Safe As Mother's Milk: The Hanford Project
Safe as Mother's Milk examines the Hanford Nuclear Reservation through declassified historical photographs, media, and documents. In 1986, increasing public suspicion over the facility's activities forced government agencies to release formally classified documents through the Freedom of Information Act, exposing undisclosed radioactive releases, experiments, and other environmental safety hazards related to plutonium production during the Cold War era.
The Hanford Nuclear Reservation is located on 565-square-miles of desert in southeastern Washington State near the Tri-Cities area of Richland, Pasco and Kennewick. For more than forty years, Hanford released radioactive materials into the environment on an uninformed public while producing plutonium for the U.S. nuclear arsenal during the Cold War era. Although the majority of the releases were due to activities related to production, some were also planned and intentional.
Hanford workers, their families and other downwind residents became literal guinea pigs for radiation experiments that were carried out at the facility by the former Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), Department of Energy (DOE), the Department of Defense, and civilian sub-contractors including DuPont and General Electric from 1944 to 1972.
Although civilians were informed of Hanford's plutonium production activities by the end of World War II, officials in charge kept secret the growing number of radioactive releases, experiments and other environmental safety hazards resulting at the facility. During the mid-1980s, increasing public suspicion over Hanford activities forced government agencies and their civilian sub-contractors to release formally classified documents through a request under the Freedom of Information Act. With the release of these documents in 1986, the public has been able to piece together a devastating chronicle of atomic weaponry production that consequently poisoned the people it was ironically meant to protect. Thousands of area residents from towns and farms surrounding the Hanford Site and beyond have suffered an array of health problems including thyroid cancers, autoimmune diseases and reproductive disorders that they feel are the direct
result of these releases and experiments.
Safe as Mother's Milk examines these important events through declassified historical photographs, media and documents available online at various government archives, including the Hanford Declassified Document Retrieval System [1] and Human Radiation Experiments Information Management System (HREX) [2].
This project is designed as both a physical installation and Web site, originally commissioned for the Cornish College of the Arts ART | ACTIVISM 2002 Visiting Artist Series.