Thursday, June 25, 2009

According to the feds, the $673 million Kansas City Plant will make it rain

Posted by Nadia Pflaum on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 2:09 PM

click to enlarge Bannister Road Kansas City Plant
  • Bannister Road Kansas City Plant

When the feds sell a project, by God, they really sell a project.

Representatives from the National Nuclear Security Administration and the General Services Administration dropped by City Hall yesterday to ask for the Planning and Zoning Committee's final blessing on the Kansas City Plant's move from offices on Bannister Road to a new facility in what one presenter called "the industrial heart of the 6th District." In doing so, they threw around so many million-dollar figures that Lil Wayne ought to remix the meeting's Channel 2 audio into his next club banger.

The meeting was the public's last chance to comment in support or opposition to the relocation of the Kansas City Plant, which is the U.S.'s primary site where the non-nuclear parts for nuclear weapons are manufactured, assembled and procured.

Ann Suellentrop, a registered nurse and member of Peace Works KC and Physicians for Social Responsibility, spoke out against the plant along with a representative of the Sierra Club. But the other testimony was a parade of yeses: from the South Kansas City Chamber of Commerce, the Kansas City Port Authority, the Heavy Constructors Association, the project's architects from HNTB, and the project's development team of Zimmer Real Estate Services LC and CenterPoint Property Trust of Chicago.

click to enlarge Hiroshima, August 1945
  • Hiroshima, August 1945

The meeting was much less contentious than last week's Planned Industrial Expansion Authority hearing last Friday.

Numerous no-nuke advocates attended that meeting, and the public's

commentary period was cut short. Retired plant worker Maurice Copeland

was tossed out for raising his voice.

Yesterday's presentations

from Michael Brincks, acting director of the GSA's Heartland Region,

and NNSA Site Manager Mark Holecek gave the impression that, rather

than spending $673 million, Kansas City is actually receiving an

envelope of cash in the form of future tax payments to the Grandview

School District and a cattle-prod-like stimulus to the local economy.

According to Holecek, the new facility will employ 2,100 employees,

less than the current 2,400. Still, that's  2,100 high-paying jobs that

won't be leaving KC, Holecek said, and they'll be looking to hire young

workers to make up for the plant's large population of  50-and-older

employees nearing retirement. The newer, more environmentally sound

construction will save $100 million a year in maintenance fees

over the ancient Bannister Road facility.

Contamination at that site

has already been cleaned up under the Department of National Resources'

watch -- for a scant $65 million, Holecek said. And there's the promise

of wetland mitigation on the site and even a hiking trail. Listening

to Holecek, KC's new nuclear weapons factory started to sound more like

a parks-and-recreation project.

Brincks' presentation on behalf

of the GSA, with his arsenal of dollar signs, was even more impressive:

Once the new plant is completed, in 2011, it will earn the city $5.2

million in property taxes. It'll pour another $2.1 million into our

coffers in payroll taxes. The project will inject another $75 million

into the local economy, which, spread over 20 years, is a lot. (Still, he left that figure for us to multiply for ourselves -- why should he have all the fun?).

Here's

where the math got really fancy: Every million dollars spent on

construction, Brincks said, represents $4.3 million in future

local-economy stimulus. And the farmland soon to be taken

over by this state-of-the-art facility, which once represented a mere

$652 in taxes to the Grandview School District, will now rain

$1.6 million a year. Does it help the children? Brincks seemed to think

so.

But, peacenik Suellentrop reminded the council, what about President Barack Obama's speech? The one he gave last April in Prague,

in which he said that the United States, as the only nation ever to deploy a nuclear weapon, had a moral responsibility to lead the way

toward a nuclear-weapons-free world? What's the point of building a $673 million nuclear-weapons facility in the midst of disarmament talks?

In his presentation, Holecek acknowledged that there had been "much debate" on the Kansas City plant's future workload. He stressed that the new plant is designed to be much more flexible to the nation's changing needs while keeping employees' "critical skills" sharp in the face of a future threat to national safety. Plus, the plant has been doing more and more national security activity. Asked about that vague phrase after the meeting, Holecek said it was something he wasn't really allowed to talk much about, but it can include non-nuclear weapons production and design work for the Department of Defense and its private-sector contractors.

Before the council voted, Suellentrop passed

around an invitation to hear Hiroshima survivor Yoshiko

Kajimoto speak. That event is Wednesday, July 8, from 7 to 8:30 p.m. in the

Hudson Auditorium in the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art at Johnson

County Community College.

Councilman John Sharp asked for a paper invitation, and Suellentrop passed them around. "I certainly share the concerns of the people who are concerned with this project and who feel uncomfortable with the decisions made by the past administration," Sharp said. He added that he was pleased to see the current administration's dedication to reducing the U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile. He hoped that more remediation wouldn't be necessary at the old Bannister site but said that it was good to keep more than 2,000 "good-paying" jobs in Kansas City and to accept the monetary spin-off promised to the local economy. He hoped to see the nation take more steps toward nuclear disarmament. Then he advanced the project to the committee for a vote. It passed unanimously.

"It's a sad day for Kansas City, in my opinion," Suellentrop said in the hallway outside the council chambers. She expects the council to rubber-stamp the project today without any further debate.

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This otherwise excellent depiction of the Government Dog and Pony show selling job hungry Kansas Citians snake oil refers to Ms. Suellentrop as a "Peacenik" Why not describe her as leader of Phsysicians for Social Rsponsibility thus granting her some respect for being informed and intellectually responsible. Peacenik unfortunately has become a perjorative in general public discourse to discount people as fuzzy headed idealists. The Government representatives are fuzzy headed in arguing for building things that the public who is going to pay for them cannot know about. Secrecy is the end of democracy.

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Posted by Bob Kinsey on 06/29/2009 at 9:46 PM

Nice article in a rag that sells classifieds to hookers. Make love not war, right? I'm sure most of the liberal intellectuals that read your paper aren't sober enough to realize that the picture you printed was of the now closed Mound Plant in Miamisburg Ohio. Too bad you don't even know what the plant that has been in our community for 60 years looks like.

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Posted by Guest on 06/29/2009 at 8:31 PM

Dear Kansas City, City Council:

It is not just an obvious moral issue but also a decision that flies in the face of logic to pour more tax money into the "Nuclear Weapons Pit Of Death". As the "lynchpin" of the nuclear weapons industry YOU are just as responsible for the deaths of thousands of innocent individuals if these Weapons Of Mass Destruction are ever used!

Save the money and direct it into sustainable development throughout the city creating jobs and well being... Not a potential Armageddon!

Stop and THINK!

Patricia L. Nelson
PeaceWorks, Kansas City
Resident in South KC, near the new plant

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Posted by Patricia Nelson on 06/25/2009 at 6:15 PM
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