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1.
Engineering actions taken during cleanup and rehabilitation
operations provide a basis for measurement or other determination
of effectiveness and adverse impact.
Good initial assurance of
satisfactory completion can be given.
2.
Advisory actiuns cover those activities of the returning people
and their professional counselors in response to instructions and
technical advice on land use, housing sites, dietary usages, etc.
Results will be achieved over a long period and depend on the
conscientious use of advice and counsel and require continuing
exchange of information between inhabitants and technical sources.
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Because of time, human factors, pressures and qualifications, less
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than optimum effectiveness may be prudently expected, despite
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a strong will
to cooperate at the outset.
Engineering actions are those upon which the U.S. parties to cleanup
and rehabilitation should place the greatest reliance for assuring continuing "as low as practicable exposures."'
If the U.S. leaves the atoll
in nominally safe condition, it can put the control in the hands of the
people with a high degree of confidence that predicted exposures will
not be exceeded to any significant degree.
Disposal of contaminated
scrap, construction of permanent housing, selecting sites for any planting
of delayed yielding food sources such as coconut and pandanus, and drilling
and locating pumps at wells in uncontaminated ground water, are typical
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