Fukushima

EnviroReporter’s Radiation Station
Watch a streaming webcam shot of EnviroReporter.com‘s Radiation Station picking up radiation 24/7 in the Los Angeles Basin since March 15, 2011, four days after the meltdowns began.

Radiation Station Posts
Dozens of original EnviroReporter.com news posts including sampling, testing and analysis from a news source that has covered radiation issues since 1998.

Special Radiation Station Testing
High radiation readings found in food, drink and in environmental media across three states. Fukushima fallout’s effect from Southern California through the Southwest.

Radiation Station Stats
Here are over 1,500 ongoing radiation tests we have recorded from our Santa Monica/West LA location, and around the United States, from March 15 to the present . Beginning in early September 2011, our emphasis zeroed in on in-situ multimedia radiation testing.
Radiation Stations
Testing for Fukushima fallout across America with stations in Agoura Hills, Glendale and Ventura California as well as Harrisburg North Carolina. This growing network of vetted testers provides trusted up to date rad readings.

Radiation Station Video
EnviroReporter.com extensive and ongoing radiation tests as well as media coverage of Radiation Station.
Radio Interviews
Michael Collins interviewed on a wide variety of subjects including the Fukushima meltdowns, radioactive fallout across America, Rocketdyne, and Runkle Canyon.

Radiation Station Graphs
Dale Ramicone’s Interior and Exterior averaging graphs include special Radiation Station testing.

Eat Me
EnviroReporter.com expands Radiation Station’s Fukushima fallout coverage to include choices for rad free food foraging. This is in part a reaction to the government’s abandonment of crucial radiation monitoring.

Radiation Station FAQ
Tens of thousands of people are visiting Radiation Station. Many have questions. Here are a number of the most common queries with our responses trying to simplify complicated issues and concepts.

Radiation Station Chat
EnviroReporter.com’s chat room was launched in April, 2011. While conversation has slowed since then, the chat room will remain available on our site for individuals who wish to connect with one another and share information and insight regarding the Fukushima nuclear disaster and other radiation-related topics.
Radiation Nation
March 25, 2011 – As the world lurches to a precipice with the multiple meltdowns at Fukushima, thousands of Americans are frantic to find the truth about the disaster. Nearly 700,000 have come to EnviroReporter.com‘s Radiation Station in just a week to watch live Los Angeles basin readings and exchange information sparked by an impending disaster.
Melt Down Wind
March 15, 2011 – Fukushima reactors teeter on the brink of full meltdown as huge spent fuel rods burn. Californians can’t help but think about the possibility of nuclear fallout. And for good reason. The State dismisses even the possibility that fallout could reach our shores hence no need to pre-distribute life-saving KI pills that fight radioactive iodine in the airborne goo.
Radiation Station
March 14, 2011 – EnviroReporter.com‘s “Radiation Station” will go online tomorrow. We will be able to show, in live time, just what the radiation readings are in Santa Monica which will give some indication of what the Los Angeles Basin is going to be exposed to since Santa Monica is upwind of most of the basin.

LA Weekly – Michael Collins, L.A. ‘Enviroreporter,’ Gets Local, Global Attention For His Geiger Counter Cam
March 18, 2011 – “Michael Collins has been covering the environment for 13 years. He’s won several awards, including the Los Angeles Press Club’s Journalist of the Year.”
Japanese Radiation Plume Heading for America?
March 17, 2011 – “Environmental reporter Michael Collins is monitoring radiation levels around Santa Monica and has set up a live web stream of one of his devices. He also has a candy bowl filled with potassium iodide tablets to counter any potential radiation.”

KTLA News
March 16, 2011 – KTLA News breaks the story of Radiation Station and creates special link on the television station’s website to hook people up 24/7 coverage of radiation readings in the Los Angeles Basin.




