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View Article  Kentucky Hero Recognized

Craig Williams, one of the Kentuckians recognized on KentuckyHeroes.com, was featured today in an article in The Richmond Register. Williams has worked with Senator Mitch McConnell to ensure that the military moves quickly to safely dispose of chemical weapons stored at the Bluegrass Army Depot.

In 1984, Berea resident and New Jersey native Craig Williams attended his first public forum where he and a crowd of about 1,000 locals learned that weapons of mass destruction were being stored in Madison County at the Blue Grass Army Depot.
...
“One day, the Army came to town and told us: ‘We have chemical weapons and we’re going to incinerate them. Any questions?,’” Williams said.
“I raised my hand and it’s still raised today. On the way home that night, my wife looked at me and said, ‘Craig, you have to do something.’ And since I always do what my wife tells me, here I am more than 20 years later.”
...
“People need to know that it can be done,” he said. “I think that people can do a lot of things if they decide what it is they want to do and are strategic in the way they go about it. Once we educated ourselves on the issue (of chemical weapons storage and destruction), we decided it was something we were not going to tolerate.”
...
Recent communication between U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell and Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates resulted in a 2017 chemical weapons destruction deadline, which means the weapons would be gone six years before the deadline last set, which was 2023.
The result of the provision was two-fold in that the Department of Defense was legally obligated to complete disposal by 2017 and had to obtain the appropriate amount of funding to meet the deadline.
 
“This is a direct result of the people’s engagement in this issue,” Williams said. “It’s remarkable.”
Watch a video below about Craig Williams' work with Sen. McConnell.
 
View Article  Editorial: Sen. McConnell a "driving force" in securing funding for Bluegrass Army Depot

The following editorial was published this week by several Kentucky newspapers. You can read the entire editorial here. (Emphasis added)

The budget the president sent to Congress proposes spending $398 million on destroying the weapons stored in Kentucky and in Pueblo, Colo. Both are planning to use neutralization rather than incineration to destroy the chemical weapons.

The Bush request is about $50 million more than the program received the past two years. Three years ago, the White House asked for only $31 million for the sites — a level that would have put operations in a holding pattern in Kentucky and Colorado.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has been a driving force in securing funding for the destruction of the weapons, pressuring Defense Secretary Robert Gates to increase spending for the neutralization sites. The Courier-Journal in Louisville reported Monday that Gates now is looking at destroying the weapons by as early as 2012. That would put the United States in compliance with an international treaty it signed pledging to destroy all stockpiled chemical weapons by 2012. After years of saying the 2012 date was impossible to meet, it is good to see that members of the Bush administration are now hinting that it may be feasible.

Blue Grass houses 523 tons of chemical weapons containing sarin, VX and mustard gas. The disposal site is currently under construction, and the destruction process is expected to take about two years once the buildings are finished.

While we’re certain the Democrats who control Congress will make many changes in the proposed budget, we hope the increased funding for the destruction of the banned weapons remains untouched. The proposal does more than any other previous budgets to speed the day the weapons finally are safely destroyed. 

Watch a video about Sen. McConnell's work to speed the destruction of chemical weapons at Bluegrass Army Depot here.

View Article  The Courier-Journal: Sen. McConnell "a formidable and effective advocate" for safety at Bluegrass Army Depot

Sen. McConnell posted yesterday about a recent meeting with leading Army officials to discuss safety issues at the Bluegrass Army Depot (link). The Courier-Journal (link) took note and had this to say in today's paper (emphasis added):

Kentucky members of Congress (Republican Sens. Mitch McConnell and Jim Bunning and Rep. Ben Chandler) told the Army that deficiencies at the depot were "a public safety issue of the highest order" and that all necessary action must be taken against any supervisors responsible for safety shortfalls.

A former chemical weapons monitoring operator at the depot testified he was fired for raising safety concerns.

Officials are still investigating what may have been the depot's largest-ever leak, of the deadly nerve agent sarin. Discovered Aug. 27, it resulted in levels of the substance that were 85 times the military's own designated safe exposure limit. Sens. McConnell and Bunning and Rep. Chandler called this "deeply disturbing" and demanded "prompt action and accountability."

This is a very curious situation.

The disturbing sequence of events has occurred in the home state of the powerful Senate minority leader, who for years has dogged the depot operation and pushed for improvement. Just recently, Sen. McConnell shepherded to passage a bill that set a 10-year deadline for the destruction of lethal chemical weapons stored in Kentucky, Indiana and other states.

Even Sen. McConnell's most relentless critics must admit that he has been all over the Blue Grass Army Depot safety issue, and he's a formidable and effective advocate. Yet, the Army doesn't seem able or willing to do what's necessary.

You can read the entire Courier-Journal editorial here.

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