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They didn’t know their backyard creek carried nuclear waste. Now, they’re dying of cancer.

By Skyler Henry, Cait Bladt, https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/news/coldwater-creek-st-louis-missouri-nuclear-waste-manhattan-project/?fbclid=IwY2xjawJ5WlNleHRuA2FlbQIxMQBicmlkETE3b0JDR3JZZ0xqRkNqVU1oAR6r1OHnTIbzQszYmq5UdxWm2CDEhfSw2CBAqIbrvNc_QJ0mnVpSMlz18FoZ6A_aem_HBiqzbUxMZqObYI2gfOYx April 24, 2025 

This story is part one of a two-part series that examines the effects of nuclear waste contamination in Coldwater Creek on the surrounding community in St. Louis, Missouri. Part two aired Wednesday, April 23 on “CBS Evening News.”


When Linda Morice and her family first moved to St. Louis in 1957, they had no idea they had anything to fear. Then, people started getting sick.

“It was a slow, insidious process,” Morice said.

After the death of Morice’s mother, her physician uncle took her aside and gave her a stark warning: “Linda, I don’t believe St. Louis is a very healthy place to live. Everyone on this street has a tumor.”

Their neighborhood was bordered by Coldwater Creek, a 19-mile tributary of the Missouri River It wound through their backyards, near baseball fields, schools and cemeteries — and past lots where leaking barrels and open-air dumps of nuclear waste leeched into its waters.

“It was shocking that this creek was likely making people sick,” Morice said.

Starting in 1942, roughly one ton of pure uranium was produced per day in downtown St. Louis. It was then shipped to labs across the country for the top secret Manhattan Project that created the first nuclear bomb.

The leftover waste was dumped around the city. 

“That material was in 82 different spots throughout St. Louis County. It spilled. Children played in it. It seemed to me that there wasn’t an attempt to absolutely get to the bottom of it,” Morice said.

In Morice’s family alone, her mother, father and brother died of cancer, leaving her to think differently about her childhood.

“All that time, all those fun things were happening, but that whole time we, and the rest of the community were being exposed to some pretty dangerous stuff,” Morice said.

Now her husband, who also lived in the area, is fighting cancer. He’s being treated by urologic oncologist Dr. Gautum Agarwal. For the last several years, Agarwal has been tracking which of his patients lived near Coldwater Creek.

“I was seeing patients who are young, who had developed pretty significant cancers from areas that there’s been some contamination with nuclear waste,” Agarwal said.

While radiation is known to cause cancer, experts say they can’t pin down the specific cause of the disease in a given patient.

But a 2019 study from the Department of Health and Human Services found that people who lived and played near Coldwater Creek from the 1960s to 1990s “could be at an increased risk of developing lung cancer, bone cancer or leukemia.”

“The people there deserve for us to look at this much closer than we have,” Agarwal said.

April 26, 2025 - Posted by | health, USA

1 Comment »

  1. To Skyler Henry at CBS News,

    My husband and his family lived on the compound where the Manhattan Project was in Oak Ridge Tennessee, His mother and father worked there and was not aware that the ground that they grew there veggies and the water that they drank was contamainated with uranium and other nuclear materials for the first atomic bombs. There was other facility’s on the compound, The Y-12 Complex, K-25 Plant, The X-10 Graphite Reactor which was used for the production of plutonium which also got into the grounds of the facility.

    My husband and his brother has been suffering for just about all their adult life of skin cancer and other serious ailments because this was not told to their parents that all this stuff they were using on the bombs could leak in the ground where they lived. I am sure other people that lived there are going through similar health problems.

    You had a news cast about the people in Coldwater Creek in St. Louis Missouri on April 22, 2025 about all that they are going through because of the contanimation in their community and two US Senators from New Mexico (Ben Ray Lujan) and Idaho(Mike Crapo) are making another push to exspand Federal Government compensation program for people exsposed to radiation following uranium mining and nuclear testing carried out during the cold war in these two states. They have already got some compensation and these two Senators are pushing for more.

    Nobody has done a write up about the people that lived in OakRidge Tennessee in the compound that is suffering all these years like my husband and his brother and many others.. They have not been contacted about any kind of compensation but others has gotten just that and probably will be after your news cast and if the two Senators get their bill passed..

    The people that lived in Oakridge Tennessee on the compound did their duty for their Country and they are now the forgotten ones, they deserve better than this!!!! This is a disgrace to the people that deserve better from the Government.

    I hope that someone will pick up this story so the people that worked at the Manhattan Project can be heard.

    Joanna M McDowell's avatar Comment by Joanna M McDowell | May 1, 2025 | Reply


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