Canada Greens demand more information about possible radiation risks

OTTAWA - The Green Party of Canada wants to see Canada take action to increase transparency around possible radioactive contamination in the wake of the Fukushima nuclear disaster. 

The Ombudsman of the European Union has launched an investigation into the lack of information European citizens have received about potential radioactive contamination of food due to fallout from the meltdown. This highlights the even greater lack of communication from the Government of Canada about potential risks.

Health Canada monitors the level of radiation in the air and posts the results on its web site. However there is no information posted to indicate whether the government is checking for radionuclide levels in Canadian food.

“We know that fallout from Fukushima reached our shores, but monitoring of airborne levels gives only a partial picture of the potential risk to Canadians,” said Elizabeth May, Leader of the Green Party and MP for Saanich Gulf Islands. “Radionuclides become concentrated in foods, particularly dairy. Is Health Canada monitoring this? If so, why is that information not being communicated to Canadians? If not, then why not?”

It is now known that damage to the coolant system from the March 11 earthquake and tsunami resulted in the meltdown of three reactors at the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan. Starting March 21, Canadian radiation monitors picked up an increase in radiation levels. Health Canada says the increase in airborne levels has not posed a health risk to Canadians.

Europe has seen small increases in airborne radiation since the disaster, but has also been monitoring contamination levels in foods. The European Union Ombudsman launched an investigation after numerous complaints regarding the lack of information about changes to maximum permissible levels of contamination.  The US government is also monitoring and publishing more data on radioactive fallout than that available to Canadians.  The US EPA and FDA are publishing data from rainfall and dairy.

“Europeans are concerned about the lack of transparency surrounding potential contamination. Canadians are receiving even less information than Europeans or Americans. We should be very concerned,” said May. 

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http://greenparty.ca/media-release/2011-06-02/greens-demand-more-informa...

Democrats? Republicans? Anyone care in the USA.no never mind

Rainfall measurements for Canada

These are spot readings from rainfall for Canada taken around mid-July, 2011:

http://www.youtube.com/user/connectingdots1
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[readings are in µSv/hour = microSieverts per hour]

Chilliwack 1.13
Kelowna 0.58
Hope 0.78
Red Deer 1.02
Lloydminster 0.97
Edmonton 1.14

The evacuation limit for Chernobyl was 0.57 µSv/hour.

(Maybe this is why they're not giving us readings).

This is only external radiation. The hot particle count was about 6 hot particles a day per person a day for the Seattle area through April and May [from car air filters]. Tokyo got about 10 hot particles a day per person during that time.

We also have massive ocean contamination which will arrive on the West Coast in about a year. There is some confusion as to whether the fish are already inedible, mainly due to lack of testing by Health Canada and others. Seaweed was measured very high in Iodine-131 near Vancouver, B.C. in April 2011. If Iodine-131 can reach us, it is likely Cesium and the hundreds of other isotopes have reached us already. (I can only assume this until I hear otherwise - and I've searched everywhere for information).

For now, we're getting it in hot particles and rainfall. If the rainfall is contaminated then so will grass, milk and other dairy products.

We can then look forward to bioaccumulation and then biomagnification through the food chain which will affect fish, milk, meat, and so on.

Radioactivity in rain is natural; fallout is no longer happening

This topic was brought up a few days ago on another thread:
Should the Pacific NW evacuate? [real question]

Please see my response and the discussion following:
No evacuation needed

The radioactivity measured by that person in the videos is completely natural. I was able to duplicate the same type of measurement, and my results perfectly matched the expected presence of the decay products of radon gas. My measurements are posted here, and there's also a thread about them. A test of the same rain with our germanium detectors yielded no isotopes from Fukushima.

Levels of fallout in our air and rainwater measurements have been undetectable for us since the end of May, and levels have been very low or undetectable worldwide for some time now.

Mark [BRAWM Team Member]

health canada

I'm so tired of not being given information. They tell us to protect ourselves but give us false or incomplete facts. The media is no better, they hear something and run with it like a pack of dogs, instead of cross checking their information to make sure it's true. (Gotta be the first one with the story, even if it's false)
One can only hope that someday ALL humans (rich and poor alike) will stop being selfish and greedy and do what's best for people not the pocketbook.
Only then will we evolve to the perfect being.

Health Canada

Well, I had been happily reading the Health Canada data for air measurements presuming that the dashes and the columns left blank meant that no radiation had been detected. I now check back today and they have added this footnote -

blank: data not available at the time of publishing

- : not measured

< 0.01: less than 0.01

So when I have been pleased thinking that we were not receiving any radiation, or less than their MDA, they actually have not been measuring it or have not recorded the data.

http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hc-ps/ed-ud/respond/nuclea/data-donnees-eng.php

Thanks Health Canada!

They need to be put in jail.

They need to be put in jail.

Raising limits public Comment voice your opinion

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2700638/posts

On March 28, 2011, I wrote an article entitled EPA to Help Mainstream Media Obscure The Truth About Radiation Exposure to Americans, in which I discussed the changes to the PAGs (Protective Action Guides) being proposed by the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) that would raise the acceptable levels of radiation allowed in the environment, food, and even the general public themselves in the event of a nuclear emergency.

Interestingly enough, an article was published on April 3, 2011, by Alexander Higgins citing Kopp Online and Xander News, stating that a similar rule change was occurring in the European Union.

PAGs are policies and guidelines established by the EPA that guide the agency’s response in the event of a radioactive emergency. Specifically, PAGs deal with how the EPA should enforce laws such as the Clean Air and Water Act in relation to the disaster. Although PAGs had already been established by the EPA in 1992, the agency now plans to amend these guidelines to much higher levels of acceptable radiation.

No congressional approval is legally needed to makes such changes, because the EPA is a regulatory agency that sets “policy” and, although these types of agencies can be directed by congress or the president, they often form their own policies. All that is required when agencies such as the EPA wish to change their policy is that they first publish the proposed changes in the Federal Register for a designated period of “public comment.”

However, since public opinion is worth virtually nothing, once a proposed change is published in the Federal Register, it is well on its way to becoming new policy. This is unfortunate considering the fact that, according to PEER (Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, the new standards would result in a “nearly 1000-fold increase for exposure to strontium-90, a 3000 to 100,000-fold hike for exposure to iodine-131; and an almost 25,000 rise for exposure to radioactive nickel-63” in drinking water.

Which brings us to the new EU mirror of EPA policy. Actually set as far back as 1989 (by amending standards set in 1987) for the purpose of responding to a nuclear or radiological emergency, the EU ordinance 297/2011 was implemented on March 25, 2011, which finally enacted the standards that were set back in 1989.

EU ordinance 297/2011 raises the Maximum Levels of radiation and radioactive isotopes for food and feed to rather serious levels. In some cases, such as the case of Cesium-134 and Cesium-137, the levels are actually twice the amount of previously acceptable levels. Many of these increases are allowed in products such as infant formula and baby foods.

It should be noted that the new EU changes only apply to food imported from Japan. The justification behind this is that in the event of a nuclear emergency the traditional levels of acceptable radiation should be ignored so as not to cause a food shortage as a result of legal constraints.

However, in this context, making such changes is a completely ridiculous decision. Although it is true that the radiation cloud from Fukushima has almost spread across the entire globe, food imported from Japan itself only makes up a small percentage of the EU food supply. As Thilo Bode and Christina Hacker stated, “These rules now to bring into force is absurd, because in Europe there are no nuclear emergency, and certainly no shortage of food.”[sic] Indeed, it seems the best course of action would be to ban imports of Japanese food or, at the very least, to ban the importation of contaminated Japanese food.

Nevertheless, it all seems a bit too coincidental that both the American EPA and the European Union EC have decided to change their standards at the same time. It is almost enough to make one wonder if there is not a hidden agenda at work amidst this ordeal. Could it be that there is a coordinated effort to increase the levels of radiation the public is subjected to, while at the same time reduce the amount of alarm being expressed (to the extent that it is) over the potential health concerns?

Only time will tell whether or not there is an ulterior motive in regards to the new changes implemented by the EU and those proposed by the EPA. However, it is always good practice to assume that when you see different countries implementing the same policies at the same time, there is much more to the story than meets the eye.

Cumulative Impacts

Here is a new website called http://cumulativeimpacts.org/

They state that the Cumulative Impacts of all hazards we are exposed to should be considered and not just the effects of induvidual hazards.

UCB was involved in the lenghty report, although there is not much mention of the hazards of radiation or nuclear when you try the search engine, wonder why that is?

"Project C"

I'm beginning to work on something that I will call, for now, "Project C" -- I don't want to reveal its true name at the moment, until I can buy Web domains and get E-mail set up and the like, but very briefly, I intend for it to be a public advocacy group to share information about the radiological safety of the food supply, bring together resources that average citizens can rely upon, and exert pressure on private enterprise, corporate, regulatory, governmental, and independent organizations to ensure that the North American public receives the highest possible standards in monitoring, investigation, research, testing, reporting, and emergency management of the food and supply chains we are all so dependent on.

I don't want to "lead" this initiative -- I am in no way qualified to do so -- but to jump-start it, help get it rolling, and maybe help steer it in the right direction. And I am ONLY considering taking this step, myself, because I don't see anyone else stepping up to do it.

Anyone seriously interested in being a part of this -- to help build this group, not just frequent it or intellectually profit from it -- please feel free to contact me at RichardFCromackJr@gmail.com. Please ONLY use the Subject, "Project C".

I'll have a new, dedicated E-mail address for this initiative in a few weeks, I hope.

Rick Cromack.
Allen, Texas

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