U.S. Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA)FOR IMMEDIATE RELASE
Contact: Giselle Barry (Markey) 202-224-2742
In 2011 in the House of Reps., lawmaker introduced nuclear safety  legislation to ensure U.S. nuclear power plants  could withstand  earthquakes, tsunamis, long power outages, or other major events
Washington (March 10, 2014)   – Senator Edward J. Markey, Congress’s leading voice on nuclear  safety,  released the following statement today decrying the lack  of  progress on key improvement to America’s nuclear fleet in the wake  of  the 2011 earthquake and tsunami that led to the meltdown of the   Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear reactors in Japan. 
“America’s  nuclear reactors are no more protected than they  were three years ago  when Japan experienced the worst nuclear disaster  in history,” said Senator Markey, a member of the Environment and Public Works Committee.    “Since the catastrophic meltdowns at Fukushima, reactors in the United   States have yet  to be required to implement a single new safety  measure. While the  NRC’s technical expert report called for swift  mandatory adoption of all  of its recommendations, the Commission voted  to extend implementation  deadlines, add cost-benefit analysis barriers   to moving forward and delay consideration of some of the   recommendations altogether. Three years later, it is past time to   immediately act to implement all of the NRC technical staffs’   recommendations and ensure Americans, especially those living near   nuclear  reactors, are safe.” 
Since  the tragic events in Japan, Senator Markey has written to the  Nuclear  Regulatory Commission (NRC) and President Obama for more  information on  the implications  for America’s domestic nuclear  industry. He has repeatedly urged the  NRC to consider specific domestic  policies to ensure increased nuclear  safety and introduced legislation  to require their implementation.  He  also queried the Food and Drug  Administration  on how the agency is ensuring that contaminated  radioactive food or  other agricultural products are prevented from  entering the domestic  food supply.