Radioactive Device In Sugar Grove Accident
Thursday, August 12, 2004, 3:47 p.m.
- SUGAR GROVE, IL -- A state nuclear safety team was summoned today to far west suburban Sugar Grove after a traffic accident involving a radioactive device.
The story from WBBM's suburban bureau chief Julie Mann. LISTEN HERE
http://www.wbbm780.com/includes/news_items/news_items_more.php?section_id=9&id=2780
Crews check for leak of radioactive gauge after truck accident
http://abclocal.go.com/wls/news/081204_ns_radioactive_ax.html
NOTICE:
They give us no information on who was driving that pickup!!!
Piper:
Sounds like a density gauge, and those are fairly common all over the country. They use them to measure concrete density.
They are radioactive, and some of the hum pretty good. The NRC licenses them and regulates them.
http://www.healthyarkansas.com/news/pr_radioactive_060804.html
Missing Radioactive Gauge
June 8, 2004
Little Rock -- Jared Thompson, Health Physicist in the Office of Radiation Control and Emergency Management, Arkansas Department of Health, announced tonight that one radioactive gauge is missing from Materials Testing of Arkansas. The gauge could pose a health risk to persons if handled or carried for an extended period of time. The missing gauge was in a locked yellow transportation case and weighs approximately 85 pounds. The gauge was lost on Amity Road near Southern Star Concrete Company in Conway, Arkansas. Anyone finding this gauge should IMMEDIATELY report it to the nearest police authority or phone 1-800-633-1735 and ask for Jared Thompson.
The gauge is described as a Troxler Electronic Laboratory Model 3430 moisture density gauge containing 9 millicuries of Cesium-137 and 44 millicures of Americium-241:Beryllium.
State Police, local government officials and law enforcement agencies, the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the Office of Emergency Services have also been notified.