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US Troops Still Dodging Deadly Showers
Military races to inspect more than 90,000 facilities to reduce deadly threat
WASHINGTON - The military is racing to inspect more than 90,000 U.S.-run facilities across Iraq to reduce a deadly threat troops face far off the battlefield: electrocution or shock while showering or using appliances.
Pfc. Justin Shults shows some of the burn wounds he received after being electrocuted in a shower facility in Iraq, in this photo taken in January in San Antonio, Texas. Shults suffered third-degree burns on 13-percent of his body. He is suing contractor KBR Inc. for faulty wiring of the facility. (Kin Man Hui / San Antonio Express-News via AP)
About one-third of the inspections so far have turned up major electrical problems, according to interviews and an internal military document obtained by The Associated Press. Half of the problems they found have since been fixed but about 65,000 facilities still need to be inspected, which could take the rest of this year. Senior Pentagon officials were on Capitol Hill this week for briefings on the findings.
The work assigned to Task Force SAFE, which oversees the inspections and repairs, is aimed at preventing deaths like that of Staff Sgt. Ryan Maseth, 24, of Pittsburgh. He died in January 2008, one of at least three soldiers killed while showering since the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
Scores more soldiers suffered shocks between September 2006 and July 2008, according to a database maintained by KBR Inc., the Houston-based contractor that oversees maintenance at most U.S. facilities in Iraq.
"We got a ton of buildings we know probably aren't safe and we just don't have them done yet," said Jim Childs, an electrician the task force hired to help with the inspections. "It's Russian roulette. I cringe every time I hear of a shock."
Ron Vance, who served as a sergeant in the California Army National Guard, remembers being knocked out cold in a shower building in 2004 in Taji, Iraq. He said he screamed and fell while showering, suffering burns on his back and shoulders. Another soldier who tried to pry him from the shower head also was injured. Vance, 57, of Fresno, Calif., said he's still too traumatized to shower without his wife nearby.
Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., called Task Force SAFE's findings troubling. He said the task force is doing good work but said problems should have been fixed much earlier.
"Just imagine getting the news that they've done 25,000 facilities, but your son or daughter is in the 65,000 they haven't done," Casey told the AP.
Last year, 94 troops stationed in Iraq, Afghanistan or other Central Command countries sought medical treatment for electric shock, according to Defense Department health data. KBR's database lists 231 electric shock incidents in the more than 89,000 facilities the company runs in Iraq, according to military records.
KBR is the target of a wrongful death lawsuit filed by Maseth's family. They claim the company knew there were electrical problems in the building where he died, but didn't fix them. His mother testified last year on Capitol Hill.
Army investigators have since reclassified Maseth's death as negligent homicide caused by KBR and two of its supervisors. An Army investigator said KBR failed to ensure work was done by qualified electricians and plumbers. The case is under legal review.
"KBR is not responsible for the electrocution deaths widely reported, including that of Staff Sgt. Ryan Maseth," Heather Browne, a KBR spokeswoman, said in an e-mail.
KBR and another contractor, Arkel International, are the targets of a second lawsuit, filed by the family of another soldier electrocuted in Iraq, Staff Sgt. Christopher Lee Everett, 23, of Huntsville, Texas. Everett, a member of the Texas Army National Guard, was killed in September 2005 when the power washer he was using to clean a vehicle short-circuited.
Task Force SAFE inspectors found many of the facilities that fall under KBR's contract have electrical problems, according to an internal military document obtained by The Associated Press. Of the 20,340 maintained by KBR and inspected so far, 6,935 failed the government inspection, the document said. When about 2,000 of the buildings with faulty work were re-inspected, the facilities passed, the document said.
The Defense Contract Management Agency has accepted KBR's plans to correct the problems, according to the document the AP obtained. It said the agency will closely oversee KBR's work.
Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., questioned why KBR has been allowed to continue to perform electrical work in Iraq. He said the military should take a more careful look at the electrical work in Afghanistan, too, where KBR also has a large contract for electrical work.
"If they found widespread problems, the obvious question is why has there not been action to remove the contract and bring in another contractor?" Dorgan said.
Browne, the company spokeswoman, said KBR has cooperated with the government, performing technical inspection and providing requested information.
Task Force SAFE (the acronym stands for Safety Action for Fire and Electricity) said it is making progress. The Army is tracking reports of just over two fires each day in Iraq, mostly blamed on electrical faults. But that's down from nearly five fires a day, Brig. Gen. Kurt Stein said in an e-mail to the AP. Stein said the number of electrical shocks has also been reduced.
"Although we are still seeing some electrical shocks, they tend to be minor and are often preventable," Stein said.
In addition to the repairs, Stein said the military has purchased more reliable surge protectors to replace ones that had been bought in Iraq.
"Our hearts go out to the families of those who died or were injured from electrical shock or fire," Stein said. "We take our job to inspect, identify, repair and prevent electrical and fire incidents very seriously."
Vance, the guardsman who was shocked in the shower, said the military didn't take his injuries seriously. He's since retired on partial disability from the Veterans Affairs Department for a "cognitive disorder" related to the incident, but he has sought additional compensation for what he describes as ongoing knee and shoulder problems for falling in the shower.
"I really don't think they cared. I didn't die," Vance said. "It wasn't a priority on their list. It was like, he's fine. He's alive. He's OK."
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26 Comments so far
Show AllUnbelievable.
This is satire or fiction, right?
Crazy, huh?
There's an undergraduate in my lab whose father is over there right now, as a contractor trying to fix all these bad electrical problems. With the crap economy = no construction, that was his best option. He's working on a military base with an airfield, but instead of flying him into the base (relatively safe) they flew him into a different city so they could drive through Iraq to get to the base (not safe).
The incompetence really is stunning. Read this book:
www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1400044871/counterpunchmaga
So the solution to a bad economy at home is to wreck somebody else's on the other side of the planet? Get real. Anybody stupid enough to join an invasion force shouldn't come back at all. We don't need more vicious morons in this country - DC is already saturated. This lie about 'needing money for college' or 'no other jobs available' is incredibly stupid, selfish, self-destructive, and unrealistic. You don't fix your own problems by creating problems for others - you stay home and get your own house in order.
Yes, I think military life is wonderful, and a great career - but an invasion force is where every decent human being has to draw the line. Because then it is no longer about 'defending your own' but about attacking 'the other' - and that's where we have to re-order our thinking. The US military is an illegal, immoral, destructive force - the economic hell we're facing is the inevitable result of a breakdown of social values. Pull out the troops? Hell, no, I'm way past that. Just walk away and abandon them - let them figure out what to do next, in a hostile foreign country half way across the planet. They thought it was such a good idea to go - against what 10,000,000 people across the planet protested (any probably billions more agreed.) Maybe if they learn the hard way - those that survive - they'll start contributing to society instead of destroying it.
"So the solution to a bad economy at home is to wreck somebody else's on the other side of the planet? "
Do you honestly think that's what I think?
I'm not even talking about an enlisted person.
I'm with you, clean the grunge out of the gene pool. If they want to go kill others for college money they deserve what they get. Right on! They have no guts at all without an automatic weapon. Gene pool slime! Next time the morons want money for college they can get it from FAFSA and ed.gov and Pell grants just like everyone in the real America does. The military is only for brainwashed losers like that little ferret faced loser "general" David Petraeus. Mr. Gedunk!
michael jordan
http://sites.google.com/site/apolloguide/
No government has ever cared about it's citizenry as people, only as sources of revenue and cannon fodder, but soldiers are by definition expendable.
Vance said he didn't THINK they cared if he lived or died? Somebody should have had a talk with him before he got mixed up with these people.
Cheney/Bush and company and legacy that keeps on giving a necrotocracy for almost all.
"Military men are dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns for foreign policy." Henry Kissinger, quoted by Bob Woodward in The Final Days, 1976
And they've proved that Kissisnger was right - again.
Another question needs answering is why is a 52 year old Sgt. from the Calif. NG in a combat zone?
When we start using old men and boys in combat, something is very wrong.
Yeah, well that's how fascism works. Hitler did the same thing. And I can't help but wonder if we really need a 52-yr old stupid enough to go along with this to come back here - we have enough idiots here already. He could have refused. He didn't. That isn't just a moral decision - that's just common sense. Destroying another country can't be more important than fixing your own - or this is what happens. Fascism requires incredible stupidity to follow - and yet millions follow without question. That's what is really scary - a zombie population.
In sixth century Rome all resources were being spent trying to maintain respect for the might of Rome on the frontiers. Like now, there was money for war but not for bread for the citizens.
Even with the games in the coliseum still providing daily entertainment the masses were starving. If you want people to wake up it wouldn't hurt to get rid of TV.
This calls for a little advanced thinking about the inconvenient fact that the desert is made of sand which is like glass which is an electrical insulator. With KBR and the Texas contract cowboys handling the wiring they haven't considered a way to ground these prefab barracks adequately. It is much harder to ground an out-of-a-box building to achieve a safe circuit in the shifting sands of Iraq.
They are going to have to use more plastic fixtures for the comfort facilities and sink very deep electrodes into the sand to fix it, too expensive for Texas cowboys who have already gone home and cashed their checks and are enjoying pepita encrusted fillets on their Dallas barbecues, larding up in anticipation of their new contracts on the US Mexico border.
One thing is sure though it is a very good thing that they never installed bidets...
michael jordan
http://sites.google.com/site/apolloguide/
you don't really need grounded curcuits with AC it all goes back to the panel. the problem is the circuits faulted ie they grounded thru the dude. a good ground would have made no difference in these cases. what they needed and the codes here require is that a GFCI be installed on circuits near water -- bathrooms and kitchens.
its just negligence plain an simple, no need to consider the relative electrical conductivitiy of sand, silt and clay.
This ain't the United States and NEC doesn't apply and these Texas non-union types have never even seen a NEC code book. There are no electrical inspectors in Iraq it is hillbilly non-union heaven.
These are all metal stud partitioned pop-up buildings meant to go up in hours. Cheap half-measures like insufficient grounds ARE problematic. The other issue is that they take two phases of 450 volt 3 phase systems and use them to produce 270v RMS to run florescent systems. They do this because they want to save copper because the higher voltage requires smaller gauge wire on their purchasing contracts which means higher profits for KBR stock holders. Those profits are made in part by electrocuting soldiers by incompetence and shoddy workmanship. These idiots don't know a Neutral from a Ground and can easily mistake in the fog of wartime construction a hot wire for a neutral and cross-connect them. When these same idiots do this in a stateside system there are measures in place to shunt the dangerous voltage away to ground. But not in Iraq.
michael jordan
http://sites.google.com/site/apolloguide/
When a person is electocuted, they die. Pfc Justin Schulz suffered an electric shock, a bit less final, but troubling nonetheless.
"just abandon them..." GREAT
Let them sink or swim, either sink in the sand or swim in the sand, either selection would teach them a good lesson to stay home and leave other people alone.
HAS A BIT TO DO WITH "NO BID" CONTRACTS, RIGHT?
ANOTHER 'FEATHER' IN THE CHENEY/BUSH PROTECTION FEDORA...
The question to be asked is would this have happened if the facilities had been built by the old Army Core of Engineers.?
The next question is , why is it more important to cut costs then to ensure a facility safe?
Thirdly , were there no private contracters involved making Monies off the US Militray and off wars of aggression would the United States of America involve itself in as many wars as it does?
It is all Mammon all the time. This is how Mammon pays his worshippers back.
"The question to be asked is would this have happened if the facilities had been built by the old Army Core of Engineers.?"
It would not, never happen. Nor if the Seabees built them.
"The next question is , why is it more important to cut costs then to ensure a facility safe?"
You KNOW the answer to that one.
I'd enjoy putting every one resopnisble for this....ALL of them (that includes the office smurfs) in their showers.
The G.W.Bush Administration were totally successful in their invasion and occupation of Iraq.
The object was to divide and destroy Iraq to promote Israel and remove the Iraqi support for Palestine.
In case you didn't know it -- Israel has had a war against Islam since 1948 and getting the US to have its own "West Bank" in Iraq was a stroke of genius.
Billions of US Taxpayer dollars wasted on totally shoddy reconstruction and blatant theft in Iraq is shameful but inconsequential .
But the original goal was achieved -- send another Muslim country back 100 years , leave Depleted Uranium , Cluster Bombs over 1 Million dead and 4 Million displaced Iraqis and millions of people with hate for the US.
The War on Islam -- 23% of the World's population -- on behalf of Israel/Jews who compose 0.2% of the World's population.
Absolutely unbelievable that the Pentagon would contract with KBR to repair the very work they botched. The officials should be tried for war profiteering, if nothing else. Read or reread Arthur Miller's All My Sons.
In a sense, this is HILARIOUS!
I feel sorry for the troops who suffer these damn electrocutions, sure, but the story's otherwise hilarious. It shows how hellbent fool the U.S. government is and all of its damn supporters are. Everyone of those assholes (excuse my language if you feel like doing so, otherwise s'cuse me) should be electrocuted like these troops have been! That surely wouldn't be less than just.
Surely. I'm convinced. Really. If you need someone to apply these extra-"curricular" electrocutions, then let me know. I'm available for hire. I'll gladly lend a hand. KBR, donald dumsfeld, cheney, etcetera, and all of their supporters; including the JDL, Jewish "Defence" League". I'm ready to be of service any time, Sir!
Edward1793: The article states Mr.Vance is 57 years old, not 52.
I'll give them a word of advice, maybe cut these incidents in half: don't connect the black wire to the water pipe.
Inspections? feh. We got no nanny state here.
Cliche alert.
Same old story. The old, the rich and corrupt send the young to kill and die and get maimed. Meanwhile war contractors sell shoddy goods and services at inflated prices. It is a money making game in which our soldiers and the people of other countries are the pawns. All of us pay in funds that are diverted from schools, health, peaceful industries and progressive energy development.
What I have written sounds like a cliched rant until you see examples like this one. These accidents are not a fluke, but a product of "take the money and run" attitude of war contractors.
Lots of books and movies deal with this, especially from the WW I era: Grand Illusion, All Quiet on the Western Front, poetry by Siegfried Sassoon... could go on and on.
We have to stop glorifying war in any way. Our soldiers want to serve and they sometimes believe they are doing good. Let us change the agenda of armies to employ the strength, beauty and idealism of youth for peaceful uses and the common good.
OK there are some people who would like to harm the US. But we are so stuck in the idea that you combat that with troops and huge military bases and contracts. We are encouraged to continue to think this way because it keeps some people like Erik Prince very comfortable. It is not only ineffective, a dead end, it helps turn the populations, who just want to live, into supporters of the terrorist tendencies. There is always another way.
Joe