
As listed in Beyond Nuclear's "Freeze Our Fukushimas" pamphlet, Entergy Nuclear's Vermont Yankee atomic reactor is a GE BWR Mark I, just like Fukushima Daiichi Units 1-4.
Entergy  Nuclear's latest argument before the State of Vermont Public Service  Board -- regarding Vermont Yankee atomic reactor's ongoing operation --  beggars belief. Entergy argues it is above State of Vermont law, even  though it agreed to abide by State of Vermont law a decade ago. As reported by the Associated Press,  Entergy's lawyers and hired experts are now arguing that because  radiological safety is exclusively U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission  jurisdiction by settled law, the State of Vermont must simply get out of  the way -- even though that same U.S. Supreme Court decision in 1983 in  the Pacific Gas & Electric case recognized that states retained authority over most other aspects of nucelar power besides radiological safety.
The article reported:  '...At Monday's hearing on Entergy's request for a new state permit,  company lawyers sought to take that idea of federal pre-emption and run  with it, telling the board that it should avoid considering not just the  economic impact of a possible nuclear accident, but that the board also  should not consider the impact that hosting a nuclear plant might be  having on the state's tourism industry.
Burlington lawyer Robert Hemley told the three-member board the only  reason the presence of a nuclear plant might harm tourism is if the  public develops fears about nuclear safety — a subject Vermont is barred  from considering.
"Discussion about tourism is a pre-empted area. ... We feel the entire area is off-limits for this board," Hemley said.
Entergy's push for pre-emption appeared to run counter to an  agreement it entered with the state when it bought Vermont Yankee in  2002 from the group of New England utilities that had owned it  previously.
Under that memorandum of understanding, Entergy and the state agreed  "to waive any claim each may have that federal law pre-empts the  jurisdiction of the board" to decide Vermont Yankee's post-2012 future.
Entergy lawyer Sanford Weisburst argued later that the board would be  hard-pressed to find a plausible, non-safety reason to deny Vermont  Yankee a new permit...'
Entergy Nuclear has named the three commissioners of Vermont's Public  Service Board, as well as Governor Peter Shumlin and Attorney General  William Sorrell -- by name -- in its lawsuits seeking to  overturn Vermont state laws, to which it had previously committed to  abide, which now call for Vermont Yankee's permanent shutdown.
The  Vermont Yankee Decommissioning Alliance and Citizens Awareness Network  have called for grassroots comments to bolster the Vermont Public  Service Board's resolve against issuing a renewed Certificate of Public  Good to Entergy. Without it, Vermont Yankee's continued operation is illegal under State of Vermont law.
Vermont Digger has reported on this story. Frances  Crowe, a nonagenarian member of the Shut It Down! Affinity Group,  responded to the article by stating: "Every day that plant operates it  is endangering the health and safety
of the people in Vermont, New  Hampshire and Massachusetts. Shut it down and start the clean up and put  the spent fuel rods in dry caskets and bury them deep underground."  Shut It Down! has has organized some two-dozen civil resistance direct  actions protesting against Vermont Yankee. When asked by AP on March 22,  2012 -- amidst 1,500 protestors gathered on the first day of VY's  NRC-rubberstamped 20-year license extension -- how many times she had  been arrested protesting VY, Frances Crowe answered "Not enough!"