New Mexico activist seeking atomic bomb reparations attends State of the Union

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Click play to listen to a version of this article. (New Mexico News Connection) A New Mexico resident attended President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address as legislation is pending to expand the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act. The measure was passed in 1990, with money going to residents of the Southwest who were harmed, either from uranium mining or atomic tests in 1945. The original legislation included “downwinders” in Arizona, Utah and Nevada. But New Mexico was left out, despite the state being home to the world’s first atomic bomb testing and explosion. Tina Cordova, co-founder of the Tularosa Basin Downwinders Consortium, has made it her life’s work to get New Mexico families compensated.  “I’ve been working for 19 years to bring attention to the negative health effects the people of New Mexico suffered,” Cordova explained. “The Trinity bomb was detonated in the middle of our state and adjacent to a bunch of towns where 13,000 people lived in a 50-mile radius.” Cordova was invited to the annual Presidential address by Senator Ben Ray Lujan, D-N.M. In the coming days, the Senate is scheduled to vote on legislation to reauthorize the act, now scheduled to end in June. Cordova...

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