To anyone who now has a claim pending with the VA. Insist they find the lost Titan II Missile download toxic UDMH surveys that the Davis Monthan AFB Bioengineering report says exist. The DM AFB Bioengineering report shows who was copied with the DM AFB report. These Titan II missile fuel download reports exist, we just have to find them.
Quoting from the DM AFB non-download report on this website:
These Titan II complex fuel vapor surveys were performed during the period 4 November 1982 through 8 April 1983 at the request of Headquarters Strategic Air Command, Bioenvironmental Engineering Division (HQ SAC/SGPB). The purpose of these surveys was to determine background levels of hydrazine, UDMH and NDMA at typical Titan II complexes in alert status for comparison with results reported during deactivation fuel propellant download operations.
If anyone has time, please try and request someone in the USAF find these reports for us. Let me know if you are willing to track these down?
DISTRIBUTION LIST
HQ AFSC/SGP, Andrews AFB MD 20334
HQ AFMSC/SGPA Brooks AFB TX 78235
AFAMRL/TB Wright-Patterson AFB OH 45433
USAF Hosp Davis-Monthan/SGPB Davis-Monthan AFB AZ 85707
USAFSAM/TSK Brooks AFB TX 78235
390th SMW Davis-Monthan AFB AZ 85707
390th MIMS Davis-Monthan AFB AZ 85707
HQ SAC/SGPB Offutt AFB NE 68113
USAF Hosp Wiesbaden/SGB APO New York 09220
OL AD, USAF OEHL APO San Francisco 06274
Here is the history of Brooks AFB, TX Environmental Group, maybe this will help in locating the missing Titan II Missile UDMH studies.
In the early 1980s, other organizations relocated to Brooks AFB. Among them were the Air Force Human Resources Laboratory and the USAF Occupational and Environmental Health Laboratory.
The Aerospace Medical Division was redesignated the Human Systems Division on Feb. 6, 1987.[6]
The 1990s ushered in a new era. For several years the Department of Defense had been looking for leaner, and smarter cost-saving ways to do business. Downsizing became the key word, but Brooks AFB continued to grow.[6]
In 1991 four of its laboratories—the Air Force Human Resources Laboratory, the Air Force Drug Testing Laboratory, the Harry G. Armstrong Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory, and the Air Force Occupational and Environmental Health Laboratory, as well as the laboratory function of the USAF School of Aerospace Medicine—combined to became the Armstrong Laboratory, one of four super laboratories in the Air Force.[6] Also, the Air Force Center for Environmental Excellence was formed and located at Brooks. This organization has the monumental task of restoring closing installations to their original state and of ensuring that future installations are environmentally safe.[6]
Consolidations continued in 1992 with the merging of the Air Force Systems Command and the Air Force Logistics Command into a new organization called the Air Force Materiel Command. As a part of the new command, the Human Systems Division at Brooks again changed its name to the Human Systems Center.
Following the 1995 BRAC, when Brooks AFB was removed from the Base Realignment and Closure list, city, state, military, and community planners began several years of hard work to develop a plan to privatize approved the gradual transition in ownership of Brooks AFB from the Air Force to the Brooks Development Authority. This transition came into full effect on 22 July 2002, when the Brooks Development Authority assumed control of the newly named Brooks City-Base.
In 2005, Brooks City-Base was once again placed on the BRAC list.
Air Force operations ceased on 15 September 2011.