"Iodine Pills" at Brattleboro High School
On Saturday April 14, there was a rally against Vermont Yankee in downtown Brattleboro. AP had a story about it which was widely reprinted. Among other places, the story appeared in the Burlington Free Press. The article was titled Vermont Yankee protest draws quadruple-digit crowd.
The AP story included this astounding statement:
Putney resident Nancy Olsen, 65, a teacher, said she stumbled upon the rally and stopped to see what people had to say. Overall, she said, she has mixed feelings about the plant remaining open.
“When the school distributed iodine pills to the teachers it was a little bit of a shock, because I hadn’t really thought about it that much,” she said, referring to the pills that were handed out at Brattleboro Union High School during last year’s tritium leak to counteract the radiation poisoning.
What-what-what-what?? ( That was my reaction.) Pills were handed out at Brattleboro High School? Only to the teachers? KI for tritium? "The radiation poisoning?" And the tritium leak was 2010, not last year, though that seems a rather trivial point, considering everything else.
Calling the High School
After I read this, I called Brattleboro Union High School to find out more about it. Olsen is a teacher at the high school, and they offered to connect me to her. However, I figured I already knew what she had said, and did not ask to be connected. I wanted to know if and when such pills were distributed: therefore, I wanted to speak to the principal.
I spoke to people, but I didn't do a very good investigation. I am not blaming anyone for not resolving the issue. Everybody was very nice. Everybody also seemed very eager to refer me to someone else to talk to. Before I was done, I had spoken with someone in the prinicipal's office, someone in the school district office, and one of the school nurses. I was also encouraged to speak to the Vermont Department of Health, but I didn't follow up. In general, the people I spoke to didn't know about any KI distribution, but nobody said: "It certainly did NOT happen."
I folded my mini-investigation. Before I folded, I spoke to some Brattleboro friends about my adventures. I have no idea if my friends followed up the investigation.
Retraction
Something happened. I don't know who did what, but something happened that encouraged the AP to write a correction, which is now running in various papers. Here's the correction:
BRATTLEBORO, Vt. (AP) — In a story about the Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant, The Associated Press erroneously reported several details about a tritium leak from the plant. The tritium did not cause radiation poisoning and posed no harm to the public, according to state health officials. The leak took place over a couple of months in late 2009 and early 2010, not last year. Also, the Vermont Health Department distributes potassium iodide — not iodine— pills in case of a leak of a different type of radiation and did not distribute pills for the tritium leak.
It was good to see this correction.
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My own coverage of the rally is in two parts: Three Views of the April 14 Rally, and We start with Vermont Yankee. Later, we shut down capitalism.