Page 10 - The Michigan Daily, Saturday, May 7, 1983 Families return after toxic cleanup SWARTZ CREEK, Mich. (AP) - Thirty-two families began moving back yesterday to homes they were forced to leave two weeks ago when a judge or- dered immediate cleanup of Michigan's worst toxic waste site. Twenty-two other families were to remain in motels until piles of con- taminated soil are hauled away from the Berlin & Farro Liquid Incineration site west of Flint. GENESSEE County Circuit Judge Judity Fullerton agreed yesterday to a state plan to let most of the homeowners return while the cleanup continues. Only those living along a road directly ,in front of the site must stay away, probably for about a week. Officials said there was no threat to health in letting residents of more distant areas move back. They said fears of finding liquid cyanide and acid - which could prove deadly if mixed - proved unfounded. The families still evacuated will return when contaminated sludge has been trucked to a landfill near Cincin- nati. Officials said Thursday that about 5,600 cubic yards of the 11,135 cubic yards dug from a lagoon have been shipped, with trucks hauling out about 800 yards a day. More than 1,000 barrels of waste have been removed, tested and sorted by contents. Under an agreement announ- ced Thursday by state and federal of- ficials, work will continue at a landfill at the site while a plan is devised to dispose of the barrels. 4 4 Survival flight uDilyPho by Rescue workers prepare to load a patient during a demonstration of the University Hospital's new "Survival Flight" helicopter ambulance service. The service, which begins May 16, will respond to emergencies within a 150 mile radius and is expected to make up to 700 flights each year according to Hospital officials. Navy practices nuclear debris clean-up (Continued from Page 3) A real emergency near a highly recent an explosion at a Titan 2 missile off area described as a "national defen- populated city could cost millions of site at Damascus, Ark., in September se area." dollars and years of cleanup time, 1980. The civilian workers included 70 from Roeder said. THE EXERCISE began with military the Virginia State Health Department. "IT WOULD not be an easy task," he authorities sending a "Broken Arrow" The workers were checked carefully said. "It would be the worst possible of message to Washington that a nuclear with radiation-detection gear as they accidents." weapons accident had occurred and returned to a safe area near a civilian Roeder said the Department of evacuation orders were carried out. command post. Energy takes precautions to avoid Reporters were allowed on the site "The first thing we have to do is find populated areas in transporting nuclear for the first time yesterday. out what happened, then how we can weapons. Marine guards in protective suits and contain the accident, then locate the There have been 32 accidents in armed with machine guns kept repor- contaminates dispersed by such an ac- volving nuclear weapons, the most ters and civilian workers out of a roped- cident," Brig. Gen. Stan Brown said. 1 It can handle just about anything. NASA bought it over the counter. You can too. Right Here. Come to Ulrich's Electronics and check out the HP-41. '_: . y , 4: { +.. hAp HELT I I 40