12
.-.ungl ...u ..... ,,,,, .1."..... &-./"'.. '-&-...- Privacy Act Release Statement As mandated by the 1974 Privacy Act, I authorize Congressman Lee M. Zeldin and his staff to make inquiries on my behalf and to obtain information from my personal records or files regarding the problem mentioned below. .. J - & _ -=--_Fe_b_ru_a_ry_2_6,_2_01_5 Signature of parent or guardian (if differentthan the person requesting infonnaoon) Date Personal Information: (PleaseprintorW1itelegibly) Dr. Carmine F. Vasile Name: First Middle Last 60 Herbert Circle Patchogue, NY 11772 Street Address City Zip 631-758-6271 Cell: 631-807-7839 Suffolk Home Telephone Work Telephone County April 24, 1941 XXX-XX-XXXX [email protected] Date of Birth - - Social security Number E-mail Address Summary of Problem: Radon gases and some naturally occurring radionuclides have been excluded from federal regulation for 39 years under the Radionuclides Rule of 1976 of the Safe Drinking Water Act. Consequently, as indicated in the attached Polonium Petition to Governor Cuomo dated February 20,2015, millions of Americans are unknowingly being exposed to huge levels of carcinogenic Polonium in water used for drinking, cooking, showering, bathing & irrigation, etc. by unscrupulous water companies that falsify Gross Alpha test results by: (i) first evaporating water from test samples thereby removing Radon gases that continually produce Polonium when dissolved in water, (ii) then waiting until fast decaying, highly radioactive Alpha-emitters such as Polonium-218 (Po-218) & Polonium-214 (Po-214) decay to non-detect levels before determining compliance with the 15-pCi/l MCl - which could not happen if frozen water samples such as powdered ice cubes were used, for example. PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO SAFE DRINKING WATER ACT: Introduce federal legislation to amend the Radionudides Rule as follows: (a) Include all Radon Gases in the Gross Alpha drinking water MCl of 15 pCi/l, (b) Determine Gross Alpha compliance in each well - with no blending as allowed by the NYS Health Code - by using frozen samples to prevent the escape of Radon gases produced by Radium-228, Radium-226, Radium-224, _ Radium-223, etc. (c) Include naturally occurring Beta & Photon emitters when determining compliance with the 4 mrem/yr drinking - water MCl for Beta particle and Photon radioactivity. Please mail or bring this original form to: Congressman Lee M. Zeldin 31 Oak Street, Suite 20 Patchogue, NY 11772 631-289-1097 FAX: 1268 All envelopes MUST be CLEARLY marked with return name and address

J - a~ v~ · test results by: (i) ... PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO SAFE DRINKING WATER ACT: ... 1 86 Rn222 3.8231 d α 5.69e+6 2.10e-15 0.833 3.23e-10 1.00 3.23e-10 0 1.01e-6 1.84e-8

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.-.ungl ,,~:u.u...u .....,,,,, .1."..... &-./"'..'-&-...­

Privacy Act Release Statement

As mandated by the 1974 Privacy Act, I authorize Congressman Lee M. Zeldin and his staff to make inquiries on my behalf and to obtain information from my personal records or files regarding the problem mentioned below. .. J -

a~ & v~ _-=--_Fe_b_ru_a_ry_2_6,_2_01_5

~~ ~

Signature of parent or guardian (ifdifferent than the person requesting infonnaoon) Date

Personal Information: (PleaseprintorW1itelegibly)

Dr. Carmine F. Vasile

Name: First Middle Last

60 Herbert Circle Patchogue, NY 11772

Street Address City Zip

631-758-6271 Cell: 631-807-7839 Suffolk

Home Telephone Work Telephone County

April 24, 1941 XXX-XX-XXXX [email protected]

Date of Birth - -

Social security Number E-mail Address

Summary of Problem: Radon gases and some naturally occurring radionuclides have been excluded from federal regulation for 39 years under the Radionuclides Rule of 1976 of the Safe Drinking Water Act.

Consequently, as indicated in the attached Polonium Petition to Governor Cuomo dated February 20,2015, millions of Americans are unknowingly being exposed to huge levels of carcinogenic Polonium in water used for drinking, cooking, showering, bathing & irrigation, etc. by unscrupulous water companies that falsify Gross Alpha test results by:

(i) first evaporating water from test samples thereby removing Radon gases that continually produce Polonium when dissolved in water,

(ii) then waiting until fast decaying, highly radioactive Alpha-emitters such as Polonium-218 (Po-218) & Polonium-214 (Po-214) decay to non-detect levels before determining compliance with the 15-pCi/l MCl - which could not happen if frozen water samples such as powdered ice cubes were used, for example.

PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO SAFE DRINKING WATER ACT: Introduce federal legislation to amend the Radionudides Rule as follows:

(a) Include all Radon Gases in the Gross Alpha drinking water MCl of 15 pCi/l, (b) Determine Gross Alpha compliance in each well - with no blending as allowed by the NYS Health Code - by

using frozen samples to prevent the escape of Radon gases produced by Radium-228, Radium-226, Radium-224, _ Radium-223, etc.

(c) Include naturally occurring Beta & Photon emitters when determining compliance with the 4 mrem/yr drinking ­water MCl for Beta particle and Photon radioactivity.

--------~---

Please mail or bring this original form to: Congressman Lee M. Zeldin

31 Oak Street, Suite 20 Patchogue, NY 11772 631-289-1097 FAX: 1268

All envelopes MUST be CLEARLY marked with return name and address

4 EWYORK DepartmentSTATE OF OPPOOTUNnY. of Health

ANDREW M. CUOMO HOWARD A. ZUCKER, M.D., J.D. SALLY DRESLlN, M.S., R.N. Governor Acting Commissioner Executive Deputy Commissioner

April 7, 2015

Dr. Carmine F. Vasile 60 Herbert Circle Patchogue, NY 11772

Dear Mr. Vasile:

This is in response to your letter received February 2,2015, concerning potential health risks from radon in drinking water. Specifically, you expressed concerns about the potential risk of radon decay products from ingesting radon in drinking water.

The issue of radon in drinking water was extensively evaluated by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) in 1999. NAS published a report entitled "Risk Assessment of Radon in Drinking Water" (copy enclosed). As part of their analysis, NAS evaluated potential doses from radon decay products from ingestion of radon in water. As indicated in the report, the ingestion of radon in drinking water is not a significant contributor to radiation dose. The NAS concluded "The committee's analysis indicates that most ofthe cancer risk posed by radon in drinking water arisesfrom the transfer ofradon into indoor air and the subsequent inhalation ofthe radon decay products, and notfrom the ingestion of the water."(p. 16).

The laboratory test results you provided with your letter indicated a radon concentration of387 pCi/l. Even when the total theoretical alpha activity from radon and its decay products reaches its maximum value of about 1120 pCi/1 at 5 hours, the yearly effective equivalent dose due to radon ingestion is about 3.7 mrem/year; the dose contribution from radon decay products accounts to only 0.4 mrern/year. These dose estimates are calculated according to the dose coefficients published in the NAS report, and assuming a "base case" diffusion of radon into the stomach wall and an ingestion of 2 liters per day of water. The report further states that because of the relatively small volume of water used in homes, the large volume of air into which the radon is emitted, and the exchange of indoor air with the ambient atmosphere, radon in water typically adds only a small increment to the indoor air concentration. Specifically, radon at a given concentration in water adds only about 1110,000 as much to the air concentration. A concentration of 387 pCi/1 of radon in drinking water would increase your indoor air levels by 0.0387 pCi/l. Although this level by itself is not cause for concern, the majority of indoor radon comes from soil gas under and around the home and therefore we suggest you test your home for radon. A low cost radon test kit is available from our Radon Program. Enclosed is an application form to purchase a radon test kit for $11.

Regarding the drinking water requirements as contained in Part 5 of the NYS Sanitary Code, radon is specifically excluded from the gross alpha limit of 15 pCi/1. Although, there is no requirement to specifically test for Po-21 0, Po-21 0 is picked up by gross alpha monitoring if it is present in water at the time of analysis. For more information on gross alpha monitoring and compliance with EPA Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL), you may consult the enclosed document entitled "Evaluation of Gross Alpha and Uranium Measurements for MCL Compliance."

Empire State Plaza, Corning Tower, Albany, NY 122371 health.ny.gov

PC
Text Box
Reply to enclosed letters dated January 30 & February 20, 2015 to Health Commissioner Zucker & Governor Cuomo from www.gfxtechnology.com/Cuomo.pdf (This note & enclosed Nucleonica Analysis added 5/7/16)

Please feel free to contact me at 518/402-7550/[email protected] if you have any further questions.

Sincerely,

Stephen Gavitt, Director Bureau of Environmental Radiation Protection

Enclosures

Empire State Plaza, Corning Tower, Albany, NY 122371 health.ny.gov

Nucleonica Analysis of April 12, 2016 Corresponding to the 2/20/15 Polonium-Petition Ignored by Governor Cuomo @ www.gfxtechnology.com/Cuomo.pdf

Nucleonica Results @ 1 day & 2 years

Curve Name Activity (Ci)

86 Rn222 3.231e-10

84 Po218 3.233e-10

84 Po214 3.259e-10

84 Po210 3.010e-18

Total α 970 pCi/L

Curve Name Activity (Ci)

82 Pb210 1.718e-13

83 Bi210 1.719e-13

84 Po210 1.697e-13

Total α 0.1697 pCi/L

Total β 0.3436 pCi/L

Table A: Alpha activity corresponding to Fig. 1

Table B: Alpha & Beta activity corresponding to Fig. 2

Alpha Activity (pCi/L) vs. Time (days)

Alpha & Beta Activity (pCi/L) vs. Time (years)

Note: Figs. 1 & 2 show it takes about 9 months for Pb-210 to reach its peak of 0.182 pCi/L, compared to 2 years for Po-210 to reach its peak of 0.1697 pCi/L - 2,280 times lower than the original Rn-222 activity of 387 pCi/L.

Fig. 1 Rn-222 decay & growth of Alpha emitters up to 24 hours after 6.8 million atoms of Rn-222 are dissloved in pure water and begin

creating 7 cancer-causing poisons listed in Table C.

Fig. 2 Ingrowth of Pb-210, Bi-210 & Po-210 up to 2 years after 6.8 million atoms of Rn-222 are dissloved in pure water.

Adjacent Bragg Curves show 5 MeV Alpha particle radiation is highly concentrated in human Skin ( ) & Soft tissue ( ) because stopping

distances are extremely short (less than 50 micrometers). Bragg curves for Ra-226, Rn-222, Po-218, Po-214 & Po-210 are similar because they release Alpha particles with energies of 4.8, 5.5, 6.0, 7.7 & 5.3 MeV,

respectively. Stopping ranges are much longer for Gamma radiation & Beta particles emitted by Ra-226, Pb-214, Bi-214, Pb-210, or Bi-210.

Table C: Nucleonica Analysis 1-Day After 6.8 Million Atoms of

Rn-222 (387 pCi) atoms produced by billions of Ra-226 atoms are dissolved in a liter of water.

ID Nuclides Half-life Decay modes N(atoms) Mass(g) Mass fractions A(Ci) A/AParent Aα(Ci) Aβ⎯(Ci) Released Energy(J) γ Dose (µSv)

1 86 Rn222 3.8231 d α 5.69e+6 2.10e-15 0.833 3.23e-10 1.00 3.23e-10 0 1.01e-6 1.84e-8

2 84 Po218 3.098 m α; β- 3.20e+3 1.16e-18 4.60e-4 3.23e-10 1.00 3.23e-10 6.14e-14 1.11e-6 4.17e-10

3 82 Pb214 26.8 m β- 2.79e+4 9.90e-18 3.93e-3 3.25e-10 1.01 0 3.25e-10 1.81e-7 1.05e-5

4 83 Bi214 19.9 m β-; α; β-,α 2.08e+4 7.38e-18 2.93e-3 3.26e-10 1.01 7.82e-14 3.26e-10 5.66e-7 6.09e-5

5 84 Po214 163.7 µs α 2.85e-3 1.01e-24 4.01e-10 3.26e-10 1.01 3.26e-10 0 1.35e-6 3.69e-9

6 82 Pb210 22.16 y β-; α 1.08e+6 3.76e-16 0.149 2.89e-14 8.96e-5 5.49e-22 2.89e-14 4.60e-13 6.05e-12

7 83 Bi210 5.012 d β-; α 43.3 1.51e-20 5.99e-6 1.87e-15 5.80e-6 2.47e-21 1.87e-15 3.63e-13 2.41e-17

8 84 Po210 138.388 d α 1.95 6.79e-22 2.69e-7 3.05e-18 9.44e-9 3.05e-18 0 0 0

9 82 Pb206 Stable Stable 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

10 2 He4 Stable Stable 3.34e+6 2.22e-17 8.81e-3 0 0 0 0 0 0

Total: 10 1.02e+7 2.52e-15 1.00 1.62e-9 5.02 9.70e-10 6.51e-10 4.22e-6 7.14e-5

FAX to: Hon: Andrew Cuomo State Capitol, Albany, NY 12224 Tel: (518) 474-8390 Fax:(518) 474-1513 email c/o: [email protected] cc: Commissioner Zucker, MD: [email protected] 518-474-2011 F: 518-474-6608

February 20, 2015Dr. Carmine F. Vasile Ph.D. Electrophysics 60 Herbert Circle Patchogue, NY 11772 631-758-6271 (Cell: 631-807-7839, F: 730-3918)

(www.gfxtechnology.com/Cuomo.pdf)

POLONIUM PETITION Demanding Removal of Polonium Poisons From Drinking Water @ 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 39, 41, 43,

45, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 65 Herbert Circle, Patchogue, NY 11772 Dear Governor Cuomo: Please intervene in this matter because your Health Commissioner has not responded to my request in the last

paragraph of the enclosed letter to Mr. Gavitt and Ms. Costello, dated January 30, 2015. Although Ms. Costello admitted she read the September 1990 Radon Surveillance Report 1 indicating Alpha activity from Rn-222 in hundred of community wells ranged from 13 to 26,800 pCi/L, she didn’t seem to know Alpha activity from Rn-222’s decay products shown in Fig. A was about twice as high; ranging from 26 to 53,600 pCi/L -- far above their NYS Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) of 15 pCi/L. This means Commissioner Zucker and his predecessors knew, or should have known, total Alpha radioactivity in hundreds of community wells serving millions of people exceeded the State’s Polonium MCL since 1988; the year the SCDHS published its Radon in Drinking Water Report 2. Additionally, there are no figures or graphs like Figs A, B & C in the 1988 & 1990 reports to indicate the State’s Polonium MCL would be exceeded unless the EPA set a Radon-MCL of 5 pCi/L.

Alpha Activity (0 to 800 pCi/L) vs Time (0 to 300 minutes)

Activity (0-15pCi/L) vs Time (0 to 180min) Fig. A. Radionuclides regulated by NYS Sanitary Code exclude Pb-214, Bi-214, Bi-210 & Rn-222 (“RADON”).

Fig. B. Graph show Alpha activity of Po-218 & Po-214 quickly exceeds 15 pCi/L after 387 pCi/L of Rn-222 is added to a liter of water. [Moral’s equations 1-21(d) 3 ]

Fig. C. Top curve shows total Alpha activity from Rn-222 in drinking water cannot exceed NY State’s Gross-Alpha MCL of 15 pCi/L at Vermont’s 5 pCi/L Radon action level.

Need For Aeration High Rn-222 levels in dozens of SCWA test reports @ www.gfxtechnology.com/Radon.html are obvious frauds because they show little or

no Gross Alpha Activity from Rn-222. Since the SCDHS does not test drinking water for Radon, as County Executive Bellone indicates in Exhibit F, the only way for homeowners can know their drinking water is safe to use is to pay for their own Radon tests – like those @ www.gfxtechnology.com/ETR-6.pdf. These tests indicate Radon gases are not removed; even from expensive filtration systems like a $3,500 WarteRx WH5 purification system advertised to remove “99.99% of the contaminants” @ www.waterx.com/why/about/. My house and 37 others on Herbert Circle are being fed drinking water contaminated by 387 pCi/L of Rn-222; higher than the EPA’s proposed MCL of 300 pCi/L.

Even if all 38 homes had WateRx purification systems that removed 99.99% of the radionuclides shown in Fig. A -- except Radon gas, the upper curve in Fig. B indicates Alpha activity from Po-218 & Po-214 alone will take about 3 hours to reach 750 pCi/L; 50 times their MCL.

Fig. C indicates water-aeration systems must be capable of reducing Rn-222 levels to below 5 pCi/L in order to meet the State’s 15 pCi/L MCL and they must be installed before any water-purification system to prevent re-growth of Polonium within the purification system itself.

Demand For Immediate Installation of 38 Aeration Systems Since Commissioner has not addressed this issue, it’s your duty to order 38 aeration systems be installed in each house on Herbert

Circle that are guaranteed to keep total Alpha activity below NY State’s 15 pCi/L Gross Alpha MCL – with Radon included. Additionally, please: 1. Order the SCWA to treat and aerate water produced by each of the 5 Barton Ave. wells identified in Exhibit C (##S-21247. S-28767, S-103447, S-37494, S-62022) to meet all NYS drinking water standards at each wellhead; 2. Advise all Herbert Circle residents to have low-dose lung CT scans capable of detecting Stage-1 lung cancer; 3. Notify all LI dermatologists to screen for cancers listed in Exhibit C and other waterborne skin cancers; 4. Impose a statewide Radon-MCL of 5 pCi/L on public, private & irrigation wells to protect all NY residents against Polonium poisoning.

Yours truly,

Dr, Carmine F. Vasile 1 REPORT OF STATEWIDE SURVEILLANCE FOR RADON IN SELECTED COMMUNITY WATER SYSTEMS, NEW YORK STATE 1989 – 1990; September 1990, by David Axelrod, M.D., New York State Department of Health Commissioner & Kenneth E. Slade, P.E., Bureau of Public Water Supply Protection Contaminant Studies Section. [http://www.gfxtechnology.com/1990-Rn.pdf] 2 RADON IN DRINKING WATER, March 1988, by David Harris, M.D., M.P.H., Commissioner Suffolk County Department of Health Services (SCDHS), & Aldo Andreoli, P.E., Director, Division of Environmental Health. [http://www.gfxtechnology.com/1988-Rn.pdf] 3 Curves in Fig. B & C from equations 20(a) to 21(d) in Algebraic approach to the radioactive decay equations, L. Moral and A. F. Pacheco, Am. J. Phys. 71, July 2003 @ http://users.df.uba.ar/sgil/physics_paper_doc/papers_phys/modern/radiactive_dacay.pdf .

HOME

FAX to: Steve Gavitt & Cindy Costello: c/o Commissioner Zucker, MD: [email protected] 518-474-2011 F: 518-474-6608 cc: Hon: Andrew Cuomo Tel: (518) 474-8390 Fax:(518) 474-1513

(www.gfxtechnology.NYSDOH.pdf)

January 30, 2015Dr. Carmine F. Vasile Ph.D. Electrophysics 60 Herbert Circle Patchogue, NY 11772 631-758-6271 (Cell: 631-807-7839, F: 730-3918)

1/21/15 Conference Call Re: Polonium Contamination in Donna Wexler’s, Tom Brinkman’s & My Tap Water

Dear Mr. Gavitt & Ms. Costello: Have you followed up on our 1/21/15 conference call with the Bureau of Water Supply Protection to confirm Polonium is covered by the State’s 15 pCi/L Gross-Alpha (α) MCL (GA-MCL)? If not, please see Table 7. Radiological Maximum Contaminant Level Determination in Exhibit A, from Part 5 of the NYS Sanitary code. Exhibit A also contains a Cancer Risk Table for some of the decay products shown in Figs. A & B for two radionuclides included in Table 7: Ra-226 & Ra-228. I modified Table 7 to indicate there’s an MCL for Polonium-210 (Po-210) & Lead-210 (Pb-210); two deadly, naturally occurring decay products of Rn-222; “RADON” in Fig. A.

Table 7 indicates the “Gross alpha activity (including radium-226 but excluding radon and uranium)” is 15 pCi/L and expressly includes Po-210 pursuant to Table 16, in addition to all the alpha emitters shown in Figs. A & B.

Fig. A shows Pb-210 is the 1st decay product of Po-214 & Po-210 is produced by Bi-210; the 1st decay product of Pb-210. Tables 7 set a 4 mrem per year MCL for “Beta [β] particle and photon [γ] radioactivity from manmade radionuclides”, but unlike the EPA’s Radionuclides Rule of 1976, Table 16 effectively set a 4 mrem/yr MCL for Pb-210. Footnote 8 of Table 7 states: “A system must determine compliance with the MCL for beta particle and photon radioactivity by using the calculation described below:

• pCi/L found in sample (from laboratory results) divided by the pCi/L equivalent of 4 mrem of exposure equals the fraction of the maximum 4 mrem/year exposure limit”. [For Pb-210, the “pCi/L equivalent of 4 mrem of exposure” is 1.2 pCi/L, according to Table MW2. Radionuclides in On-Site Monitoring Wells in the BNL Health Assessment.]

Radium-228 Decay Chain

Fig. A. Radionuclides in the Radium-226 Decay Chain regulated by NYS & EPA -- except Rn-222.

Fig. B. Radionuclides in the Radium-228 Decay Chain regulated by NYS Sanitary Code & EPA’s Radionuclides Rule of 1976.

POLONIUM CANCER RISK Exhibit A also includes cancer risk factors for several radionuclides found in LI groundwater, including Ra-228,

Pb-210, Bi-210 & Po-210. Lead-210 has the highest cancer risk factor of all Beta/Gamma emitters found in LI drinking water, yet its cancer risk factor is only 47.9% of Po-210’s -- the 7th and most deadly decay product of Rn-222.

• Exhibits B indicates my water supply had 387 pCi/L of “RADON” on November 12, 2014. Exhibit C shows 387 pCi/L of Rn-222 produces Gross Alpha activity above NY State’s GA-MCL of 15 pCi/L and

the likely source the SCWA’s Barton Ave. well field; located ~ ¾ of a mile from my house. It has no aeration tower. Exhibit D from www.gfxtechnology.com/Po.html indicates the proposed EPA GA-MCL for Radon of 300 pCi/L & its

proposed Alternative MCL (AMCL) of 4,000 pCi/L must be rejected by Governor Cuomo because a 300 pCi/L MCL will not meet NY State’s GA-MCL and a 4,000 pCi/L AMCL will not meet NY State’s 4 mrem/yr MCL for Lead-210.

Exhibit E indicates the EPA is responsible for our cancer pandemic by regulating Rn-220 while excluding Rn-222. Exhibit F indicates County Executive Bellone was made aware of excessive Radon & Lead-210 levels, but chose

to lie about this problem, rather than take actions to protect our health & welfare. Therefore, I hereby demand that you ask Governor Cuomo to intervene to protect Suffolk County residents by

ordering Suffolk County health officials to take immediate action to reduce Rn-222 levels in the water main feeding the 4 dozen homes on Herbert Circle to 5 pCi/L; the level at which Gross Alpha activity from Rn-222; Po-218, Po-214 & Po-210 will never exceed the 15 pCi/L GA-MCL, as shown in Fig. 2, Exhibit D from www.gfxtechnology.com/Po.html. Yours truly,

Dr. Carmine F. Vasile

cfv
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Typos corrected 2/20/15
cfv
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NYS Drinking Water Regulations for Radionuclides (Excerpts from Part 5 of the New York State Sanitary Code, Subpart 5-1) Table 7. Radiological Maximum Contaminant Level Determination

(www.health.ny.gov/environmental/water/drinking/regulations/) Contaminant MCL Type of Water System Determination of MCL Violation2

Combined radium-226 and radium-228 Gross alpha activity (including radium-226 but excluding radon and uranium) [Including Polonium-210 Pursuant to Table 16]

5 picocuries per liter 15 picocuries per liter

Community A violation occurs when a sample or the annual average of samples at any sampling point exceeds the MCL3,4,5,6,7.

Uranium 30 micrograms per liter Community A violation occurs when a sample or the annual average of samples at any sampling point exceeds the MCL3,4,5,6,7.

Community Water Systems designated by the State as vulnerable

A violation occurs when a sample or the annual average of samples at any sampling point exceeds the MCL3,4,5,7,9,10.

Beta particle and photon radioactivity from manmade radionuclides [but including Lead-210 pursuant to Table 16]

Four millirems per year as the annual dose equivalent to the total body or any internal organ8. Community systems designated by the

State as utilizing waters contaminated by effluents from nuclear facilities.

A violation occurs when a sample or the annual average of samples at any sampling point exceeds the MCL3,4,5,7,9,10.

1. The Radionuclides Rule including the MCLs and minimum monitoring requirements applies only to community water systems. 2. To judge compliance with the maximum contaminant levels, averages of data shall be used and shall be rounded to the same number of significant figures as the maximum contaminant level for the substance in question. 3. For systems monitoring more than once per year, compliance with the MCL is determined by a running annual average at each sampling point. If the average of any sampling point is greater than the MCL, then the system is out of compliance with the MCL. 4. For systems monitoring more than once a year, if any sample result will cause the running average to exceed the MCL at any sample point, e.g., a single sample result is greater than four times of the MCL, the system is out of compliance with the MCL immediately. 5. If a system does not collect all required samples when compliance is based on a running annual average of quarterly samples, compliance will be based on the running average of the samples collected. 6. If a sample result is less than the detection limit, zero will be used to calculate the annual average, unless a gross alpha particle activity is being used in lieu of radium-226 and/or uranium. If the gross alpha particle activity result is less than detection and is substituted for radium-226 and/or uranium, 1/2 the detection limit will be used to calculate the annual average. 7. If the MCL for radionuclides in this Table is exceeded, the community water system must give notice to the State. 8. A system must determine compliance with the MCL for beta particle and photon radioactivity by using the calculation described below: pCi/L found in sample (from laboratory results) divided by the pCi/L equivalent of 4 mrem of exposure equals the fraction of the maximum 4 mrem/year exposure limit 9. To determine compliance with the MCL, a system must monitor at a frequency as described in Table 12. 10. If the results show an MCL violation for any of the constituents, the system must conduct monthly monitoring for all species at any sampling point that exceeds the MCL. Monitoring must be conducted in accordance with Table 12 in this section. A system can resume quarterly monitoring if the rolling average of three months of samples is at or below the MCL.

Cancer Risk Tables* Radionuclide Morbidity Risk Coefficients

(per Bq) Cancer Risk per pCi/L in

drinking water Cancer Risk Relative to 210Po in Drinking Water

3H [Tritium] 1.37 x 10-12 2.59 x 10-9 0.00276% 106Ru/Rh 1.14 x 10-9 2.16 x 10-6 2.30% 134Cs 1.14 x 10-9 2.16 x 10-6 2.30% 137Cs/Ba 8.22 x 10-10 1.55 x 10-6 1.53% 210Pb 2.38 x 10-8 4.50 x 10-5 47.9% 210Bi 2.41 x 10-10 4.56 x 10-7 0.485% 210Po 4.97 x 10-8 9.40 x10-5 Reference 226Ra N/A N/A N/A 228Ra 1.04 x 10-8 1.97 x 10-5 20.1% 228Th 2.90 x 10-9 5.48 x 10-6 5.8% * From: Table 1. Federal Guidance Report No. 13 Cancer Risk Coefficients, Unit Risk Quantities for Drinking Water Concentrations, and the Concentrations Yielding a 1 in a Million Lifetime Cancer Risk for Environmentally Significant Radionuclides @ http://oehha.ca.gov/water/reports/grossbetahealth.pdf

EXHIBIT A

Fig. A. ETR test report for sample taken on 11/12/14 of radioactive water supplied by

the SCWA to 60 Herbert Circle shows 387 pCi/L of Rn-222.

Alpha Activity (0 to 800 pCi/L) vs Time (0 to 300 minutes)

Fig. B. Graphs show Alpha activity of Po-218 & Po-214 quickly exceeds the NYS Gross Alpha MCL given in Table B after 387 pCi/L of Rn-222 is added to a liter of pure water; based on Moral’s equations 1-21(d). [1]

Table A. Diseases Caused or Worsned By: (a) Radon & Polonium in Air2 (b) Radon & Polonium in Water3

1. lung cancer (typically bronchogenic) 2. squamous cell carcinoma 3. small cell carcinoma 4. adenocarcinoma 5. large cell carcinoma 6. emphysema 7. pulmonary fibrosis 8. chronic interstitial pneumonia 9. Silicosis 10. respiratory lesions 11. chromosomal aberrations

12. liver cancer 13. bladder cancer 14. stomach ulcer 15. leukemia 16. cirrhosis of liver 17. cardiovascular diseases

Fig. C. Radionuclides in the Radium-226 Decay Chain regulated by

NYS Health Code. (See Table B) Table B. Excerpts from Table 7. Radiological Maximum Contaminant Level Determination

Contaminant MCL Type of Water System Gross alpha activity (including radium-226 but excluding radon and uranium)

15 picocuries per liter (pCi/L) Community

Gross alpha activity (including radium-226 but excluding radon and uranium)

15 picocuries per liter Community

Beta particle and photon radioactivity from manmade radionuclides

Four millirems per year as the annual dose equivalent to the total body or any internal organ8

Community Water Systems designated by the State as vulnerable Community systems designated by the State as utilizing waters contaminated by effluents from nuclear facilities

8. A system must determine compliance with the MCL for beta particle and photon radioactivity by using the following calculation: pCi/L found in sample (from laboratory results) divided by the pCi/L equivalent of 4 mrem of exposure equals the fraction of the maximum 4 mrem/year exposure limit. [NOTE: BNL had 3 leaky nukes covered by this MCL.]

Tale C. Radionuclides Table for SCWA’s Barton Ave Well Field Located About ¾ Miles From Herbert Circle (From Table 2 @ http://www.gfxtechnology.com/Radon.html)

2-BARTON AVE -- 5 wells: S-21247. S-28767, S-103447, S-37494, S-62022 in North Patchogue in 2001; Dist Area 1B in 2002 serving: Bayport, Bellport, Blue Point, Bohemia, Brookhaven, East Patchogue, Hagerman & Holbrook.

Component Low Value High Value Avg. Value Number of Tests Gross Alpha Activity pci/l NA NA NA 0 Gross Beta Activity pci/l NA NA NA 0 Cesium-137 pci/l NA NA NA 0 Lead-210 pci/l NA NA NA 0 Radon

ND

329 (378 in 2001)

221

6

NOTE (1): This well field has 5 radioactive wells but only one Radiological table containing high peak and average values of Radon, but no alpha test results; clear violations of the Radionuclides Rule & Monitoring Requirements.

• NOTE (2): Rn-222 levels reported by the SCWA for 2001 & 2002 (378 & 329 pCi/L) are consistent with the 387 pCi/L measured on a sample taken 11/12/14; indicating the Barton Ave Well field has been poisoning about 4 dozen homes on Herbert Circle with radioactive decay products of Ra-226 for at least 14 years; including Pb-210 & Po-210 which have respective cancer risk factors >17,000 & 36,000 times Tritium’s; the only radionuclide the Suffolk County Health Department (SCDHS) will test tap water for. The cancer risk factor of Cesium-137 is only about 1.5% of Po-210’s; 3.4% of Pb-210’s, yet the SCWA tests for Cs-137 & Pb-210 – NOT Polonium-210 or Lead-210’s parent: Polonium-214.

1 Curves in Fig. B & C from equations 20(a) to 21(d) in Algebraic approach to the radioactive decay equations, L. Moral and A. F. Pacheco, Am. J. Phys. 71, July 2003 @ http://users.df.uba.ar/sgil/physics_paper_doc/papers_phys/modern/radiactive_dacay.pdf . 2 University of Minnesota Web page: http://enhs.umn.edu/hazards/hazardssite/radon/radonharm.html 3 NOTE: Former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop stated that radioactivity, rather than tar, accounts for at least 90% of all smoking-related lung cancers. The Center for Disease Control concluded "Americans are exposed to far more radiation from tobacco smoke than from any other source." [Quote from “Health effects of polonium.” @ http://www.lenntech.com/periodic/elements/po.htm]

Andrea
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EXHIBIT C

Polonium Pollution @ Vermont’s 5 pCi/L Action Level vs EPA’s Proposed Alternative MCL (AMCL) for Radon-222 in Drinking Water of 4,000 pCi/L1

Activity (0-6pCi/L) vs Time (0 to 60 min & 3 days)

Activity (0-15pCi/L) vs Time (0 to 180min)

Activity (0-12,000 pCi/L) vs Time (0 to 180 min)

Fig. 1. Ra-226 Decay Chain includes one radioactive gas (Rn-222), seven radioactive metals (Po-218, Pb-214, Bi-214, Po-214, Pb-210, Bi-210, Po-210) & one non-radioactive metal Pb-206. 2

Fig. 2. Alpha acivity in drinking water produced by 5 pCi/L of Rn-222, Po-218 & Po-214; predicted by Moral’s equations 1-21(d).3

Fig. 3. Top curve shows total Alpha activity produced by Rn-222 in tap water will never exceed EPA’s Gross-Alpha MCL of 15 pCi/L at Vermont’s 5 pCi/L action level.

Fig. 4. Top curve shows total Alpha activity produced by Rn-222 will exceed EPA’s Gross-Alpha MCL of 15 pCi/L less than a minute after 4000 pCi/L of Rn-222 is added to tap water.

Activity (0-5000pCi/L vs Time (0 to 60 min & 3 day)

Activity (0-5000 pCi/L) vs Time (0 to 60 min & 3 days)

Activity (0-2 pCi/L) vs Time (0 to 50 & 1000 days)

Radiation Energy (MEV) vs Time (minutes)

Fig. 5 Alpha Activity from 4000 pCi/L of Rn-222 and its fastest decaying Alpha emitters: Po-218 & Po-214.

Fig. 6. Beta & Photon Activity from 4000 pCi/L of Rn-222 and its fastest decaying, carcinogenic Beta/Photon emitters: Pb-214, Bi-214, Bi-210.

Fig. 7 Alpha/Beta/Photon Activity from 4000 pCi/L of Po-214 and its progeny: Pb-210, Bi-210 & Po-210.*

Fig. 8. Relative Alpha, Beta & Gamma Radiation-Energy) emitted by each atom of Rn-222, Po-218, Pb-214, Bi-214 & Po-214. 4

* NOTE: The horizontal line in Fig. 6 is 1.2 pCi/L; the activity at which Pb-210 in drinking water delivers a dose of 4 mRem/yr to an average person; the EPA MCL for Beta and/or Photon emitters adopted in 1976. 1 The 2012 water quality report Suffolk County Water Authority (SCWA) sates: “In 2011 we monitored for radon, and gross alpha and beta particles at 87 locations throughout our distribution system. The results for each distribution area are noted on pages 13 through 19. Overall, the test results for radon ranged from non-detect (no radon found) to 303 pCi/L. Currently there is no established state or federal MCL for radon. EPA is proposing to require water suppliers to provide water with radon levels no higher than 4,000 pCi/L." Quote from http://65.36.213.246/DWQR2012/SCWA_2012_AWQR_page5_educational%20info.pdf. See SCWA Radionuclides Tables @ http://www.gfxtechnology.com/Radon.html -- with a link to a Petition to Governor Cuomo entitled: “Adopt Vermont's 5 pCi/L action level as a NYS MCL for Radon gases in each water well used for drinking, bottling, irrigation, or any other use.” 2 List of Alpha emitters regulated by the EPA’s Radionuclides Rule of 1976 in CERCLA Dirctive No. 9283.1-14.includes Ra-226, Po-218, Po-214, Po-210 NOT Rn-222. [http://www.epa.gov/superfund/health/contaminants/radiation/pdfs/9283_1_14.pdf 3 Curves in Fig. B & C from equations 20(a) to 21(d) in Algebraic approach to the radioactive decay equations, L. Moral and A. F. Pacheco, Am. J. Phys. 71, July 2003 @ http://users.df.uba.ar/sgil/physics_paper_doc/papers_phys/modern/radiactive_dacay.pdf . 4 NOTE: One MeV is equal to 0.16 trillionth of a joule, 1 rad equals 0.01 joules/kg, radiation energy levels and other parameters from pages 42 & 78, EVS Human Health Fact Sheet for Radium (Argonne National Laboratory, August 2005)

(This page @ www.gfxtechnology.com/Po.html)

cfv
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EXHIBIT D

EXHIBIT E

Suffolk County Executive Steven Bellone commented on your post. [Notes added on 2/5/15 by Dr. Carmine F. Vasile] 1. Suffolk County Executive Steven Bellone wrote: As with all emerging contaminants, SCDHS is concerned with potential radionuclide contamination, and remains proactive in investigating potential sources. In fact, the SCDHS has the only certified radiological laboratory on Long Island. To date, the SCDHS has not confirmed any significant concentrations of radionuclides in public water supply wells in Suffolk County. [False] 2. With respect to your specific questions, radon levels are naturally low on Long Island compared with background levels in other areas of the country, tritium levels have been well under drinking water standards, and there have been no confirmed significant detections of lead-210 (which is a naturally occurring radionuclide for which there is currently no drinking water standard). [False: See NOTE A] 3. The Suffolk County Department of Health Services, Office of Water Resources currently tests all community water supply wells for radionuclides every 3 years, except that Suffolk County Water Authority wells closest to Brookhaven National Laboratory are sampled every year as a precaution. In addition, there is also a monitoring well network upgradient of the Suffolk County Water Authority Wells that are frequently sampled by Suffolk County Department of Health Services staff, Suffolk County Water Authority and Brookhaven National Laboratory. This sampling exceeds the requirements of the Safe Drinking Water Act. [Misleading, the SCDHS doesn’t test for Radon] 4. The NYSDOH, the USEPA, and the SCDHS have previously reviewed the Suffolk County Water Authority’s Annual Water Quality Report supplements that included detections of Lead-210. However, these detections were determined to be likely false positives, and subsequent resampling by SCWA in 2013 did not identify any detections. The standard error, also known as uncertainty, for nearly all of the historical detections were close to or more than the actual measurements reported by Suffolk County Water Authority’s contract laboratory. The Suffolk County Water Authority has investigated the high uncertainties and they were informed by their contract laboratory that the results were an anomaly of the analysis. [False, Table 19 below shows a 14-test average was 77.1; 64 times the 4 mrem/yr MCL in the NYS Sanitary Code] 5. Radon is a naturally occurring radioactive gas produced from the breakdown of radium which may be present in certain soil and rock geological formations. Studies conducted by the USEPA reveal that radon is a natural constituent of most groundwaters. Based on historical monitoring and research, it has been determined that the radon levels detected in Suffolk County water resources were below the natural background level found in other areas of the country. At present, there is no enforceable drinking water standard for radon; however, please note that our staff in the Suffolk County Department of Health Services, Office of Water Resources routinely collect samples for gross alpha, gross beta and tritium analyses. The gross alpha analysis would identify the presence of radon’s parent compound, Radium-226, which is an alpha emitter and regulated under the USEPA Radionuclide Rule; gross alpha results in public water supplies in Suffolk have never approached drinking water standards. [False] 6. Finally, in response to your inquiry on the BNL sewage treatment plant, the NYSDEC has determined that the relocation of the outfall to groundwater will have beneficial effects on the Peconic River. Our evaluation of the proposed discharge, using best available modeling and assessment tools, shows that the outfall will not be near the contributing areas to any public supply wells, and the discharge is not expected to impact public water supplies. [False, the NYSDEC never tests groundwater for radionuclides produced by Radon-222, for example.]

January 29 at 2:44pm · Like Carmine VasileSuffolk County Executive Steven Bellone January 27 at 9:55am ·

Comment Re: "Bellone eyes added sewers to fight pollution" by Emily Dooley, Newsday online (January 23, 2014) Dear Mr. Bellone: Did you see the following comment? If so, please address this issue because nitrogen doesn't cause cancer.

NEWSDAY COMMENT “If Supervisor Bellone read water quality & supplemental well reports @ scwa.com, which show huge amounts of Radon in wells near BNL, he would know the "number one threat to public health and safety in Suffolk County” is not "nitrogen pollution of ground and surface waters” -- it's pollution from some of the 39 isotopes of Radon; the 2nd leading cause of lung cancer. One of its isotopes, Radon-222; produces the most carcinogenic of all water contaminants, Lead-210, which is found in SCWA wells, as is Tritium (H-3). Lead-210's cancer risk is about 20,000 times higher than Tritium's, yet the SC Health Department tests our groundwater only for Gross Alpha, Gross Beta & Tritium. To make matters worse, the DEC recently gave tentative approval to DOE's application to divert radioactive discharge from BNL's sewage treatment plant from the fast-moving Peconic river to slow-moving ground water in the Pine Barrens. Because NYS allows water companies to blend contaminated water sources if it's cheaper than treating, once radionuclides from this new source reaches SCWA wells it will be pumped (untreated) back to the surface to re-pollute ground water, lakes & streams. Why is Bellone allowing this?”

NOTE A: Exhibit A, Table 19 & Fig. 19 below from www.gfxtechnology.com/Radon.html show Bellone lied when he wrote: “…and there have been no confirmed significant detections of lead-210 (which is a naturally occurring radionuclide for which there is currently no drinking water standard).” Table 19: LAMBERT AVE -- 2 wells: S-71881, S-71882 in Mastic in 2001; Dist Area 20 in 2002 serving: Mastic, Mastic Beach, Moriches, North Shirley, Ridge, Shoreham, South Manor, South Ridge, Westhampton Beach.

Fig. 19: Fraudulent Table from 2003 AWQR shows 232 pCi/L Alpha activity from Radon, but only 4.0 pCi/L Alpha activity from Radon progeny.

Component Low Value High Value Avg. Value Number of Tests Gross Alpha Activity pci/l ND 1.5 ND 14 Gross Beta Activity pci/l ND 2.0 ND 14 Cesium-137 pci/l ND ND ND 14 Lead-210 pci/l ND 1080.0 77.1 14 Radon ND ND ND 5

NOTE: More obvious examples of violations of the Radionuclides Rule & Monitoring Requirements suborned by County Executive Bellone who wrote on his Facebook page “there have been no confirmed significant detections of lead-210”; falsely alleging the 1080 pCi/L entry in Fig. 19 is merely an “anomaly of the analysis” made by the SCWA’s laboratory; not the County’s.

EXHIBIT F