health consequences of the Trinity test.
A program for compensating victims of government-caused nuclear contamination has been in place since 1990,
but it never included downwinders in New Mexico, the site of the very first nuclear test.
Today, the Senate voted to expand the bipartisan legislation that could compensate New Mexicans like Tina Córdova and her family.
Consider this. Generations after the Trinity nuclear test, will people in New Mexico finally get compensation?
From NPR, I'm Ari Shapiro. It's Thursday, March 7th.
It's Consider This from NPR.
The United States has had a law on the books since 1990 to compensate victims of government nuclear testing for suffering health impacts of radiation.
But the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act, or RICA, has never included the people who were
first exposed to radiation after the famous Trinity nuclear test in 1945.
Just hours before the Senate was scheduled to vote on legislation that would expand RICA,
I spoke with Tina Cordova, a downwinder who's been on the front lines of the battle for decades now.
She was joined by Senator Ben Ray Lujan of New Mexico, a Democrat who's been pushing for the
expansion of RICA since he became a House representative in 2008. Tina, I'd love to
start with you. Can you tell us about where you grew up and how much of
your community has suffered health problems likely because of the radiation they were exposed to?
Yeah, absolutely. I grew up in a community about 45 miles away the crows fly from the
Trinity bomb site. And my dad was a four-year-old child at the time of the test. And today is the 11th anniversary of when he passed away from cancer.
He actually had three different cancers before he died.
And it's not just my family.
I mean, we've documented hundreds and hundreds of families like mine that are displaying four and five generations of cancer.
I'm a cancer survivor.
And so, you know, this is something that's had a tremendous
negative effect on us. And everybody has always looked away.
When you were first diagnosed with thyroid cancer at the age of 39, did you know that it was
probably because of radiation exposure?
Well, I have a background in the sciences, so I had a very strong feeling that it was. And one
of the first questions the doctors asked me at the time of the diagnosis was,
when were you exposed to radiation?
And so, yes, I always knew that it was as a result of the exposure to radiation I had
experienced as a child growing up.
Senator Lujan, RICA has been in place since 1990.
Why did it initially fail to include the Trinity Downwinders, the very first
people in the world who were exposed to radiation from nuclear testing? Ari, you're asking the right
question here. And I'm sad to say that nobody can answer that question. How can the community where the first nuclear bomb was tested on soil anywhere in the world?
How was that community left out of downwind inclusion? And no one can answer that. I mean,
it's one of the reasons why we are all fighting diligently for all the families throughout New
Mexico and throughout America that deserve to be seen and heard and included
in this compensation, families like Tina's. What do you hope this expanded program,
if it is signed into law, will do for people like Tina?
It's going to first ensure that our friends and family like Tina Cordova are seen, are heard.
This is going to provide a level of support and compensation to help them with their health struggles.
They were never, ever given a heads up
that there was going to be a test of a nuclear site,
an explosion of a bright light.
This will provide a level of support
to help each and every one of these families
to be made as whole as possible.
But I don't know that there's anything
to ever make them completely whole. But I don't know that there's anything to ever make them completely
whole. But I'm doing everything that I can to ensure that the federal government accepts full
liability and responsibility, and that we can move together as Democrats and Republicans,
working with the president, who has issued a statement of support to get this done,
to recognize these families and all the sacrifices of them and the
uranium mine workers who also were left out of the original legislation. Tina, there is so much that
can never be restored. You mentioned that your father died 11 years ago, but what do you think
this legislation can do? What tangible things do you hope to get from this bill if it passes?
What I will tell you is that when this bill finally passes,
there will be people in New Mexico and across the American West, in Guam,
uranium workers, as Senator Lujan has mentioned, and downwinders who will, for the first time ever,
be acknowledged. And Ari, honestly, I have lost count of all the people who started out on this journey with me who are gone now and will never see that day.
And so for me, that acknowledgement is incredibly important.
And the payment of restitution will assist people who are waiting today for cancer treatment and don't have the means for that.
Your organization, the Tularosa Basin Downwinders Consortium,
has been doing health surveys to document the health histories of people in your community.
It's really hard to know how many people in New Mexico and beyond were impacted by the Trinity
test. What have you learned from the surveys that your organization has done?
Well, the primary thing we've learned is that hundreds of families have been affected.
It's multi-generational in nature.
I mentioned earlier that I'm a cancer survivor, so I'm the fourth generation in my family,
and there's a fifth generation now.
I have a 24-year-old niece who was diagnosed with thyroid cancer at the age of 23.
Oh, my goodness. And so, yeah, this is not something that's going away anytime soon, Ari.
And those health surveys have helped us to better understand how it's not only affected us physically, but it's affected us emotionally, psychologically, and financially.
People end up losing everything that they have when they don't have access to health care and they're trying to save their lives or the lives of their family members. I know this is a complicated question, but can you tell us why people stay in this part of New Mexico,
even knowing what comes with it, the generations of cancer, of toxins?
First of all, let me start out by saying this, that footprints were found at White Sands National Monument, which is literally adjacent to the Trinity Test Site.
Those footprints are 23,000 years old. So we've lived in this area for 23,000 years. You know, we are people that are very
place-based and grounded in where we're from. So it's really difficult to uproot yourself.
We had an option to be warned and relocated in advance, but that didn't happen.
So now it's too late for us. We have been exposed and we have the genetics for this. It doesn't make
any sense to leave now. Senator Lujan, you've chosen Tina to be your guest tonight for the
State of the Union address. What do you hope her presence and story will get across to legislators? Tina Cordova has already educated the American people about her life, about the life of her family, and so many others.
And other members' offices from the U.S. House of Representatives and senators that now know Tina Cordova by name. Tina Cordova alone is responsible for more colleagues in the House and in the United
States Senate now voting in favor of fixing this injustice and addressing it. Senator Ben Ray Lujan,
Democrat of New Mexico, and Tina Cordova, cancer survivor and advocate for the expansion of the
Radiation Exposure Compensation Act. Thank you both so much. Thank you, Ari. Thank you, Ari.
This episode was produced by Janaki Mehta with audio engineering by Peter Alina.
It was edited by Courtney Dorning. Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Ari Shapiro.