——.

ee
oe

PRIVACY ACT MATERIAL REMO ED

in the Matter of

and Department of Interior,
Geological Survey

the aircraft was ‘‘on the order of ten times the normal level of such
contamination”; that this alerted the members of the crew who were
responsible for maintaining, operating and monitoring the testing and recording
equipment installed in the aircraft that the skin of the airplane had been
contaminated by the radioactive rain water which had fallen upon it during the
flight; that the scintillometer on the plane, which charted and recorded the
radioactive fallout within the conical area below the plane, would not have
accurately recorded the radioactive level of the rain water falling upon the

plane; that after landing, the skin of the airplane was washed twice because

when the radioactive level of the plane's skin following the first washing was
measured it was found to bestill contaminated to an unacceptable extent; that
appeliant remained with the plane to supervise its maintenance including

21 ECAB 290
Type ofInjury: Cancer of the Parotid Gland.

ECAB’s Decision: BEC’s Decision Denying Compensation Set Aside
and the

Case Remanded for Further Development of the Record.
Date of Decision: 1970.

Appellant's Allegation: That cancer of the parotid gland and
other conditions

me;

were causally related to exposure to atomic radiation during
the course of his

employment on May 29, 1957.

— ae

ee ee

CASE NO. 49

A supervisor of the team during the flight reported that following the rain

storms encountered on the flight the radioactive contamination on the skin of

Facts: In April 1967 the Bureau denied appeilant’s claim
for compensation.
Appellant requested reconsideration of the Bureau's decision
. In February
1968 the Bureau denied modification ofits original order
rejecting the claim.

several washings to remove the radioactivity; that appellant continued to wear
his wet clothing during this period and for several hours thereafter.

Further testimony indicated that the clothing worn by appellant during the
flight was contaminated; that the needle of the Geiger counter used to measure
the radioactivity of his clothing held steady at a high level several times that of

the normal background but that the values measured by the hand counter were

not recorded and could not be recovered, that appellant was directed to take a
hot shower and scrub his body with soap in an effort to remove any radioactive
material on his body, which appellant did; that shortly thereafter appellant

became weak, feverish, and generally ill and was unable to perform his duties

Appellant again requested modification of BEC’s denial. In March
1969 the

Bureau again denied modification of its Original decision
. Appellant filed an

appeal.

with the team.

Circumstances of the flight and information with respect to appellant's

exposure to radiation incidental thereto, were also furnished by the Chief,
Airborne Operations Section, Geological Survey, U.S. Department of the
Interior, in a statement dated June 5, 1964. He was appellant’s supervisor at

the time of the flight and stated the records relating to that flight showed that

24 hours earlier. It appears that the flight was made in cooperation
with the

the aircraft was contaminated by the fallout and that it passed through three
rain showers, that the plane passed briefly through the edge of the first rain
shower, the second lasted approximately 6 minutes, and the aircraft was in the
third shower area for approximately 3 minutes. With respect to the extent of
the radioactivity encountered, his report said:

agency with respect to an atomic test detonation on May 28, 1957.
The
program under which the flight on May 29, 1957 occurred was carried
out in
cooperation with the Civil Effects Group of the Atomic Energy Commission.
The Geological Survey was reimbursed by the AEC, which made use ofthe
radioactivity measurements obtained. The aircraft, a DC-3, was equipped with

The aircraft contamination of gamma radiation as measured by the
Geological Survey airborne equipment was 10,000 counts per second
(c.p.s.). This measurement resulted from contamination on the aircraft
skin below the scintillation crystal array. Comparative measurement
using a hand counter showed the vicinity of the engines to be much

in the windshield of the plane on appeliant’s side, and rain water entered
the
cockpit through it and drenched appellant’s clothing, earphones, face, neck
and
hands, anid he swallowed a small portion of the water, The radiation counter
s

appears that the aircraft contamination resulted from nuclear fallout

Appellant was employed as an airplane pilot. On May 29,
1957, he was

copilot of an aircraft flown in pursuit of the fallout pattern which
followed the

explosion of a 12-kiloton atomic device at the Nevada Test Site approxi
mately
Atomic Energy Commission to obtain radioactivity and other
data for that

instruments to measure the radioactivity encountered. Members
of the crew
did not wear individual dosimeters. While pursuing the fallout
cloud to
delineate its pattern, the aircraft passed through 3 rain storms. There
was a leak

in the aircraft indicated that the rain water was contaminated with
radioactive

material. After the aircraft landed upon completion of the mission, the

background radiation count was higher than normal.
152

higher. Normal radioactigty background as measured on the ground at
the Las Vegas, Nevada, Airport ramp was 820 counts per second. During
the period of the first rain shower radiation levels ranging from
200,000-500,000 c.p.s. were measured, 220,000-420,000 c.p.s. during
the second shower, and 10,000-12,000 c.p.s. during the third shower. It
products in the rain showers.

He pointed out in his report that with the U.S. Geological Survey

equipment, 70,000 c.p.s. are equal to one milliroentgen per hour (mr/hr.) and

PRIVACY AGT MATERIAL REMOVED

153

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