http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1502425/posts
Power failure hits CDC germ lab (Fort Collins, CO)
Rocky Mountain News ^ | October 13, 2005 | Jim Erickson, Rocky Mountain News
Posted on 10/14/2005 8:13:53 AM PDT by LurkedLongEnough
A power failure knocked out the security system at a federal germ lab
in Fort Collins for 13 hours Monday and disabled freezers housing
thousands of vials of plague and other potential bioweapons.
A backup generator kicked on when the power failed.
But an electrical short prevented the backup power from being routed
through the building, said Colorado State University spokesman Brad
Bohlander.
As a result, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention laboratory
was without power for 13 hours, beginning at 3:07 p.m. Monday,
Bohlander said. CSU owns the building and leases it to the
government.No germ collections were damaged, the public was not
endangered, and no security breach occurred, said CDC spokeswoman
Jennifer Morcone.
The Fort Collins CDC lab, which opened in 1967, is known as the
Division of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases.
It houses freeze-dried samples of about 1,000 plague strains, along
with smaller collections of two other potential bioweapons, tularemia
and Venezuelan equine encephalitis.
West Nile virus and the microbes that cause Lyme disease and yellow
fever also are stored at the lab, which is west of downtown Fort Collins
on Colorado State's Foothills Campus.
A new $80 million CDC lab is being built adjacent to the aging facility.
It is scheduled for completion next year.
Sen. Wayne Allard and other members of the Colorado congressional
delegation pushed hard to get funding for the new lab. In the wake of
the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and the anthrax-letter incidents
that followed, Allard stressed the current lab's security shortcomings.
In a February 2002 letter to the Health and Human Services secretary,
Allard said the lab's run-down state constitutes a "bioterrorism
security breach."
On Wednesday afternoon, two members of Allard's staff visited the lab
for a briefing about Monday's power failure. An incident report is being
prepared.
"The senator will take a look at that report, and if there are concerns,
he'll address them," said Carolyn Williams, Allard's Colorado press
secretary.
"But what we've heard so far is that things were handled very well,"
she said.
Lab employees were off for the Columbus Day holiday when Monday's
power outage occurred. The problem was traced to water that leaked
into the room that houses the lab's main electrical system, causing a
short that knocked out power, Bohlander said.
Extra security guards were posted during the blackout, which disabled
the lab's video surveillance system and the electronic card keys that
control access to restricted areas, Morcone said.
(continued at the link, to me this is Plum Island all over again......granny)
Sounds like a plot from Alias when they disable security equipment to gain access to places to steal stuff.
Unforgiveable that the backup power failed.
In so many instances on this thread, we've come full circle.
I agree, it's another Plum Island.