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ARTICLE ARCHIVE

Nuclear Reactors

The nuclear industry is more than 50 years old. Its history is replete with a colossal financial disaster and a multitude of near-misses and catastrophic accidents like Three Mile Island and Chornobyl. Beyond Nuclear works to expose the risks and dangers posed by an aging and deteriorating reactor industry and the unproven designs being proposed for new construction.

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Entries by admin (520)

Wednesday
Jun242020

Covid-19 is “a significant impediment to evacuation” during nuclear accident

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and many state emergency planning authorities in conjunction with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) have been conducting COVID-19 Preparedness Assessments for the offsite emergency plans around U.S. nuclear power stations. While the two-page pro forma response issued by FEMA claims there is “reasonable assurance”  that emergency plans remain “adequate” should a serious nuclear accident occur, the federal agency is silent on the fact that  entire communities within the ten-mile evacuation planning zones (EPZ) effectively remain sheltering-in-place through state-issued stay at home orders as this highly infectious viral threat continues to grow.  A closer examination of additional documentation temporarily available then mysteriously taken down from the NRC public website raises serious questions and concerns about the present efficacy of radiological emergency preparedness around nuclear power stations during the pandemic--- particularly for populations more vulnerable to radiation exposure (infants, young children and pregnant women).

Specifically, FEMA Headquarters provided its June 2, 2020 Region I assessment for the state of emergency preparedness for New England’s Seabrook (NH) and Millstone (CT) nuclear power stations that was publicly posted on the NRC Agencywide Document Access and Management System (ADAMS) on June 5, 2020. The assessment of emergency planning for the Millstone Units 2 and 3 included an attachment from the Director of the State of Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (CT DEEP) Radiation Division. The CT DEEP determines that “the presence of the high risk of COVID-19 transmission represents a significant impediment to any orderly evacuation because the key strategy to prevent rapid transmission and spread of the disease is to maintain social distancing and minimize movement and gathering of large populations.” State officials concluded compensatory actions are needed where “evacuation should not be considered unless measured offsite dose exceeds levels that would result in offsite doses greater than 25 rem.”  The 25 rem dose is more than 12 times the threshold radiation dose (2 rem projected over a year) that current Center for Disease Control (CDC) guidelines presently advise authorities to initiate public evacuation from the pathway of accidental  radioactive releases.

The CT DEEP compensatory actions further outline the plan to delay the evacuation of populations stuck in nursing homes and hospitals until radiation doses from a nuclear accident exceed 100 rem. There is no evaluation of the attrition rate for emergency responders that will balk at going into radioactive zones contaminated at levels that exceed 100 rem.  The threshold dose for acute radiation sickness is 100 rem. Even this dose disregards more vulnerable populations including infants, young children and pregnant women.

FEMA Headquarters subsequently reissued the June 2, 2020 assessment for Region I on June 15, 2020 removing the CT DEEP attachment from the NRC public record and burying documentation of the Connecticut’s Covid-19 compensatory actions that intend to raise radiation exposure limit guidelines for the Millstone 10-mile emergency planning zone and significantly delay the state’s evacuation response.

There is one critical protective action that would well serve populations hunkered down by the viral threat that is deliberately being ignored by FEMA, NRC and state authorities, that being the immediate pre-distribution of potassium iodide tablets to all residents within the nation's emergency planning zones for nuclear power stations. The American Thyroid Association (ATA) and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) have been urgently recommending the pre-distribution of potassium iodide (KI) tablets by direct delivery through the mail to all residents within the 10-mile evacuation planning zone of every US nuclear power station. KI is FDA approved for the safe and effective prophylactic protection of populations sheltering-in-place as well as during evacuation from radioactive iodine (I-131), a highly mobile radioactive gas released early in a nuclear accident. Radioactive iodine, inhaled and ingested, will concentrate in the thyroid gland where it can cause thyroid cancer and developmental disorders particularly in vulnerable populations that include infants, young children and pregnant women.  Presently, KI protective actions though incorporated as optional in emergency planning around US nuclear power stations is voluntary. Many states do not participate or stockpile KI tablets.  In states where KI is part of the radiological emergency plan, the general population is instructed that KI pickup voluntary. Consequently on a small fraction of potentially affected populations in the event of a nuclear accident presently have KI tablets in their homes.  

Saturday
Jun202020

Nuclear Power Safety Concerns in Michigan amidst the COVID-19 Pandemic

"Nuclear Power Safety Concerns in Michigan amidst the COVID-19 Pandemic," letter and briefing paper sent to Governor Whitmer and Lt. Gov. Gilchrist by three-dozen groups and 62 individuals

 

To: Governor Gretchen Whitmer and Lieutenant Governor Garlin Gilchrist II P.O. Box 30013 Lansing, Michigan 48909


Also submitted via email to: <governor@michigan.gov>, and  <governorsoffice@michigan.gov>


June 19, 2020 (Juneteenth, and the eve of Summer Solstice)

Dear Governor Whitmer and Lieutenant Governor Gilchrist,


We respectfully ask that you, and the rest of state, county, city, and tribal leadership, as well as the U.S. congressional delegation, in Michigan, cc'd below, do everything in your power to protect nuclear power plant workers, as well as nuclear power plant host community residents downwind and downstream, against the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission's (NRC), and the nuclear power industry's, attempts to weaken regulations at this time. During a global pandemic, safety, security, health, environmental protection, and emergency preparedness and response regulations should be strengthened, not weakened.

Specifically in Michigan, as detailed in the attached briefing paper below, we request that:

---Vital safety inspections, repairs and maintenance at Michigan reactors be carried out, not deferred or cancelled, including for example the torus inspection and repair at Fermi 2 prior to reactor restart;

---The highly radioactive waste storage pools at Michigan reactors be carefully monitored and prepared for the potential loss of electric grid power to run safety and cooling systems, that is, that back-up emergency diesel generators be connected to pool cooling systems prior to an emergency, and that expedited transfer of irradiated nuclear fuel into on-site or near-site hardened storage be prioritized;

---There be no further reduction in safety margins at Fermi 2, Palisades, or Cook, even during refueling outage shutdowns;

--- the COVID-19 emergency is no excuse to increase radiological risks;


---Emergency preparedness and response measures, complicated by the coronavirus pandemic, be comprehensively reviewed and addressed, including by state, county, local, and tribal agencies of jurisdiction;

---Given the reduced demand for electricity at the present time, keep Palisades shut down for good, and delay refueling outages, and postpone restarts, at Fermi Unit 2 and Cook Units 1 and 2, until post-pandemic, in order to prevent coronavirus outbreaks in southwest Michigan, as has already occurred in southeast Michigan at Fermi 2 due to very large, itinerant refueling outage workforces traveling in from outside counties and even other states.


On April 22, 2020, four Michigan-based safe energy groups, and numerous national organizations with large Michigan memberships, wrote Vice President Pence as President Trump's COVID-19 Task Force director. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and Occupational Safety and Health Administration were copied on the letter. The letter regarded "Urgent Actions Required to Mitigate COVID-19 Impacts in [the] Nuclear Energy Industry," and "Demand[s] for Immediate Corrective Action to Address Urgent COVID-19 Pandemic Risk." A link to this letter is provided in the briefing paper attached below. We have not received acknowledgement of receipt of the letter, nor a direct response.


But NRC's Chairwoman, Kristine Svinicki, did write Vice President Pence on May 18th (a link is provided in the briefing paper below), enclosing our April 22nd letter. Her indirect response to our concerns was most unsatisfactory. We disagree with her claim the agency is on top of nuclear safety in light of the COVID-19 pandemic.   As Michiganders, and others downwind and downstream of Michigan's reactors, we are now writing to you, because our national concerns, conveyed in the April 22nd letter cited above and linked in the attached briefing paper, very much apply to Michigan's operational nuclear power plants (with additional concerns at Michigan's sole closed reactor site, Big Rock Point in Charlevoix). The Fermi Unit 2 atomic reactor in Frenchtown Township, Monroe County, on the Lake Erie shore, is of the most immediate concern. However, similar concerns will grow more urgent in the months ahead at the Palisades atomic reactor in Covert Township, Van Buren County, and the Donald C. Cook atomic reactors in Bridgman, Berrien County; all three southwest Michigan reactors are located on the Lake Michigan shoreline, and have scheduled refueling outages in August and September, respectively.  Nothing less than the Great Lakes themselves are now at elevated risk.  (See, for example, this cautionary essay entitled "Downstream" by Fairewinds Energy Education nuclear engineer Arnie Gundersen, who has served as an expert witness for nuclear power watchdogs in Michigan:  https://www.fairewinds.org/demystify/downstream?rq=downstream.) Also at risk is a second wave coronavirus outbreak in southwest Michigan due to the refueling outages at Palisades and Cook.



We are requesting to meet with the designated responsible department(s) in your administration to discuss our concerns. Who in your administration should we communicate with, regarding our concerns expressed in the April 22 letter to Vice President Pence, as well as our Michigan-specific concerns expressed in our briefing paper attached below? Which departments and staff persons in your administration are handling such concerns? We would be happy to meet with them by teleconference or webinar, or when applicable stay home/stay safe orders are lifted, in person while socially distanced. Many of our Michigan-based groups, or groups with large numbers of Michigan members and supporters, have been watch-dogging nuclear power plants and radioactive waste issues in the Great Lakes State for several decades, as we will continue to do in the future. We look forward to sharing with your administration our expertise, born of deep concern living downwind and downstream of Michigan's atomic reactors and radioactive waste storage sites. We look forward to working with your administration on the current pandemic-related increase in nuclear risks, as well as future nuclear power and radioactive waste issues in our state.

Please see our briefing paper, "Nuclear Power Safety Concerns in Michigan amidst the COVID-19 Pandemic," [linked here], which provides more detail on our concerns regarding nuclear safety amidst the coronavirus pandemic at Michigan's operating, and even closed (Big Rock Point), atomic reactors. Thank you for your consideration. We eagerly await your response. Please direct your response to Kevin Kamps, radioactive waste specialist at Beyond Nuclear (as well as Don't Waste Michigan Board of Directors Member, Kalamazoo Chapter, and Citizens for Alternatives to Chemical Contamination, Advisory Board Member): kevin@beyondnuclear.org; (240) 462-3216; Kevin Kamps, 441 Fairfax Avenue, Kalamazoo, MI 49001.

Sincerely,

Sovereign Native American Authority:

Jane A. TenEyck, Executive Director, Chippewa Ottawa Resource Authority (CORA), Sault Ste. Marie, MI, jteneyck@chippewaottawa.org (CORA is composed of five Native American tribes that have treaty rights in Michigan: 1836cora.org)

Organizations:

Michigan Groups --

Keith Gunter, Co-Chair, Alliance to Halt Fermi 3, Livonia, MI, Keith.Gunter9@gmail.com

LuAnne Kozma, President, Ban Michigan Fracking, Charlevoix, MI, luannekozma@gmail.com

Sandra Novacek, Coordinator, Belle Isle Concern, Detroit, MI, belleisleconcern@gmail.com

Reverend Edward Pinckney, President & CEO, Black Autonomy Network Community Organization, Benton Harbor, MI, banco9342@sbcglobal.net

Tada Gunter, President, Citizens for Peace, Livonia, MI, tadajoyful@gmail.com


Jesse Deer In Water, Community Organizer, Citizens' Resistance at Fermi 2 (CRAFT), Redford, MI, shutdownfermi@gmail.com


Diane Weckerle, Co-Chair, Coalition to Oppose the Expansion of US Ecology, Detroit, Michigan, djweck@gmail.com

Tom Stephens, Detroit Independent Freedom Schools Movement, Detroit, MI, thomasstephens2043@sbcglobal.net

Michael J. Keegan, Co-Chair, Board of Directors, Don't Waste Michigan, Monroe, MI, <mkeeganj@comcast.net>

Kathryn Barnes, Sherwood Chapter, Don’t Waste Michigan, Sherwood, MI, <greenwoodsforest@gmail.com>
Elizabeth Kirkwood, Executive Director, FLOW (For Love of Water), Traverse City, MI, info@flowforwater.org

Kristy Meyer, M.S., Associate Director, Freshwater Future, Petoskey, MI, Kristy@FreshwaterFuture.org

Natalie Jakub, Executive Director, Green Living Science, Detroit, MI, info@greenlivingscience.org

John Ephland and Ruth Moerdyk, Chairpersons, Kalamazoo Nonviolent Opponents of War (KNOW), Kalamazoo, MI, newsfromknow@gmail.com

Christina Schlitt, President, League of Women Voters of Michigan, Lansing, MI, bcschlitt@aol.com

Terry Miller, Chair, Lone Tree Council, Bay City, MI, terbar@charter.net

Peggy Case, President, Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation, Mecosta, MI, Info@savemiwater.org or hildaheron@aol.com

Jessica Smith, Administrative Coordinator and Policy Committee Chair, Michigan Organic Food and Farm Alliance, Lansing, MI, moffaorganic@gmail.com

Barbara (Iris) Potter, Founding Member/Organizer, Michigan Safe Energy Future-Kalamazoo Chapter, Kalamazoo, MI, b.irispotter@gmail.com

Bette Pierman, Michigan Safe Energy Future-Shoreline Chapter, Benton Harbor, MI, Bette49022@yahoo.com


Vic Macks, Steering Committee, Michigan Stop the Nuclear Bombs Campaign, St. Clair Shores, MI, vicmacks3@gmail.com


John J. Ropp, President/CEO, Michigan Wildlife Conservancy, Bath, MI, jropp@MiWildlife.org

Hasan S. Newash, Director, Palestine Cultural Office-Michigan, Detroit, MI, newashh@sbcglobal.net


Jody Flynn, on behalf of the Palisades Park Community, Covert, MI, jodygflynn@gmail.com


Rev. Rich Peacock, Peace Action of Michigan, Ferndale, MI, rjpeacock@wowway.com


Steven E. Saelzler, Chapter Coordinator, Chapter 74, SE MI Michael Gramlich Chapter, Veterans for Peace, Brownstown, MI, saelzler@comcast.net

Lisa Patrell, Washtenaw350, Ypsilanti, MI, <patrell.lisa@gmail.com> 



Groups based in other Great Lakes States/Provinces downstream and/or downwind from Michigan's nuclear power plants --

Derek Coronado, Coordinator, Citizens Environment Alliance of Southwestern Ontario, Windsor, Ontario, Canada, dcoronado@cogeco.net

Barbara Warren RN, MS, Executive Director, Citizens’ Environmental Coalition, Cuddebackville, NY, warrenba@msn.com


David Kraft, Director, Nuclear Energy Information Service (NEIS), Chicago, IL, neis@neis.org (on behalf of NEIS's members and supporters in MI, as well as the Lake Michigan drinking water supply)


Terry J. Lodge, Convenor, Toledo Coalition for Safe Energy, Toledo, OH, <tjlodge50@yahoo.com> (on behalf of the Lake Erie drinking water supply; and Legal Counsel, Don't Waste Michigan, and Beyond Nuclear)


Dr. Ross Landsman, Safety Inspector, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Region III, Chicago, IL (retired), <ross@landsman.info>



National groups with members and supporters in Michigan, as well as downwind and downstream throughout the Great Lakes Basin --

Kevin Kamps, Radioactive Waste Specialist, Beyond Nuclear, Takoma Park, Maryland, kevin@beyondnuclear.org


Timothy Judson, Executive Director, Nuclear Information and Resource Service, Takoma Park, MD, TimJ@nirs.org


 

INDIVIDUALS (alphabetical by last name):

Wade Adams and Family, Kalamazoo, MI, wadeadams65@hotmail.com

Cliff Alles-Curie Rodas, Rockford, MI, aboveriver@gmail.com

Jeff Alson, Ann Arbor, MI, jeffalson56@gmail.com
Dale Anderson, Kalamazoo, MI, daleanderson@mei.net
Pam Barker, Monroe, MI, misspjb1@gmail.com

Thomas Beck, Covert, MI, tombeck1961@gmail.com
Lee Blackburn, Pataskala, OH, leeblackburn@live.com
John Brenneman, South Bend, IN, thebrenneman@yahoo.com
Mary Buchowski, Charter Township of Clinton, MI, <mbucko2@gmail.com>

Barry Lee Burnside, Kalamazoo, MI, barryburnside@att.net
Tom Cannon, Haslett, MI, toppcatt71@hotmail.com
Karen Chadwick, Kalamazoo, MI, karen.chadwick@gmail.com
Julia Christianson, Decatur, MI, julia@nscjc.net
Patrice Cole, Bloomfield Hills, MI, pcole1545@comcast.net

Bill Costantino, Caledonia, MI, Bill.c@w3groupllc.com


Pedro Crespo, Fennville, MI, Pedroc3@att.net
Martha Dahlinger, Portage, MI, marthadahlinger@att.net
Tom Duffield, Kalamazoo, MI, b.irispotter@gmail.com
Julie Dye, Dowagiac, MI, julietooohio@yahoo.com
Carolyn Ferry, Covert, MI, carolynferry@sbcglobal.net

Patrick Flynn, Palisades Park, Covert, MI, patflynnspub@aol.com

Tom Flynn, Palisades Park, Covert, MI, tflynn71@gmail.com

Flo Friender, Scotts, MI,  friendernest@comcast.net

Earl Hall, Kalamazoo, MI, earl_hall@att.net

Catherine Heaney, Palisades Park Community, Covert, MI, caqheaney@yahoo.com

Robert Henderson, Cottage Owner, Palisades Park Community, Covert, MI, rhenderson1010@yahoo.com
Joseph W. Hess, East Lansing, MI, jwhessgm@gmail.com
Christopher and Lydia Hodshire, Kalamazoo, MI, ong_lydia@hotmail.com
Deb Killarney, Citizen, Kalamazoo, MI, byline1@charter.nert

Mary Lebert, Brighton, MI, mlebert@umich.edu
Patricia R. Lynn, Delton, MI, plynn@mei.net

Rebecca Mandrell, Kalamazoo, MI, eggplant783@gmail.com
Mitchell Maricque, Menominee, MI, mmaricque@yahoo.com
Larry B. & Priscilla D. Massie, Allegan, MI, mihistory.massie@gmail.com
Rebecca McClure, Health care worker, Kalamazoo, MI, Raprahm@gmail.com
Carol McGeehan, Holland, MI, cpmcgeehan27@gmail.com
Victor McManemy, Traverse City, MI, vrmcmanemy@yahoo.com
Mark Muhich, Jackson, MI, turtleeyeproductions.com

Kathleen O’Connor Pierce, Covert, MI, kathleenop@maine.rr.com

Pattie O'Connor, Covert, MI, pattieoconnor@outlook.com 

Deborah A. Owens, South Haven, MI, Debaowens@aol.com
Julius and Barbara Pellegrini, Benton Harbor, MI, barbpell@att.net
David Peterson, Plainwell, MI, david.peterson@wmich.edu
Kathleen Phillips, Covert, MI, kcfp215@gmail.com

Nancy Poprafsky, Royal Oak, MI, ezzybomaso@gmail.com
Francis B. Quinn, Jr., and Claudia J. Somes, MD, Palisades Park, Covert, MI, fbquinn1@gmail.com and drmomcjs@aol.com
Dillon Reed, Homeowner, Covert Township, MI, dillonreed1@gmail.com
Natasha Robinson, Kalamazoo, MI, n.robinson8@gmail.com

Pamela Rups, Kalamazoo, MI, lotusrabbit51@icloud.com
Ilze Skrupskelis, Kalamazoo, MI, ilze-jsj@usa.net

Daniel Smith, Portage, MI, daniel_b_smith@yahoo.com
Dave Staiger, Oshtemo Township, MI, davestaiger@gmail.com
George Theodoru, Portage, MI, gtheodoru@aol.com
Karen Tomlonson, Kalamazoo,  MI, tomlonsonk@gmail.com
Margaret Valade, Bloomfield Hills, MI, macmarg@comcast.net
Lynne VandeBunte, Kalamazoo, MI, lynnegya@gmail.com

Jeffrey Vrba, Bloomfield Hills, MI, jeffvrba@mac.com

Ineke Way, Kalamazoo, MI, inekew786@gmail.com
Ashley Yonker, Kalamazoo, MI, ashleyyonker21@yahoo.com

 

 

cc: Dana Nessel, Attorney General of Michigan

Robert Gordon, Director, Michigan Department of Health and Human Services

Dr. Joneigh S. Khaldun, Chief Medical Executive, and Chief Deputy Director for Health, Michigan Department of Health and Human Services

Nicole Britten, MPH, Health Officer/Director, Berrien County Health Department

Kim Comerzan, Officer/Director, Monroe County Health Department

Jeffery L. Elliott, BBA, Health Officer/Administrator, Van Buren/Cass District Health Department

Liesl Eichler Clark, Director, Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy

James Clift, Senior Great Lakes Advisor, Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy

Sally A. Talberg, Chairman, Michigan Public Service Commission

Daniel C. Scripps, Commissioner, Michigan Public Service Commission

Tremaine L. Phillips, Commissioner, Michigan Public Service Commission

Rachael Eubanks, Treasurer of Michigan

U.S. Senator Debbie Stabenow

U.S. Senator Gary Peters

U.S. Representative Jack Bergman (MI-1st District)

U.S. Representative Bill Huizenga (MI-2nd District)

U.S. Representative Justin Amash (MI-3rd District)

U.S. Representative John Moolenaar (MI-4th District)

U.S. Representative Daniel Kildee (MI-5th District)

U.S. Representative Fred Upton (MI-6th District)

U.S. Representative Tim Walberg (MI-7th District)

U.S. Representative Elissa Slotkin (MI-8th District)

U.S. Representative Andy Levin (MI-9th District)

U.S. Representative Paul Mitchell (MI-10th District)

U.S. Representative Haley Stevens (MI-11th District)

U.S. Representative Debbie Dingell (MI-12th District)

U.S. Representative Rashida Tlaib (MI-13th District)

U.S. Representative Brenda Lawrence (MI-14th District)

Michigan State Speaker of the House, Representative Lee Chatfield

Michigan State House Minority Leader, Representative Christine Greig

Michigan State Senate Majority Leader, Senator Mike Shirkey

Michigan State Senate Minority Leader, Senator Jim Ananich

Chairman Bryan Newland, Executive Council, Bay Mills Chippewa Indian Community

Chairman Thurlow "Sam" McClellan, Tribal Council, Grand Traverse Bay Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians

Kenneth Meshigaud, Tribal Chairman, Hannahville Indian Community

Warren C. Swartz Jr., President, Tribal Council, Keweenaw Bay Indian Community

James Williams Jr., Tribal Chairman, Lac Vieux Desert Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians

Larry Romanelli, Tribal Ogema, Little River Band of Ottawa Indians

Regina Gasco-Bentley, Tribal Chairperson, Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians

Bob Peters, Tribal Chairman, Match-e-be-nash-she-wish Band of Potawatomi Indians of Michigan (Gun Lake)

Jamie Stuck, Chairperson, Naganijek/Tribal Council, Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potawatomi Indians

Matt Wesaw, Tribal Council Chairman, Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians

Tim J. Davis, Chief, Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe


Aaron A. Payment, Tribal Chairperson , Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians

Saturday
Apr252020

Letter from 86 Organizations to Vice President Pence: Urgent Actions Required to Mitigate COVID-19 Impacts in Nuclear Energy Industry

As posted on the NIRS website. This letter, sent by Beyond Nuclear and 85 allied groups, was submitted on Earth Day's 50th anniversary, April 22, 2020.

Tuesday
Apr212020

Groups petition NRC over Fermi 2 repair

Monday
Sep232019

Three Mile Island: What was once too cheap to meter, is now too toxic to clean up

Three Mile Island Alert has put up a billboard in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, warning folks that vigilance is still very much needed, even after the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant's last operating unit shut down for good last Friday.

While de-fueled reactors means a core meltdown is no longer possible, by definition, the high risks have now moved to the high-level radioactive waste storage pools, and irradiated nuclear fuel dry casks. And, as TMIA warns above, hazardous radioactive contamination blankets the site in the middle of the Susquehanna River.

Nuclear corporations Exelon of Chicago, IL, and FirstEnergy of Akron, OH, are currently responsible for the decommissioning phase at Three Mile Island's Unit 1s and 2. Word is, they will "SAFSTORE" the plant for decades to come, before beginning facility dismantlement, and "low-level" radioactive waste and contamination export to a dump someplace else. (There is nowhere for high-level radioactive waste to be shipped off to.)

But nuclear utilities sometimes change their policy on a dime, and move into prompt decommissioning at breakneck speed. In fact, both scandal-ridden Holtec International (and its decommissioning partner, SNC-Lavalin), as well as NorthStar (a consortium which includes Waste Control Specialists, as well as Orano, formerly Areva, of France) claim such prompt decommissioning as their business model.

Vigilance is required. Such firms often seek to drain down already woefully inadequate decommissioning trust funds, as at Three Mile Island, to line their own pockets, and pay unrelated bills. All this, while doing as little actual radioactive contamination cleanup as they can get away with, and taking as many short cuts on safety and security re: on-site high-level radioactive waste management as they can get away with. The fight is on.

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