[AGL] Opportunity for Bush to Step Up...
Wayne Johnson
cadaobh at shentel.net
Thu Mar 2 11:30:29 EST 2006
Clearly, this is an opportunity for the President of the United States to
make clear his intention to keep America safe. All it would require.....and
this would set a marvelous example for Republicans everywhere....is for him
to volunteer land in Texas as a permanent home for nuclear waste. Why
should Nevada get all the "glory"?
Starting with his holdings in...or actually, beneath....Crawford.
It is quite likely that with this breathtakingly simple solution to such a
vexing issue, people like Tom DeLay would do the same and Rick Goodhair, the
Governor. If they don't have a ranch or an old abandoned oil well,
they....were they True Patriots...volunteer to ingest some nuclear waste
themselves. Think of the Prime Time Photo Opportunities. Imagine how
History would reward them!
I get all moist just thinking about it.
RB
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EPA in hot seat over nuclear storage radiation
Some senators resist proposal, Nevada Republican calls it a ‘farce’
MSNBC News Services
Updated: 9:35 a.m. ET March 2, 2006
WASHINGTON - The Environmental Protection Agency will issue a final rule by
the end of the year on how much radiation can be released from the Yucca
Mountain nuclear waste dump, an agency official told senators at a hearing
Wednesday.
William Wehrum, acting assistant administrator of EPA's office of air and
radiation, defended the agency's proposed rule against criticism from Nevada
lawmakers and a Democratic senator from California who said it wouldn't
adequately protect human health.
"Our job at EPA is to set standards for the Yucca Mountain repository that
are fully protective of human health and safety," Wehrum said at a Senate
Environment and Public Works Committee hearing.
He received strong support from the committee's chairman, Republican Sen.
James Inhofe of Oklahoma, who asked whether the rule might be "too
conservative" compared with approaches taken in Europe. Wehrum said the
standard was consistent with international approaches.
Store more there?
Inhofe also said after the hearing that he'd be open to voting to increase
the storage capacity of Yucca Mountain, which by law is supposed to hold
77,000 tons of radioactive waste. Because of waste already waiting at
reactor sites nationwide, the repository will be full soon after it opens.
Spent fuel from U.S. nuclear plants — which supply about 20 percent of U.S.
electricity — is piling up. More than 50,000 tons of it is stored at over
100 temporary locations in 39 states.
The EPA in August proposed limiting radiation exposure near the planned dump
90 miles northwest of Las Vegas to 15 millirems a year for 10,000 years,
then increasing the allowable level to 350 millirems a year for up to 1
million years.
That higher level is more than three times what is allowed from nuclear
facilities today by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. A standard chest
X-ray is about 10 millirems.
The EPA issued the rule under consideration after a federal court said the
agency's first standard was inadequate because it didn't establish exposure
limits beyond 10,000 years. A public comment period for the rule ended Nov.
21, and the agency is reviewing comments and will finalize the rule by
year's end, Wehrum said.
Weighing radiation risks
Nevada Sens. Harry Reid and John Ensign criticized the standard. Ensign, a
Republican, called it "a farce."
Reid and Ensign have instead proposed handling nuclear waste through “dry
cask storage,” a process that would allow nuclear reactors to store waste
on-site.
Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., cited a study that she said showed cancer
risks at the 350 millirem level increasing to one in four for women and one
in five for men.
"This is such a nightmare that we're abandoning ... what we consider to be
an acceptable cancer risk," Boxer said.
But a scientist who testified before the committee, Dade Moeller, former
president of the Health Physics Society, said his estimates show a smaller
increase of cancer risk under the proposed rules — perhaps 1 percent or
less. Moeller's company has done contract work for the Energy Department.
The radiation issue and other problems with the project have caused a series
of delays. The Energy Department originally was supposed to submit its
application for a license to operate the dump to the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission by December 2004.
Paul Golan, acting director of the department's Office of Civilian
Radioactive Waste Management, couldn't provide senators a new date but said
the department would release a schedule this summer.
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