KAREN GAY SILKWOOD
Today in #LaborHistory :
November13 -- via --
www.unionist.com
Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union activist Karen Silkwood is killed in a suspicious car crash on her way to deliver documents to a newspaper reporter during a safety investigation of her Kerr-McGee plutonium processing plant in Oklahoma. - 1974
Karen Gay Silkwood (February 19, 1946 – November 13, 1974) was an American chemical technician and
labor union activist known for raising concerns about corporate practices related to health and safety of workers in a nuclear facility.
She worked at the
Kerr-McGee Cimarron Fuel Fabrication Site plant near
Crescent, Oklahoma, United States. Silkwood's job was making
plutonium pellets for
nuclear reactor fuel rods. She joined the union and became an
activist on behalf of issues of health and safety at the plant as a member of the union's negotiating team, the first woman to have that position at Kerr-McGee. In the summer of 1974, she testified to the
Atomic Energy Commission about her concerns.
For three days in November, she was found to have high levels of contamination on her person and in her home. While driving to a meeting that month with David Burnham, a
New York Times journalist, and Steve Wodka, an official of her union's national office, she died in a car accident under mysterious circumstances.
Her family sued Kerr-McGee on behalf of her estate. In what was the longest trial up until then in Oklahoma history, the jury found Kerr-McGee liable for the plutonium contamination of Silkwood, and awarded substantial damages. These were reduced on appeal, but the case reached the
United States Supreme Court in 1979, which upheld the damages verdict. Before another trial took place, Kerr-McGee settled with the estate out of court for US $1.38 million, while not admitting liability.
Her life was featured in
Silkwood (1983), an
Academy Award-nominated film based on an original screenplay by
Nora Ephron and Alice Arlen.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karen_Silkwood
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