For immediate release Oct 10, 2023 Organizations, businesses seek Santa Fe City resolution opposing plutonium warhead ("pit") production at LANL
Contact: Greg Mello, 505-265-1200 office, 505-577-8563 cell Santa Fe, NM -- Tomorrow, October 11, at noon, some of the 112 organizations, businesses, and religious institutions opposing all pit production at LANL will gather outside the Santa Fe City Hall (200 Lincoln Ave., map) to ask the City of Santa Fe to join them in formally opposing all pit production at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), as well as any further incursions of LANL into Santa Fe. A draft resolution being studied at City Hall also asks the City to call on the New Mexico congressional delegation to:
The City declared its unconditional opposition to pit production at LANL in resolutions 2003-64, 2005-39, 2006-104, and 2008-17, before LANL was assigned an industrial pit mission. Resolution 2005-39, in addition to opposing nuclear weapons production, also affirmed the identity of the City of Santa Fe ("The City of the Holy Faith of Saint Francis of Assisi") as supporting nuclear disarmament and leading toward that goal pursuant to binding international law, and rejected as immoral the policy of nuclear deterrence. Preparation for pit production is the largest U.S. warhead-related program since the Cold War, and is slated to be by far the largest capital investment in the history of New Mexico (slide 23), dwarfing the Los Alamos portion of the Manhattan Project by an order of magnitude in constant dollars (Atomic Audit, Schwartz, p. 60; Pit Production Startup Costs By Site and Year, May 11, 2023). Restarting pit production, including future costs only, is expected to cost more than the entire Manhattan Project, in constant dollars (NNSA's effort to restart plutonium warhead "pit" production will cost more than the Manhattan Project," May 27, 2023). Most of the cost of pit production is to be incurred at LANL, where hundreds of construction projects are expected (slide 10) and more than 4,000 permanent staff (p. 5) will be required for the round-the-clock, 7-days-per-week (pp. 4-5) crash mission, centered in LANL's 45-year old plutonium facility. In dollar terms, LANL is the largest nuclear weapons facility in the U.S., with an annual budget now exceeding $5 billion, if work for other federal agencies is included (Laboratory Tables; files). Only a small part of LANL's budget is not related to nuclear weapons. The advent of pit production is adding the equivalent of a whole additional national laboratory to LANL. To make more room for pit production, LANL is proposing one or more new "mini-campuses" to be built in Santa Fe or Bernalillo/Rio Rancho ("Los Alamos to metastasize as weapons mission outgrows site," Jul 17, 2023; "LANL Growth & mission support," Kelly Beierschmitt, Jul 18, 2023; video, start at 4:45). LANL leases three properties in Santa Fe already, with roughly 500 staff working there and/or in Santa Fe homes (LANL leases second office complex in Santa Fe as nuclear weapons growth pushes admin staff off "The Hill", Mar 8, 2021). LANL envisions 3,600 staff working somewhere offsite by 2028 (p. 11), to ease congestion on-site. Some 30% of LANL staff currently work off-site, two-thirds of which telecommute (p. 6). The regional road network serving LANL is already congested during commuting periods, as are some roads on the LANL site, even prior to the anticipated hiring of 2,000 more staff (slide 9; The troubled logistics of LANL pit production: how will LANL staff and contractors get to work?, Mar 26, 2022). LANL has proposed a number of different solutions to this fundamental geographical problem. LANL's most recent plan is the LANL Transportation Plan FY23, LA-UR-22-31888, Nov 9, 2022. Whether this latest plan will be successful is an open question. The U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee noted this year that the "transportation infrastructure throughput in and out of LANL is insufficient to handle the increasing construction activity, associated craft workforce increases, and continued planned staff growth" and directed NNSA to brief the committee on "options for implementing alternative transportation approaches for moving people, equipment, and material in and out of the lab" (p. 392). In 2019, NNSA was authorized to take over the entire City-owned "Midtown"campus if chosen by the City to develop that 63-acre property (DOE/NNSA Proposal for an Innovation Campus, Midtown Santa Fe). This proposal was rejected but it shows NNSA's willingness to invest in a Santa Fe campus. Meanwhile, Santa Fe is plagued by high and rising housing costs -- prohibitively high for most incomes (slides 41-43) -- a phenomenon to which LANL's highly-paid staff, many of whom prefer to live in Santa Fe or who cannot find housing in Los Alamos are contributing. Median household income in Los Alamos County is three times that of neighboring Rio Arriba County and twice that of Santa Fe County (slide 38). Los Alamos County income rose 20% from 2020 to 2021, the most recent data year (slides 38, 39). In 2020, before this recent wealth growth, about one in every 7.5 households in Los Alamos had a million dollars or more in investable assets, the second-highest concentration of millionaires by county in the U.S. (Kiplinger's; see also this video). LANL pit production is not at all necessary to maintain current nuclear weapons or to keep them reliable and "safe." LANL's pits will be "early to need" for existing weapons. A larger pit production facility, capable of supporting the entire current U.S. arsenal or any future subset of it, is being built in South Carolina. That facility is expected to begin production in the 2036 timeframe. For additional background see "Plutonium Pit Factory at LANL: Dead End for New Mexico and the U.S.," Sep 27, 2023; "Toward a viable plutonium pit production plan: part 1, May 18, 2023 and part 2, Jun 9, 2023, and other materials available on our pit page, especially those featured. Study Group director Greg Mello: "The planned addition of a plutonium warhead factory to LANL poses serious problems to the region, and is entirely unnecessary from any sane perspective. The pits it would make aren't 'needed' for a long time, even assuming the U.S. retains a large arsenal, which binding international law requires the U.S. to negotiate away. LANL's Rube-Goldberg, Jerry-rigged pit program is driven by greed and the mistaken idea that more and different warheads will help bring peace into the world. ***ENDS*** |
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