Search Beyond Lies: Fact or Fiction — The University

In Search Beyond Lies, a key place is the university. Both James and Brett were graduate students at the university and obtained PhDs in Health Physics. Is the university a real place?

The University

Although the university within the book is fictitious, both Brian Perri and J.C. were graduate students in Colorado State University’s Health Physics program. Because my intention was to create a fictitious university, I intentionally did no research on CSU at the time of my writing Search Beyond Lies.

The Real University – Colorado State University

Colorado State University
Colorado State University

Colorado State University is located in Fort Collins, Colorado. Its Health Physics program was created over 40 years ago and was fully accredited by ABET in July 2007 and continually reaccredited in subsequent years. CSU is recognized as one of the premier health physics/radiation protection graduate training programs in the country.

ABET and the Accreditation Process

  • In case you are wondering what ABET is, it’s a nonprofit, ISO 9001 certified organization that accredits university and college programs in applied and natural science, computing, engineering, and engineering technology.
  • Every year the entire Health Physics program is critically examined by an advisory board, and in depth every 6 years by the ABET external review team.
  • CSU’s External Advisory Board contains representatives from nuclear power facilities, consulting experts, mining and milling operations, and national laboratories.

What is Health Physics?

I reached out to one of the key faculty members who provided me with the best definition of health physics: “Protection of workers, the public and the environment from harmful effects of radiation while facilitating beneficial use of radiation.”

You might wonder why someone who works in the field of radiation is called a Health Physicist. Why not a Radiation Physicist? I touched a little bit about this within the book.

The professor provided me with further insight. “The health physics profession was named in an effort to obfuscate what we do. It was named in WWII to try to deflect the actual work that was done.”

Unique Offerings in CSU’s Health Physics Program

Unlike other programs, CSU’s health physics program offers classes in Radioecology and Radiochemistry. Both of these areas are important for evaluating reactor chemistry and making human health and environmental impact assessments for all segments of the nuclear fuel cycle.  Additionally, these areas are very important in evaluating and periodically revising the environmental regulations for nuclear power and other nuclear activities, especially nuclear accidents.

There are many opportunities for their graduate students, including the ability to work in radiation research through CSU’s partnership with Japan’s Fukushima University.

Job Opportunities

Where do graduates of CSU’s Health Physics program work? Since there are very few graduate programs in this highly specialized field, opportunities abound. Graduates are working in nuclear power plants, at the International Atomic Energy Agency in Monaco and Austria, most of the national laboratories, and hospitals. Many alumni hold leadership positions in the Health Physics Society, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Idaho National Laboratory, and nuclear power plants.

Nuclear Power Plant

It’s an incredible program with global opportunities.  In the next article we’ll delve into the truth behind the top-secret research project with world-wide implications at the heart of Search Beyond Lies. Is it fact or fiction?

suspense thriller, romantic suspense, Colorado, Rocky Mountains, action

Search Beyond Lies is available on Amazon.

© 2022 Karen VDH Fischer

Search Beyond Lies: Fact or Fiction—The Place—Idaho National Lab

The setting for Search Beyond Lies moves into Idaho as the adventure continues. Although Idaho National Lab is not the setting for the story, it has a key role in the backstory. Idaho National Lab is a real place, formally known as Idaho National Laboratory (“INL”).

A Little History

The Idaho National Laboratory was previously known as the National Reactor Testing Station.

It was intentionally located in a remote area of the Idaho desert which would limit public exposure to any radiation in the event of an incident with the nuclear power reactor. The historic incident was SL-1 in Idaho in 1961, one of 4 historic incidents.

According to INL, Just the Facts SL-1 , “The Stationary Low-Power Plant Number 1 (SL-1) was a 3-megawatt experimental reactor designed for the U.S. Army to use in remote locations.”

The SL-1 accident resulted in 3 deaths and is “considered the only fatal nuclear reactor accident in the United States…caused by the process of making nuclear energy.” This does not take into consideration “industrial fatalities at other generating stations.”

Today

The U.S. Department of Energy complex has 17 national labs, one of which is INL. There are more that 5,700 employees including researchers and various support staff. Innovation is their focus in nuclear research, security solutions, and renewable energy systems. They are always looking to attract scientists and others in an effort to “redefine what’s possible.”

The Grand Tetons Across the Sagebrush Flats

Search Beyond Lies

What is revealed in Search Beyond Lies regarding INL and some of their recruitment efforts are fact. However, the story is fiction.

With respect to targeted radioactive waste from the Rocky Mountain Flats, from 1954 to 1970 it was packaged in boxes and storage drums and then sent to the high-desert, sagebrush prairie land of eastern Idaho where it was buried in trenches and unlined pits.  According to the U.S. Department of Energy, they completed the removal of this waste from the 97-acre landfill at its 890-square-mile site that includes INL. For more on these more fairly recent developments, there’s a good article in the Denver Post.

suspense thriller, romantic suspense, Colorado, Rocky Mountains, action

One of the important characters is a schnauzer mutt name Brady. Is Brady a real dog? Is he fact or fiction?

Search Beyond Lies is available on Amazon.

© 2022 Karen VDH Fischer

Search Beyond Lies: Fact or Fiction The Place—Mount Beacon

Mount Beacon is the primary setting for the first part of Search Beyond Lies. Is it a real place? Although I have been known to use the real name of a real place in my writing, it’s not my norm.

Mount Beacon – The Name

My first book was a nonfiction book titled, A Beacon for Life. The name “beacon” was chosen for sentimental reasons. A Beacon for Life is an inspirational written to help people through difficult times. For me, it was cathartic since it helped me work through my difficult journey while pregnant with my second child, Mary Kathryn, who was trisomy 13.

The Place—Is It Real?

The place is real. It is Mount Meeker, one of the most dangerous mountains in Rocky Mountain National Park. The information presented in the book regarding the mountain is based on my research of Mount Meeker and discussions with a number of the volunteers.

Mount Meeker, Rocky Mountain National Park, Brian Perri
Mount Meeker

The selfie taken on the summit of Mount Meeker is fact. When Brian Perri summited Mount Meeker on June 30, 2018, he took a selfie and sent it to a friend.

Nick Sangetta hiked Mount Meeker as a dedication to Brian, J.C., and the other volunteers. You can find his dedication on YouTube and get a first-hand feel for the danger presented on this treacherous mountain.

Mount Meeker Left / Longs Peak Right

My brother has hiked mountains all over the world and I asked him to view Nick’s video so he could provide me with insight into Charlie’s search for Brett and check my story for accuracy. I want my research and story to be correct always. He told me that Mount Meeker is very dangerous to hike, especially alone.

Mount Meeker, Columbine, Rocky Mountain National Park

The descriptions presented, including the lone columbine in an area that seemed hopeless to support life are real. This photo was taken by Kimo during their search.

I had provided an advanced reader copy to a few of the volunteers who felt they were reliving their journey.

How about Idaho National Lab? Is it real?

suspense thriller, romantic suspense, Colorado, Rocky Mountains, action

Search Beyond Lies is available on Amazon.


© 2022 Karen VDH Fischer

Search Beyond Lies: Its Inspiration

Search Beyond Lies, Book One in the Search & Recovery Series

Search Beyond Lies is a work of fiction, but it was inspired by true events. What follows is the tribute I wrote at the time to Brian Joseph Perri, J.C. Fischer, and Kimo McEwen.

An Inspiring Rare Friendship

An inspiring rare friendship is contagious. If you have two people you can call “friend” during your lifetime, you have a rare gift. Most of us have what amounts to as acquaintances. Yes, we may have a good time and periodically help each other professionally or personally, but what if your friend went missing? To what extent would you put your world on hold and jeopardize your safety, well-being, and your own life to find that friend? What I witnessed were two such friends when they discovered their friend went missing…

The Defense

My son, J.C., defended his master’s thesis on Thursday, July 5, 2018 at 8:00 a.m. Brian, a friend of his from the program, promised to attend, but he was absent. When it became clear that no one had seen him since the Friday before, a Missing Person’s Report was filed. It was the Fourth of July week and not unusual for someone to be gone … until he was expected.

Mount Meeker, Rocky Mountain National Park, Brian Perri
Mount Meeker

Brian Joseph Perri, a former special operations-trained paratrooper, usually went hiking alone. A graduate of the Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape (SERE) training program, he was trained, tortured, and dropped without any provision into unknown territory and passed with flying colors. He was an avid hiker and fell in love with the Colorado Rockies, successfully summiting several fourteeners. Mount Meeker, one of the most dangerous mountains in the Rocky Mountain National Park, beaconed him. At 10:00 a.m. on Saturday, June 30, 2018, he reached the summit and sent a selfie to someone who asked to be picked up from the airport. M

Missing

Brian’s car was found at the trailhead of Mount Meeker that night, and on Friday, the search began. Kimo, Brian’s former army roommate from special operations flew in from Maine to help J.C. find their friend. Although neither were mountain hikers (this was Kimo’s first visit to the Colorado Rockies), they were bound and determined to find their friend and bring him down from the mountain. P

Park Rangers

The park rangers did their part and sent up the Alpine Team to repel down the cliff side of Mount Meeker along with others who searched the terrain. Twenty-two square miles of rough terrain is no easy task. Helicopters and canine units were used. At this time, there were fires in Colorado, and on Sunday, the helicopters had to be diverted from their search. Not to be deterred, the rangers got permission to use a drone—the first ever used in the Rocky Mountain National Park.V

volunteers

J.C. and Kimo never gave up, searching every day possible for their friend. Priscilla Jane Kurtz Williams, unable to hike because of ankle surgery, set up a social media presence and a GoFundMe account to help with the search. Jordie, Kimo’s wife, gave him the blessing to go to Colorado to aid the search while she held down the fort with their 3 children. She also helped with research, social media, and outreach. Brian was very close to his sister, Becky, who handled what she could from New York and was the family contact.

J.C. & Kimo searching for Brian Perri — Mount Meeker

All of their efforts brought in many volunteers; some of the rangers even continued their search on their day off after searching for 5 straight days. One week turned into two. Still, there was hope—Brian was a survivor.

Fox 31 News followed J.C. and Kimo up (and the camera man took a vacation day to return the next day without his camera to help search). They quoted J.C. in the title of their story: “I will not let this mountain be my friend’s grave.” Friends continue search for the missing hiker.

found

Four weeks to the day that Brian summited Mount Meeker, the park rangers responded to a visitor’s GPS tracking device, which denoted a sign of distress. J.C. and Kimo saw them going up the mountain as they were coming down one last time—after hiking more than 200 miles within 3 weeks, their bodies were too broken to continue. Despite the approaching storm, the park rangers hiked up, and in their search for the injured hiker, they found Brian. Park officials believe he fell 25 to 40 feet and died instantly. It was the cliff side with very dangerous rocks and crevices.

“Why did so many who never knew Brian come?” my son asked a number of these volunteers, because he was so overwhelmed with the support of strangers. Over and over he was told that they were inspired by this rare friendship. It was J.C. and Kimo’s care, concern, persistence, loyalty, and dedication to finding their friend that exemplified true friendship—and that is a contagious type of friendship. So few people experience such a friendship; Brian was blessed with two such friends. Brian impacted the lives of many people both directly and indirectly, and his legacy and gifts will live on through these people—paying it forward throughout each life. Rest in peace, Brian—you were loved.

(c) 2018 Karen VDH Fischer