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Brentwood's Toxic Grave

Historic dumping grounds beneath the spectacular VA land finally get tested.

Several days ago, men wearing radiation dosimeters stood on the Veteran Administration’s West Los Angeles property, atop an old toxic dump that partially underlies Barrington Recreation Center’s baseball fields and a city dog park, and began the federal government’s long-delayed $1 million test of the soils.

Circa 1970s- Dumping into unlined VA ravines and lands adjacent to Brentwood went on for decades.
Courtesy enviroreporter.com
Circa 1970s- Dumping into unlined VA ravines and lands adjacent to Brentwood went on for decades.
A discarded grave marker unveiled by soil erosion at the old dump. Strict rules governing how to discard military gravestones went ignored.
Courtesy of enviroreporter.com.
A discarded grave marker unveiled by soil erosion at the old dump. Strict rules governing how to discard military gravestones went ignored.

The men would not identify themselves but one volunteered that they planned to “core” tubes of dirt to test for contamination along the length of a fenced-off drainage system east of the park.

Yet they were drilling in an area covered with 5,000 truckloads of inert fill dirt, according to a VA report. And they were coring far from key areas that the VA’s own maps show overlay the disused VA and UCLA medical and chemical dumps, long hidden beneath the VA’s chunk of valuable Westside real estate.

According to VA maps, two historic dumping areas lie partially under the city’s Barrington Recreation Center, a popular spot that draws affluent Brentwood residents, including celebrities. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has played ball with his boys there.

Yet after years of promises to complete tests and determine what is really buried there, indications show that the property has not been well monitored. A disturbing collection of abandoned soldiers’ tombstones, partially covered by the eroding dirt and debris, have sat for months within the boundaries of the dump study area, in violation of federal regulations requiring dignified, full destruction of such discarded gravestones.

Some of the white marble slabs are whole, others broken. “Rodriguez” died in 1971 after serving in World War II in the Army. His headstone, busted in half and with his first name missing, is one of at least 10 apparently long-ago discarded markers spotted peeking from the dirt since this reporter first noticed them on January 9, 2008.

That day, California Sen. Dianne Feinstein spoke at the VA, where she was honored for legislation preventing commercial development of the Brentwood-adjacent property, one of the choicest pieces of open land in urban Los Angeles. When a reporter told Feinstein about the broken tombstones partially buried in dirt, she responded, “Really?” then turned to her district director, Trevor Daley, and said, “Yes, go out and look at it, will you?” The existence of the grave markers implies that the VA’s chief of external affairs, Ralph Tillman, has not completed an assessment of soils in the study area — to the point of failing to undertake the basic task of properly destroying the gravestones.

Tillman has failed to respond to requests for an interview, but with the federal government finally embarking on a long-delayed $1-million testing phase, Dr. Bennett Ramberg, a longtime critic of the government’s handling of the historic dump, says, “We’re in the more definitive phase and yet, once again, the questionable zones at the site appear to be ignored by the testers. If you’re going to spend $1 million in these tight times, you have got to get it right.”

Tillman has previously insisted that the soils are safe. U.S. Rep. Henry Waxman of Los Angeles says, “I am pleased that they are taking this additional step, and I will be monitoring the situation closely.”

A controversial $4 billion Bush Administration plan to develop the property, opposed by many Angelenos because the land is located in one of Southern California’s most congested and overbuilt areas, collapsed in 2007 in part because of its surprisingly troubled history.

On September 22, 2007, Jay Halpern, special assistant to the VA secretary, told concerned residents at a community meeting that one obstacle to developing luxury condos and businesses on the massive property was “the issue around the radiation of Barrington Park.”

Halpern said questions about whether radiation problems exist on the site were addressed in a Phase One report, but added, “Now we enter the Phase Two study to ensure that there is absolutely nothing underneath there.”

But Ramberg, one of several critics of the two-year delay before the Phase Two study began late this year, says, “How is the public supposed to rely on the conclusions of the Phase Two study when the VA appears to have prejudged the outcome?”

Although the testing site, which is fenced with “Do Not Enter” signs, is not easily visible downslope from the Brentwood Recreation Center, it is in full view of the adjacent MacArthur Field to the east. The land was used to dump biomedical nuclear and chemical waste from 1948 to 1968 by the VA and nearby UCLA.

According to UCLA archival documents, the buried items include barrels of radioactive tritium, chemical lab wastes, and carcasses of animals killed in medical experiments.

Nobody knows if the land is safe. Last February, an unidentified man inspecting the site with a member of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission stated, “This is just perfect for the media. You build a dog park over a nuclear dump. People care more about dogs than people, but people are walking on it!”

VA and UCLA documents also show that hazardous chemicals, including toluene and dioxane, are buried under the soil. According to VA records of 1960 to 1968, wastes were tossed or poured into the site by deposit into unlined trenches and holes. For the first 12 haphazard years, no records were kept.

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  • Annabella Price 09/17/2010 8:58:00 PM

    Michael Collins is brilliant. Please see his work at http://enviroreporter.com. It is amazing! http://www.enviroreporter.com/2010/01/grave-mistakes/

  • Corrine Adams 01/07/2010 6:17:00 AM

    My husband and I have been struck by the reaction of our neighbors here in Mandeville Canyon about this article. Two doors down the road is a couple who have kids who go to Brentwood School and they seem in pretty heavy denial about the pollution the Weekly has exposed at the school (and where my neighbors pay, get this, $28,500 a year to send their 8th grader). The husband says that because Gov. Schwarzenegger sends his girls to the school, there couldn't possibly be anything wrong with the athletic fields. We say that is about as astute as the dopes running the place, especially school head Michael Pratt who spent on $150,000 on worthless tests to rebuke your reporter's revelations. It's hard to tell a neighbor that they're burning through serious cash only to send their kid to a contaminated school where the people in charge either don't have the wherewithal to read scientific reports about the property they're leasing and obviously don't have the character to tell the parents of those kids that they have a problem with their athletic fields. This is a blight on Brentwood.

  • Virginia Davies 12/31/2009 5:47:00 AM

    This was outstanding coverage of an important story. Thank you for persisting on this issue.

  • David Atkins 12/29/2009 2:22:00 PM

    This article outraged me, a Vietnam Veteran, on so many levels I don't know where to begin. So the Weekly reporter, Michael Collins, tells Sen. Feinstein and her aide Trevor Daley to face to face about Veterans' tombstones laying exposed in the VA nuke dump nearly two years ago and not only did Daley do nothing about it, he won't even respond to the Weekly for comment on this inexcusable lack of action? Does Sen. Feinstein know about this? Does she pay attention to one of the biggest newspapers in this state? Unbelievable! And now the VA is in the process of blowing a million bucks on some phony nuke dump testing (in the wrong areas) to placate who? Waxman? The residents of Brentwood who care more about their dumb dogs than they do themselves? What the hell is wrong with these people? There is a nuke dump under their precious dog park and the VA is drilling to supposedly test for it as far away as possible. That is an outrageous waste of taxpayer dollars and Waxman and Councilman Bill Rosendahl should demand a full accounting of how and why the VA chose to deliberately test so far away from the actual dump. Why doesn't the VA dig up that mound of crap they excavated from Brentwood School where it's sitting in plain sight like the article says? Because they don't want to get sued by the school, that's why. The VA went and leased contaminated land to Brentwood School which gladly took it, ignoring all the environmental reports that Collins has analyzed on Enviroreporter.com, and then acts like they tested the toxins away after Collins first breaks the story. I don't think passes the stink test. Do the parents of Brentwood School students care more about not rocking the boat than taking the administrators to task over this outrage? Do they know what heavy metal contamination can lead to? There is only one bright spot in all this and that's the LA Weekly having the guts to do this kind of in depth investigative reporting that reveals where the bodies are buried, in this case the radioactive bodies of dogs that UCLA and the VA tested on of all damn things. The fact that this nuke dump stopped Bush from developing the VA for his Brentwood fat cat pals sure hasn't made the VA do what it promised to do and get that radioactive, chemical and heavy metal contamination out of Brentwood. Michael Collins and the Weekly ought to be commended for unearthing this mess. It's up to Waxman and Rosendahl to do something about it. And while they're twiddling their thumbs trying to figure out how to get out of it, why doesn't someone fire the VA's Ralph Tillman and Feinstein's ineffective aide Trevor Daley? Me and my Vet pals are plenty pissed. Keep up the great work and don't let these people get away with this. Veterans deserve better, don't we? Maybe just not in Brentwood...

  • Charlie Baker 12/13/2009 8:06:00 AM

    There is a long history of both disregard and disrespect for the honorable men and women who sacrifice for their fellow Citizens dating back to the Bonus Army protest in 1932 to the initial lack of recognition for the Vietnam Veterans in the late 60s and early 70s to the recent expos�f inhumane conditions at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. The disrespect shown in this article for the grave markers and the lack of concern just continues the tradition of disrespect for the best and bravest of our society. I do appreciate the reporter(s) that shined a light on this subject. The freedom of the press is one of the rights that Veterans fight for and now that right has been used to expose an injustice. We should all be thankful that their sacrifices are not in vane.

  • Tom Pincu 12/12/2009 4:45:00 AM

    Senator Feinstein won't do a thing. She sent her rep to look into it and nothing has happened nor will it. The local VA director won't do anything unless his bosses in Washington say, "Clean it up". All the senator is interested in is mollifying the crowd. The White House invited her constituents to visit her over the summer break providing a special form to fill out. So a group assembled only to meet a young man who was in over his head. He didn't expect to run into a group of people who wanted to meet the Senator. A senior man took over and gave out his card so people could make appointments to meet with the Senator. No one got to meet with the senator. This is an issue that will be on the back burner unless the Senator feels her place in the Senate is in danger. Politicians only do things when they feel their position is in danger. Michael Collins needs to keep up his good work and hold the feet of these government toadies to the fire.

  • Michael Collins 12/11/2009 11:56:00 AM

    Three corrections: In the third paragraph, it should read �biomedical nuclear and chemical dumps.� In the seventh paragraph, Sen. Dianne Feinstein spoke at the VA January 16, 2008, a week after the tombstones were first discovered. In the last paragraph, the considerable amount syringes (and other debris, including headstones) were covered by asphalt, not the entire football field, all of which was then covered by turf.

  • Joan Bien 12/11/2009 6:34:00 AM

    Of course, on re-reading the story, I see that Feinstein's aide did not bother to look at what was in front of their noses. Figures. Hats off to Michael Collins for grabbing on to this story and despite the disinterest by those who are paid to care and then to fix it, he has held tight. If this mess ever gets cleaned up, we have Collins to thank for having our backs.

  • Joan Bien 12/11/2009 4:39:00 AM

    I will never fully understand why officials insist on doing nothing when they know about a worsening problem that puts the health of people, especially children, at risk. It is a measure of either their incompetence, stupidity, or laziness. Senator Feinstein sends one of her aides to go look at it. So he looked. One would think that he was sent to look at it as the first step in fixing the problem or at least measuring the problem. No. I'm so glad Feinstein had someone look at it. applause, applause. You glow girl! And to think it happened on a Brentwood street! Oh my! I thought the well-heeled folks in that area who drive a Prius and raise money for the opera would have become a bit more informed. One reporter can't do it all. Now you know, so what are you going to do about it? Gov, check this out in your own backyard.

  • Michael Rose 12/11/2009 1:55:00 AM

    Great reporting. Thank you for continuing to pursue this and bringing this important issue to the forefront.

 

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