Professional Documents
Culture Documents
PO Box 300146
Jamaica Plain MA 02130
March 17/2015
Chief of Health and Human Services
Chief Felix Arroyo
Boston City Hall
One City Hall Square
Boston, MA 02201
Dear Chief Arroyo,
We are writing to request a meeting with you to discuss our concerns
about recent accidents in high containment BSL laboratories and to
present some proposals that we believe will minimize risks to the
citizens of Boston.
The Mission of the League of United Latin American Citizens is to
advance the economic condition, educational attainment, political
influence, housing, health and civil rights of the Hispanic population of
the United States. Annually, LULAC engages its network of 135,000
community volunteers, 1,000 local councils, 60 community technology
centers and 14 LULAC National Educational Service Centers to
empower Hispanic families through direct service programs and
advocacy in 35 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico.
The League of United Latin American Citizens recognizes and promotes the need for
healthy and safe communities and for environmental justice. Members of the Roxbury
Safety Net and residents throughout the City of Boston have expressed opposition to
locating a Biosafety Level 4 (BSL4) bioterrorism research laboratory in the South
End/Roxbury near Boston Medical Center that would perform research with select agents
that can be used in biological warfare. LULAC endorsed the position statement of Safety
Net in opposition to Boston Universitys Bioterrorism Lab and urged the Boston City
Council and the Mayor to pass an ordinance prohibiting research in BSL4 laboratories
within the City of Boston.
The LULAC Resolution was adopted by Massachusetts State Convention May 2006 as
well as at the National Convention the same year for the following reasons.
The proposed bioterrorism research laboratory would be the first BSL4 laboratory in a
densely populated urban neighborhood in the United States; and the health and safety
risks from the laboratory are serious because there can be no guarantee that agents that
cause incurable diseases may not accidentally or intentionally be released from the
laboratory; and, the laboratory might be a target for terrorism; and
there is no guarantee that the lab will operate in an open and transparent manner and that
there will be sufficient public oversight and review of laboratory research with bio
warfare agents; and the laboratory is incompatible with the nearby residential
neighborhood, medical campus, and hospital that is the primary provider of free care in
Boston..
We want to thank you again for continuing your father's legacy and for
representing LULACs membership (local and national) in opposing BU's
laboratories by voting to ban BU's National Emerging Infectious
Diseases Laboratories & Biodefense for the six years you served as a
Boston City Councilor. Now, you have been blessed with an appointed
position of leadership, which is critically important to the creation of
serious research safety protections, regulations and safety compliance
enforcement.
In the past year, the Director of the Centers for Disease Prevention and
Control has publicly admitted to numerous and on-going violations of
routine safety protocols that endanger the lives of laboratory workers.
In addition, recent laboratory inspections have reported the
disappearance of vials containing incurable pathogens.
On 8/21/14, a letter was sent to Mayor Walsh from the Lawyers'
Committee for Civil Rights and Economic Justice containing a multitude
of signatures of those who share concerns and "the lack of trust in BU
to implement and maintain a culture of safety". The letter also refers to
one of the most disturbing incidents that occurred early in 2014. A
scientist engaged in "Gain of Function" research by increasing the
virulence of a "bird Flu" pathogen, which increased the likelihood of
that pathogen being transmissible to humans.
Recently, in the CDC's Atlanta based biosafety level 4 lab, a lab worker
accidentally confused some specimens from an Ebola experiment and
sent an un-killed (live) sample to a lower-level lab where workers
handling the specimens had minimal protections. A technician there
had to be quarantined for 21 days. Other serious errors have involved
mishandling of anthrax bacteria and the discovery of forgotten vials of
deadly smallpox in a cold-storage room at the National Institutes of
Health (NIH).