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Archive for March, 2009

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Hopefully the Hays County Commissioners will vote with their conscience.

County delays KBR pact after vets protest

By SEAN BATURA
News Reporter

A routine execution of a professional services contract turned into a political statement at the Hays County Commissioners Court Tuesday morning, where the court wound up taking no action on an item to approve an engineering contract for KBR.

Two combat veterans of the war in Iraq testified against giving the FM 110 engineering services contract to KBR, Inc. Rather than execute the contract, the court decided to give sponsoring Precinct 1 Commissioner Debbie Ingalsbe (D-) time to decide if she wants to again propose giving the contract to KBR.

KBR, a Houston-based engineering, procurement and construction firm, has been in the news in recent months for charges ranging from bribery of foreign government officials to endangering their own employees and U.S. troops serving in Iraq. Pending litigation against KBR involves allegations including , purposely sending unarmed employees into a dangerous combat zone (the “Good Friday Massacre”), exposing employees and national guardsmen to carcinogenic and covering up evidence of rapes of its employees.

“I personally watched KBR ship empty trucks around Iraq,” Hays County resident Bryan Hannah told the court. Hannah served in Baghdad from 2006 to 2008.

“I put my life on the line to escort those empty trucks and make a profit for this company,” Hannah said.

This is an excerpt from deeper in the article. A very wise man!!

“My father once told me, ‘Son, your dollar votes; if you don’t like the way a company does business, then don’t do business with them,’” Foster said. “I believe I speak for many of us here in Hays County when I say, ‘We don’t like the way KBR does business. We don’t want to give them any more of our money.’ I would like to ask the court to postpone making a decision on this contract.”

Click HERE to read the entire article. It’s worth it. And be sure to leave a comment. Tell them why you think KBR does not deserve one more US tax dollar! Click HERE to go the to Hays County Commissioners Page. Call or email and ask them to award the contract to a contractor that is not under investigation by the US government.

Ms Sparky

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I love it when readers and fellow bloggers send me links to interesting sites. Go check out these sites and leave comments on the blogs. Bloggers just love comments.

Burn Pits Action Center – This website was launched as the central information clearinghouse for with assistance from the office of Congressman Tim Bishop, Kerry Baker from the Disabled American Veterans and Kelly Kennedy from Army Times.

War Mules – This website just launched and is a place to discuss the issues of the modern day war mule… “the civilian contractor”.

‘I believe that every soldier who has anything to do with horse or mule has come to love them for what they are and the grand work they have done and are doing in and out of the death zones.’ Captain Sidney Galtrey, autumn 1918

Like contractors they stumbled through the hell of no-man’s land, in the mud, rain and terror of the trenches they supplied their comrades with food, water and ammunition, even though they themselves were starved, sodden and spent. They died in their thousands.

Like the contractors they were the backbone of our military.

Subcommittee on Contracting Oversight – The committee is asking for your opinion.  You can vote on my opinions and those of others. You can bet I’ve already been there. You need a free Google account. Click HERE for that.

What hearings would you like to see? What contract or program needs additional oversight? What laws, regulations, and policies need to be changed?

I’ll need all the suggestions and support I can get — I’ll draw heavily on your input as we move forward toward a system that better serves the government and the taxpayer.

- Senator Claire McCaskill

The War Comes Home - Our government’s failure to take care of its War Casualties and the lives left hanging in the balance.

Catbird Scout – A gifted writer who is finishing her first book. I can’t wait.

When I awake this morning, awareness filtering into unconsciousness like cream into black coffee, my eyes seek the red light orientation of my clock. (Can’t you just smell the coffee!)

If you know of a great website or blog that needs to be talked about, send me an email and tell me about it.

Ms Sparky

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I’ve gotten some “hate mail” with regards to a comment I made on “The Rachel Maddow Show” and “Stand Up! With Pete Dominick”. The comments are regarding the lack of “craft” qualifications for some of the Third Country National (TCN) also called Sub-Contract Workers (SCW) and Host Country National (HCN’s) working under LOGCAP contracts.

First, there are three types of workers working under LOGCAP contracts.

Expats (Expatriates)-These are the Americans working for a LOGCAP Contractor such as KBR, Fluor, Dyncorp etc.

Host Country Nationals (HCN’s) - These are local residents, ie Iraqi’s, Afghan’s, Kuwaiti’s working in their own countries.

Sub-Contract Workers (SCW’s) also called Third Country Nationals (TCN’s) – These are workers from countries other than the US or the country they are working in, ie Iraq, Afghanistan, Kuwait. These TCN’s can be from Canada, England, Croatia, Bosnia but are most likely from the Philippines, India, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Nepal.

Contractors like KBR, Fluor and Dyncorp hire TCN’s as craftspeople such as electricians, plumbers, carpenters, HVAC and expect them to have the same skill-set, experience and safety culture that Americans have even though they have never been exposed to US codes, standards and training. There are some countries such as Canada and England that have codes and licensing requirements. But the majority of these TCN’s come for poor third world countries such as India or Sri Lanka and have no craft experience. Even the best Sri Lankan electrician is not up to par with a licensed US electrician.  That’s not an insult, just a fact.

My issue is not whether or not these people are hard workers. Because they normally are. My issue is that MOST should not be performing craft work. KBR and others will say…..”They are supervised by expats.” That’s not always the case. More often than not the expats are off BSing or sleeping or just don’t care or they are not qualified to supervise any crafts.

The mission is to support our soldiers. The electrocution deaths and injuries prove that has not been happening.

My next issue. These TCN’s are forced to live in inhumane an filthy cramped conditions. They have to stay long enough to pay off “recruiters” and airfare. They are fed very poor diets. And the decision makers in KBR and the DoD walk by these camps everyday with the “Not my problem” attitude. Now there are thousands of these people stranded on the streets of Iraq without passports and visas because their “recruiter” just left them!

My next issue. This practice promotes and abuse and I’m damn sick and tired of KBR and others not taking responsibility for it. They contract with these slave traders and the DoD allows it.

So…here is my stand on the issue of TCN’s, SCW’s, HCN’s performing craft work. If you must employ TCN or HCN craft workers, the ratio of qualified expat of the same craft to TCN should be no more the 1to 2 and the expat must be held responsible for the work of the TCN or HCN. I’ve watched one expat supervising up to 20 TCN’s or HCN’s doing electrical work. How can you watch what each and every person is doing? It’s impossible.

I will say I was very fortunate. I worked with who I feel was one of the best Iraqi electricians in Iraq. He had better work ethics and attitude than many of the US electricians and he was willing to learn the “American way”.

Third Country Nationals and Host Country Nationals are also employed in the Dining Facilities, Laundry, Housekeeping, Security, Drivers, Laborers and Administrative. I want to think for the most part, the expats treated these people well, but I know there are instances of abuse. We had several Bosnian Laundry supervisors who were so abusive to the Iraqi workers. But, KBR didn’t do anything about it.

I loathe human rights abusers. If slavery is illegal in the States, why is it legal on US bases in Iraq, Afghanistan and Kuwait.

Ms Sparky

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Burning Toxic Waste is Making U.S. Soldiers and Iraqis Sick, But the Pentagon Refuses to Admit It

By Nora Eisenberg, AlterNet. Posted March 18, 2009.

Six years into the war, many U.S. bases in Iraq are still without incinerators, leaving open pits spewing toxic plumes over soldiers and civilians.

Acetaldehyde, Acrolien, Arsenic, Benzene, Carbon Monoxide, Ethylbenzene,  Formaldehyde, Hydrogen Cyanide, Hydrogen Fluoride, Phosgene, Sulfur Dioxide, Sulfuric Acid, Toluene, Trichloroethane, Xylene. These are just some of the chemicals detected in smoke from the Balad Burn Pit, one of the many vast open pits spewing toxic plumes over Iraq and Afghanistan.

But not to worry; In “Just the Facts,” an information sheet for troops, the Department of Defense has stated that “the potential short- and long-term risks” from Balad “were estimated to be low.” The VA has just announced it will monitor reports of veterans’ pit-related illness. But the DoD has yet to declassify old air sample reports or issue current findings.

The Pentagon’s fact sheet appeared after VAWatchdog.com linked to a memo showing that, as early as 2006, the DoD had known that the pit was “an acute health hazard.” In the memo, titled “Burn Pit Health Hazards,” Air Force Bioenvironmental Engineering Flight Commander Darrin Curtis wrote to authorities that he found it “amazing that the burn pit has been able to operate without restrictions over the past few years without significant engineering controls being put in place.” In an accompanying memo, James R. Elliott, Chief of Air Force Aeromedical Services, concurred that the pit’s fumes contained “known carcinogens” and “respiratory sensitizers” that posed a “chronic and acute health hazard to our troops and the local population.” Read the remainder of this entry »

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I hope this registry will include exposure to the and Depleted Uranium!!

Senators propose registry for poisoned Iraq veterans

by Jullie Sullivan, The Oregonian
Thursday March 19, 2009, 9:03 PM

Three U.S. senators want Oregon Army National Guard soldiers exposed to toxic chemicals in Iraq to be tracked and receive lifetime medical care for problems that result.

They introduced a bill Thursday to create a registry that would speed exams and treatment through the Department of Veterans Affairs. The legislation also authorizes a scientific review of evidence linking chemical exposure to health problems, much like the Agent Orange registry that was created for Vietnam veterans.

The proposal would affect at least 292 Oregon soldiers who served in Iraq in 2003, as well as hundreds from Indiana, South Carolina and West Virginia. The troops, including the first Oregonians into Iraq, may have been exposed to cancer-causing hexavalent chromium.

The bill would apply to other — even future — hazards.

“We have 3,000 Guard members about to deploy in May, and I want to make sure they’re protected,” said co-sponsor Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Oregon. “They face enough risk, and they shouldn’t have to battle their own government if they need treatment when they come home.”

The bill would ease access to care that soldiers are already entitled to as veterans. But instead of veterans having to prove that certain medical conditions may be related to chemical exposure, the government would presume that connection, said Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Indiana.

“We are shifting the burden of proof,” Bayh said.

Since January, more than two dozen Oregon veterans have asked to be placed on a registry and more than a dozen have reported health issues, mostly breathing problems. The troops were with the 1st Battalion, 162nd Infantry Division that served at the water treatment plant from April 2003 to June 2003. They were protecting civilian contractors from the Haliburton subsidiary KBR, which was restoring Iraqi oil production.

Bags of a corrosion fighter that contained hexavalent chromium had been spilled and piled, sometimes feet deep, at the plant. Soldiers may have been exposed while patrolling at the water plant, and they may have exposed other soldiers who shared their dusty living quarters or vehicles. Inhaling an amount as small as a grain of salt of hexavalent chromium can greatly increase the risk of cancer.

But nearly six years after their tour, some Oregon soldiers still may not know of the potential danger. A Guard spokesman said Thursday that 43 registered letters sent to 292 Oregon soldiers have been returned unopened.

Also Thursday, Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Ore., introduced his own bill requiring the Department of Defense to notify soldiers in writing if they have been exposed to contaminants.

“When we send American soldiers overseas, we have a responsibility to protect their health and safety,” Schrader said in a statement. “Our responsibility does not end when they leave the combat zone — our responsibility to them and their families is a lifelong commitment.”

Schrader has joined with Rep. Baron Hill, D-Ind., to introduce the U.S. House version of the Senate’s registry bill.

Schrader has personally reached out to of Aumsville whose story of being 100 percent disabled with lung and other problems since serving at the Iraqi water treatment plan was featured in The Oregonian on March 7.

“If it helps someone not have to go through the heartache we did, that would be nice,” said Roberta’s wife, Michelle.

Concerns about chemical exposures in Iraq had passed virtually unnoticed until last year when Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-North Dakota, held 18 hearings into waste, abuse and fraud. At one hearing in June, former civilian employees of Kellogg, Brown & Root, testified that their managers disregarded their concerns about hexavalent chromium. By the employees’ own survey, 60 percent of those at the water plant were having health problems, including difficulty breathing and bloody noses. They included British and U.S. soldiers.

KBR whistleblowers had sued the company, a case now in arbitration, according to Houston attorney Mike Doyle. In September, Sens. Bayh, Dorgan, Wyden, Robert Byrd, D-W.V., and Richard Lugar, R-Ind., proposed an amendment to last year’s National Defense Authorization Act to create a registry. President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, then senators, were co-sponsors.

In December, 16 Indiana soldiers sued KBR. But it wasn’t until Bayh mentioned the Oregon soldiers in a television program that the commanders of the Oregon Guard say they learned of the exposure.

For veterans such as Scott Ashby of Portland, the proposed legislation promises help. “After five years of living with health problems, it’s so nice to see we are starting to make some headway.” said Ashby, 41.

In July 2005, the Department of Defense acknowledged soldiers’ exposure to other hazards in Iraq including radiation at Al Tuwaitha Nuclear Research Center; chemical and depleted uranium at Al-Samawah; lead at Camp War Eagle; the nerve-gas sarin in Baghdad; and hazardous smoke at the Al Mishraq Sulfur plant. Outside Iraq, soldiers faced industrial pollution at Ash Shuaiba Port in Kuwait and at Kharsi Khanabad in Uzbekistan.

Michelle Roberta said streamlining and informing the VA staff through a registry would help.

“You have to tell your story over and over,” she said, “and that gets old.” She hopes such tracking would help detect health problems that may not appear for years, especially cancer.

“It scares me to know that he might be a ticking time bomb,” she said of her husband, Larry. “I keep telling him he’s worth much more to me alive.”

– Julie Sullivan; juliesullivan@news.oregonian.com  (click HERE to read original article)

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