Shameless call for material for the book”Shundahai Network: A Decade of Resistance:

In addition to writing this blog I also write 4-5 other blogs and have taken over the responsibility of getting “The Shundahai Network” web site running, again.

After our Founder and Spiritual Leader of the Western Shoshone People passed, last July- Corbin Harney, thing sorta fell apart.

But we are up and running again, I am also getting my 18 year old son enrolled in College in Salt Lake City, UT. In addition I am moving to Las Vegas, to be closer to Yucca Mountain, the proposed High-Level Radioactive Waste Suppository Repository, which is located on Traditional Western Shoshone Lands. These Lands encompass parts of several states, UT, CA, ID and NV . Things have been pretty busy lately and once again I am putting a call out to ask for any Video’s, Audio recordings, memories of Shundahai Network actions and also the same for any Corbin Harney Materials.

Nuclear and Indigenous Items of Interest

This WordPress Bog also dedicated to Corbin Harney has only been live for 3 weeks. it has over 2000+(NOW OVER 5,000+) hit so far and has been mentioned in the WordPress blog also. It is at http://gregornot.wordpress.com/
Come check it out as it will be part of the new Shundahai.org Web site,which is currently undergoing renovations. Please visit “The Shundahai Network” web site at shundahai.org . Please note some of the material is out of date, but soon will be caught up and this blog will be incorporated into the new site.
Here is some info about myself and the book”The Shundahai Network: A Decade of Resistance”( actually the book will cove times prior to the forming of The Shundahai Network and, also times after, Corbin passed, bringing it up to the present day status.

About Gregor

Hi, I’m Gregor Gable but remember that much of the material is a little out of date

I’m a Indigenous Rights, Social Justice and Anti-Nuclear Activist. I believe we need to break the Nuclear Cycle to save this Planet. I worked for 20+ years at the Nevada Test Site, doing non-violent direct actions. I was the very first person arrested at Yucca Mountain. I was arrested uncountable (hundreds) times at the Nevada Test Site (NTS). I am also writing a book “The Shundahai Network: A Decade of Resistance”. In addition, I am making a DVD/CD of Corbin’s Harney(Western Shoshone Spiritual Leader, who has passed over)last Public Sunrise Ceremonies & Songs(with his verbal permission as seen on DVD). If you wish to contribute materials, Audio, visual or memories of Shundahai Network (SN), contact me : gregornot AT gmail.com and I will send my snail mail address for mailing photos or audio or video materials.

Shundahai Friends,

Those of you who wish to send Audio. Video, Photos,Stories or uplifting memories of Corbin Harney (including who,what, where) for part of the book honoring Corbin and the Shundahai Network,”The Shundahai Network: A Decade of Resistance” may mail them to Gregor Gable (Web Master of Shundahai Network Domain and a personal friend of 20 + years) :

All materials will be returned and proper credit will be given in the book. Please print clearly your snail mail address, so that I may return materials, along with a note given me permission to use the materials in this book. This is a Book Corbin Harney authorized me to write, and I have been working on it for quite a while.

This is a record of Corbin’s non-stop fight against radioactivity and his attempts to have the traditional lands returned to the Newe people(after it had been cleaned up) under the Treaty of Ruby Valley 1863 and the people who helped him know as The Shundahai Network.

Shundahai, gregor

Agency gives OK to some Area 51 workers seeking compensation

Health claim roadblocks end

Agency gives OK to some Area 51 workers seeking compensation

In 1998, the Department of Defense and the Department of Energy were keeping mum about the secret work that went on at Area 51, a widely known Air Force installation near the northeast corner of the Nevada Test Site.

That year, the U.S. Supreme Court turned away an appeal by former Area 51 workers who claimed that they were made sick and that co-workers had died from exposure to toxic fumes from stealth coatings burned in open trenches near the Groom Lake base, 90 miles north of Las Vegas. The site was used to test high-tech aircraft.

The court upheld the government’s stance that national security would be compromised if materials used at the base or even the base’s name were publicly acknowledged.

On Wednesday, another federal agency, the Department of Labor, sliced through that veil of secrecy, posting on its Web site a bulletin to its workers’ compensation staff titled: “Expansion of Nevada Test Site to include Area 51.”

In 1998, the Department of Defense and the Department of Energy were keeping mum about the secret work that went on at Area 51, a widely known Air Force installation near the northeast corner of the Nevada Test Site.

That year, the U.S. Supreme Court turned away an appeal by former Area 51 workers who claimed that they were made sick and that co-workers had died from exposure to toxic fumes from stealth coatings burned in open trenches near the Groom Lake base, 90 miles north of Las Vegas. The site was used to test high-tech aircraft.

The court upheld the government’s stance that national security would be compromised if materials used at the base or even the base’s name were publicly acknowledged.

On Wednesday, another federal agency, the Department of Labor, sliced through that veil of secrecy, posting on its Web site a bulletin to its workers’ compensation staff titled: “Expansion of Nevada Test Site to include Area 51.”

The bulletin opens the door for hundreds of Area 51 claimants who stand to receive $150,000 or more under the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program.

For the past seven years, many Area 51 claimants had been told by program officials that they weren’t eligible for compensation because they had worked at the secret base and not the test site. Area 51 is a 38,400-acre rectangle of land that was transferred from the Energy Department to the Defense Department in 1999.

“The purpose of this circular is to notify all division … staff that Area 51 is part of the Nevada Test Site for the years 1958-1999,” states the Aug. 5 bulletin, signed by Rachel P. Leiton, director of the Labor Department’s Division of Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation.

Ironically, Fred Dunham, one of the claimants whose case was under appeal and who spurred Leiton’s decision, learned late Wednesday that the Labor Department intends to deny his appeal. That, according to Labor Department spokesman Loren Smith, is because Dunham’s former employer, EG&G Special Projects, was a Department of Defense contractor, and not one of the so-called “captive contractors” for the Department of Energy at Area 51.

“Employees other than REECO and Bechtel ‘are’ covered. EG&G and Wackenhut ‘are’ included, and I’m told other contractor or subcontractor employees may be identified as (the Department of Labor) processes claims,” Smith wrote in an e-mail to the Review-Journal.

“Again, the REECO and Bechtel mentioned in the (bulletin) is not an exhaustive list of covered contractors or subcontractors. EG&G Special Projects was a DOD, not DOE contractor and thus they are not covered,” Smith’s e-mail stated.

Dunham, 57, who suffers from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, says his health problems might not only be linked to inhaling dioxin-laden fumes while he worked as a security guard at Area 51. He also was on duty after the 1986 Mighty Oak nuclear weapons test “blew the doors” off a tunnel, resulting in a controlled release of radioactivity that was detected in the vicinity of where he was standing outside, about seven miles east of the tunnel.

The Mighty Oak nuclear detonation was conducted by the Department of Defense and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, a Department of Energy lab that was managed and operated at the time by the University of California.

“Just because you were a DOD contractor doesn’t mean you didn’t get exposed to radiation,” Dunham said. “I was right there when Mighty Oak ended. What does that mean? I don’t have any rights because I’m a DOD contractor and it was a DOD event?”

After months of waiting for the Labor Department’s bulletin to be posted, Dunham said he is holding out hope that his appeal will get special consideration. He said a clerk who handles final adjudication appeals in Washington, D.C. has eight cases — including his — that have been sitting on her desk while she waits for written direction from her supervisors on how to proceed.

Dunham fears that the deck is stacked against Area 51 workers who were employed by EG&G Special Projects.

“Now all those guys who died and got sick, this is all going to be for nothing,” Dunham said.

John Funk, chairman of a nonprofit Las Vegas advocacy group, Atomic Veterans and Victims of America, estimates hundreds of new claims will be filed because of Leiton’s circular, given that there have been some 2,000 crafts, trades and independent contract workers at Area 51.

Dunham said his next move will be to seek a class action lawsuit against the departments of Labor and Energy for discrimination and failing to provide equal protection under the law. He said he also will demand that the agencies include Area 51 in the Nevada Test Site’s profile, which is used to determine hazardous work sites and activities that affect workers’ health.

Contact reporter Keith Rogers at krogers@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0308.

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