- Breaking News Comtec Solar and Neo Solar Power Launch the 'Perfect Wafer' Embedded 'Perfect Cell'
- Breaking News Ask Amy: He Backs Out Over Ban on Gay Marriage
- Breaking News Rumble dots
- Breaking News Pride of service
Bio lab proposed for Tracy
0 Comments | Oakland Tribune, Aug 10, 2006 | by Ian Hoffman, STAFF WRITER
On rolling, grassy hills between the Bay Area's cities and the farms of the Central Valley, the University of California and scientists of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory see a sprawling biodefense lab as large as two Wal-Mart Supercenters.
Federal homeland-security authorities gave the nod Wednesday to the university and its 7,000-acre site near Tracy along with 17 other proposals nationwide as contenders for the National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility.
Originally, this new lab was intended as a replacement for Plum Island, a 1950s-era federal facility off Long Island where dangerous animal diseases are studied.
Most Popular Articles
Most Recent Articles
Most Popular Publications
Most Recent Publications
But lately the U.S. Department of Homeland Security has retreated from talk of closing Plum Island and suggested a role for NBAF as the animal counterpart to the top-secret, human biodefense lab being built inside the Army's Fort Detrick in Maryland. There, in buildings that are themselves entirely classified, researchers expect to step into the shoes of terrorists and create biowarfare agents, in order to devise defenses against them.
The National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility would be four times larger -- 500,000 square feet -- and study "high consequence biological threats" involving human or animal diseases or having the potential to jump from animals to humans. Federal grants for the lab run to $451 million.
The University of California and the Lawrence Livermore lab are proposing construction in the middle of the lab's Site 300, a once- remote explosives testing area.
University officials have rounded up endorsements from the mayor of Livermore to U.S. Rep. Ellen Tauscher, D-Walnut Creek, and from the state Food and Agriculture Secretary A.G. Kawamura to the California cattlemens and poultry associations.
I think all of these individuals realize this could have a wonderful trickle-down effect for California and the Tri-Valley, said Livermore lab spokeswoman Susan Houghton. It could provide 200- 300 new jobs, and it could show California really can lead in this area.
Much of the new lab would operate at Biosafety Level 3, a category of biocontainment used for plague and tularemia. But some of the lab, perhaps a fifth or more, would operate at Biosafety Level 4, the highest level of biocontainment. BSL4 is reserved for diseases having no known vaccine such as Ebola hemorrhagic fever, foot and mouth disease or avian flu and requiring researchers to wear moonsuits inside airlocked labs.
In these labs, scientists would seek ways to detect and treat animal-human diseases but also assess and research evolving bioterrorism threats over the next five decades, according to a Department of Homeland Security summary.
Youre talking about a BSL4 facility handling large, hooved animals infected with BSL4 agents, so this is a very serious lab, said Edward Hammond, co-leader of the Sunshine Project, a nonprofit group that monitors research involving biowarfare agents.
Federal officials have not elaborated on exactly which microorganisms would be studied in the new lab and the degree to which those germs would be modified. The university rejected a request by Tri-Valley Citizens Against a Radioactive Environment, a Livermore lab watchdog group, for a copy of its proposal.
These guys just really dont like transparency, and this double standard is really bothersome, Hammond said. The U.S. thinks because we believe our motives are good, we should be able to do things that we think are entirely unacceptable for other countries to do.
Marylia Kelley, the head of Tri-Valley CAREs, said the new lab is worrisome on several fronts.
If an agricultural disease were to get loose from this facility, it would be devastating to the states economy, she said.
Twenty-nine teams mostly led by U.S. universities leaped to make proposals. On Wednesday, the Homeland Security Department narrowed the list to 18 teams in 11 states. A smaller list of semi-finalists will be visited by federal officials in October, and the finalists will be evaluated in a full, environmental impact study over the next year, with a final decision in July 2008 and operations in 2013.
Contact Ian Hoffman at ihoffman@angnews-
papers.com.
- Gap CEO volunteers to cut annual salary
- Readers Forum: Gov. Schwarzenegger should sign bill encouraging oil
- Controlling your dog or cat's arthritis pain
- Selling liquor violates Islam, but Yemenis do it to survive
- Lake Chabot offers camping escape
- Convicted molester maintains innocence
- Convicted molester insists he's innocent
- Evacuated Dublin residents allowed to return home
- Getting to the root of beautiful hair: shiny, silky hair begins with a healthy scalp - includes list of resources and a recipe for an herbal scalp tonic
- Made from scratch: When Honda built a plant in Alabama it also built a workforce-using local workers who had no experience in making cars - Recruitment & Hiring
- Portfolio forecasting tools: what you need to know
- Traction Named #1 Interactive Agency for 2009 by BtoB Magazine
- Banking technology, technological learning and competition: comparative case studies in Thai banking
- Why fly solo when an executive assistant can accelerate your CLNC® business?
- A multi-class SVM classifier utilizing binary decision tree
- Taylor Fund L.P. Gains 40.53% in Third Quarter