“On a warm July evening, Yolanda Badback described the noxious fumes that haunt the air where she lives. Unlike the fragrance of sagebrush or the sweet scent of juniper and piñon, the odor is astringent and sulfuric, hard to breathe. Sometimes it forces Badback and her family of eight to stay indoors. At its worst, it causes nausea.”
The Nation’s Last Uranium Mill Plans to Import Estonia’s Radioactive Waste
Jessica Douglas | High Country News | November 1, 2021 | 4,279 words