'Downwinder' is a term used to describe people across the
United States who were exposed to
radioactive fallout from both atmospheric and underground
nuclear weapons testing. It has also been used to describe those exposed to
radiation through
experimentation and
uranium mining.
In the
1950s, people who lived in the vicinity of the
Nevada Test Site were encouraged to sit outside and watch the
mushroom clouds that were created by nuclear bomb explosions. Many were given
radiation badges to wear on their clothes, which were later collected by the
Atomic Energy Commission to gather data about radiation levels.
Under the
Radiation Exposure Compensation Act of 1990, downwinders who are able to show correlations between certain diseases and their personal exposure to
nuclear fallout are eligible for up to $50,000 in compensation from the federal government.
The threat of downwind exposure to radioactivity remaining at the Nevada Test Site from nuclear weapons tests was still an issue as late as 2007. The Pentagon planned to test a 700-ton
ammonium nitrate-and-
fuel oil "
bunker buster" weapon. The planned "
Divine Strake" test would have raised a large
mushroom cloud of
contaminated dust that could have blown toward population centers such as
Las Vegas,
Boise,
Salt Lake City, and
St. George, Utah. This project was cancelled in February of 2007 in large part due to political pressure inspired by the threat of downwind exposure to radioactivity.
External links
★
Nuclear Testing and the Downwinders from the website of the Utah State Historical Society
★
View documentary short "Downwinders: The People of Parowan"