Twin news items to make you nervous:
Mishandling of germs on rise at US Labs.
Some cattlemen nervous about new biolab.
Well, it makes me nervous, anyway. First we have a report on how with the increased accreditation of so-called high security labs has seen an increased incident rate for those labs. In the last 4 years, more than 100 incidents involving very dangerous biologic materials have occurred. From the first news article:
The mishaps include workers bitten or scratched by infected animals, skin cuts, needle sticks and more, according to a review by The Associated Press of confidential reports submitted to federal regulators. They describe accidents involving anthrax, bird flu virus, monkeypox and plague-causing bacteria at 44 labs in 24 states. More than two-dozen incidents were still under investigation.
The number of accidents has risen steadily. Through August, the most recent period covered in the reports obtained by the AP, labs reported 36 accidents and lost shipments during 2007 — nearly double the number reported during all of 2004.
And the second one involves cattle ranchers who are concerned about the DHS plans for a new animal disease research lab, and how the proximity of such a lab near livestock operations poses a threat. (Disclosure note: my hometown of Columbia was recently removed from a list of potential sites, in part thanks to efforts of friends of mine who opposed such a facility being placed here.) The threat is not theoretical - it is little known in this country, but recent outbreaks of foot-and-mouth disease in Britain have been tied to a similar research lab in that country. Yet this is what we hear from the government:
"No matter where we put it it's going to be safe and secure," said James Johnson, Homeland Security's director of national labs and the program manager for the planned lab.
I'm sure it will be, Jim. Just like all those other high-security labs around the country.
See, the problem is that people being people, mistakes happen. Under the best of conditions. And when you're messing around with really dangerous shit, the potential harm of an error goes way up. And that is only being concerned with mistakes.
Because what happens when some one or group decides to exploit the system in place to redirect something really nasty for their own purposes? This type of scenario is what I use as the source material for my novel Communion of Dreams, which is set some 40 years following a pandemic caused by the release of a pandemic flu agent engineered to be particularly virulent. Think that is unlikely or impossible? Oh? Remember the 2001 Anthrax attacks which killed five people and shut down the Senate's postal facility? That whole episode is still unsolved, and is likely some variant on such a redirected military strain of the disease.
I don't know about you, but when the same people who let New Orleans die tell me that I should trust them to secure biologic agents which have the potential to wipe out our (overly concentrated) livestock, cause widespread crop failure, or even start a pandemic plague of some variety, I shudder.
Jim Downey
(Cross posted to my blog.)