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This weeks Other Issues stories for Wednesday, July 10, 2002.
Nuclear Waste: U.S. Senate Approves Yucca MountainBy Mike Nartker “This vote is a great step forward in securing America’s energy future. Now more than ever, we need a safe central and secure facility for our nation’s nuclear waste,” Senator Frank Murkowski (R-Alaska), who had called the joint resolution to the floor of the Senate for the vote, said in a press release. “Today the Senate spoke, and the Senate agreed.” The Senate voted 60-39 to pass a procedural motion on considering the resolution, which was later approved by a voice vote. Senate Republicans were nearly united in their support of the resolution, the final step in overriding Nevada Governor Kenny Guinn’s veto of the site. Only three Republicans — Senators Ben Nighthorse Campbell (R-Colo.), John Ensign (R-Nev.) and Lincoln Chafee (R-R.I.) voted against the resolution. Senate Democrats, however, were more divided with 35 voting against it and 15 voting in favor. To maintain Yucca Mountain as the site of the nuclear waste repository, both houses of Congress needed to pass the override resolution. The U.S. House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed the resolution in May (see GSN, May 9). Yesterday U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham praised the outcome of the Senate vote. “We are pleased that the Congress agrees moving forward is the right thing to do, rather than cutting off the process now and leaving nuclear waste for future generations to deal with,” he said in a press release. The Nuclear Energy Institute, the industry’s main lobby group, also praised the decision, calling it a “clear signal” of support for nuclear energy. The activist group Public Citizen, however, criticized the industry’s influence over the Senate and the Bush administration’s decisions to support the project (see GSN, April 2). “This vote was paid for, and records likely will show more contributions poured into campaign coffers in recent weeks,” Public Citizen President Joan Claybrook said in a statement released yesterday. “With today’s vote, lawmakers have not only succumbed to industry influence but have again failed to check the Bush administration’s inappropriate coziness with the energy industries.” Guinn said he is “disappointed” with the vote. His state still plans to continue the fight against the Yucca Mountain repository, he said. “Now the process moves to the federal courts, where the playing field is level and Nevada’s factual, scientific arguments will be heard by impartial judges,” Guinn said in a statement (see GSN, June 7). “The Department of Energy and the nuclear industry will no longer be able to hide behind the political process and wield their influence to move the Yucca Mountain agenda. Now, for perhaps the first time in this process, the DOE will finally be held accountable for its many imprudent and unsound decisions, and we are highly confident that Nevada will prevail.”
Nuclear Waste: U.S. Senate Expected to Approve Yucca MountainThe U.S. Senate is expected to pass a resolution today supporting Yucca Mountain for the site of the first long-term U.S. nuclear waste repository (see GSN, June 26). Senator Frank Murkowski (R-Alaska) is expected to offer a motion today to consider a joint resolution that would override Nevada Governor Kenny Guinn’s veto of the site, according to CongressDaily. The motion is likely to cause a procedural vote, which Republican supporters of Yucca Mountain are expected to win closely, CongressDaily reported. The Nuclear Waste Policy Act, which designated Yucca Mountain as the sole site for a potential nuclear waste repository, allows 10 hours of Senate debate on the resolution before a vote. To override Guinn’s veto, both houses of Congress must pass the joint resolution, which the U.S. House of Representatives passed in May (CongressDaily, July 9). A CongressDaily survey indicated that yesterday 51 senators were in favor of the Yucca Mountain repository plan, 25 were opposed and 23 undecided. Almost all Senate Republicans have said they are backing the plan, with the only opposition coming from Senators Ben Nighthorse Campbell (R-Colo.) and John Ensign (R-Nev.), according to CongressDaily. Democrats in the Senate have been more divided, with 23 against the repository and 10 in favor. Out of the senators still publicly undecided on the issue yesterday, 16 were Democrats and six were Republicans (CongressDaily, July 8). If the Senate approves the override resolution, the U.S. Energy Department will have 90 days to file a license application with the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, according to the New York Times. Many Yucca Mountain supporters, however, have said that Energy will not be able to meet that deadline and that it might take up to two years to file an application. Once Energy files an application, the commission will probably decide based on rules prepared by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, according to the Times (see GSN, April 12). The state of Nevada and the Natural Resources Defense Council, however, are currently challenging the EPA rules (Mitchell/Wald, New York Times, July 9).
Radiological Weapons: States Debate Accepting Potassium IodideFewer than half of eligible U.S. states have accepted medicine from the federal government to guard against thyroid cancer during a nuclear disaster, USA Today reported today (see GSN, May 24). The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission announced a program six months ago to provide a two-day supply of potassium iodide pills for people living within 10 miles of a nuclear power plant (see GSN, Feb. 15). Of the 33 states eligible for the program, 15 have accepted the drug, according to USA Today. Some states have rejected the program, saying that it might give people a false sense of security or that the two-day supply of the drug is not enough because people must take the drug for 10 to 14 days after exposure to radioactive iodine. The NRC has said a two-day supply is sufficient to protect people as a supplement to evacuation. Iowa, one of the states that rejected the NRC offer, did so partly because potassium iodide does not protect against other potential consequences of radiation exposure, such as cancers other than thyroid cancer, Iowa’s Public Health Director Stephen Gleason said. He also expressed concern about giving the drug to people without checking their medical conditions. States that have accepted the NRC offer are distributing tablets in different ways. Florida is storing its pills in secret locations to be distributed if a nuclear disaster occurs. New Hampshire plans to distribute its pills soon after it completes a plan, and New York’s Westchester and Rockland counties began distribution in June. Other states that have asked for the pills include Alabama, Arizona, California, Connecticut, Maryland (see GSN, Jan. 14), Massachusetts (see GSN, Jan. 11), New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Vermont (Haya El Nasser, USA Today, July 9).
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