Department of Defense

News Releases

U.S. ARMY TO CONTRACT OUT ENVIRONMENTAL STAFF

Call for Congressional Intervention to Avert Litigation

ARMY LOOKING AT BIG EXPANSION OF ARIZONA TRAINING GROUNDS

Half Million Acres of Public Land May Be Put Off-Limits

NEW WHISTLEBLOWER SURFACES AT CHEMICAL WEAPON DEPOT

Worker Safety, Environmental Violations and Data Falsification at Kentucky Facility

ARMY CHEMICAL WEAPONS DEPOT UNDER CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION

Federal Probe Targets Agent Leaks, Monitoring Failures & Environmental Violations

NAVY CONTINUES UP TO 300 DETONATIONS PER YEAR IN PUGET SOUND

Promised Environmental Mitigation Measures “Floundering” Due to Navy Resistance

ARMY TO BANISH WHISTLEBLOWER FROM CHEMICAL WEAPONS DEPOT

“Lack of Positive Attitude” Cited as Basis for Rescinding Clearance

CHEMICAL WEAPONS PLANTS ISSUE GAG ORDER TO EMPLOYEES

All Disclosures of Unclassified but “Sensitive” Information Must Be Cleared

CHEMICAL WEAPONS MONITOR FILES RETALIATION COMPLAINT

Emergency Response Capability at Chemical Weapons Depot in Doubt

CHEMICAL WEAPON LEAK DETECTORS INOPERATIVE

Monitors for VX Agent at Kentucky Storage Depot Not Working for Years

PENTAGON PARES BACK ENVIRONMENTAL RESPONSIBILITIES

New Policy Drops Cleanup and Resource Conservation Duties



Surveys
2001  Survey of Military Fish & Wildlife Employees

Other PEER Activities
Dan Meyer's Testimony in Support of Renewal of the Sikes Act

Lawsuit Against USAF to Block Defense Contracts for Nat. Resource Mgmt: Suit 1

Lawsuit Against USAF to Block Defense Contracts for Nat. Resource Mgmt: Suit 2

Letter from the Director to the USAF Inspector General

Preliminary decision in the lawsuit against USAF to block defense contracts for Natural Resource Management: Pages 1-8

Preliminary decision in the lawsuit against USAF to block defense contracts for Natural Resource Management: Pages 18-26

Preliminary decision in the lawsuit against USAF to block defense contracts for Natural Resource Management: Pages 9-17

Working Papers: Seeking legislative exemptions to environmental laws