[ RadSafe ] " Port gets dirty-bomb detectors "

Jim Hardeman Jim_Hardeman at dnr.state.ga.us
Tue May 8 21:02:11 CDT 2007


"Eliminate the chance of 'dirty bombs' coming into the city"??!!
ELIMINATE??!! Man, I'd like to have a couple of those "100% guaranteed"
detector systems! 
 
Jim Hardeman
Jim_Hardeman at dnr.state.ga.us 

>>> "Brennan, Mike  (DOH)" <Mike.Brennan at DOH.WA.GOV> 5/8/2007 12:11
>>>
Of course, these systems work even better if you don't advertise their
location and how they operate.  But, of course, from a political point
of view, it is more effective to be seen doing something than it is to
not be seen doing something effective. 

-----Original Message-----
From: radsafe-bounces at radlab.nl [mailto:radsafe-bounces at radlab.nl] On
Behalf Of Jaro
Sent: Tuesday, May 08, 2007 4:39 AM
To: multiple cdn; RADSAFE
Subject: [ RadSafe ] " Port gets dirty-bomb detectors "

http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/story.html?id=61bb3880-589c-4

f6f-
a241-04ffc3453532

Port gets dirty-bomb detectors

ANNE SUTHERLAND, The Gazette, May 08, 2007

Two new tools to scan containers that arrive at the Port of Montreal
were unveiled yesterday.

Politicians say the devices will eliminate the chance of ''dirty
bombs''
coming into the city.

A dirty bomb is a device that combines radioactive material with
conventional explosives.

Low-level radiation detector portals and a car-mounted X-ray system
that
can be driven around a container are now in use at the entryway to the
port and will help fight the war on terrorism, officials said.

Federal Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day and Public Works Michael
Fortier unveiled the two new devices yesterday at the offices of the
Canada Border Services Agency near the Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine
tunnel.

Each radiation detection portal consists of two panels, four metres
high
and separated by the width of a container. All arriving containers are
loaded on a transport truck and driven through the portal. The machine
identifies sources of artificial and natural radiation. Artificially
sourced radiation is associated with nuclear devices.

The radiation detector will not only sniff out bombs, but will
identify
the ingredients necessary to make these kinds of bombs. The car-borne
X-ray machine is a second check for any container that emits traces of
artificially sourced radiation.

The Port of Montreal currently has two X-ray equipped vehicles and
eight
portal scanners.

These two scanning systems are now in place in Montreal and Saint
John,
N.B., and and are in the process of being installed in Vancouver and
Halifax.

The new radiation detection portal devices cost $210,000 each and the
X-ray machines cost $100,000 each, not including the cost of the
vehicle.

The Canada-wide budget for these new systems is $8 million, said
Amelie
Morin, spokesperson for the Canada Border Services Agency.

About 1.3 million containers enter and leave the port every year.

asutherland at thegazette.canwest.com 

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