Here is the full article link:
As  the article reports, proponents of consolidated interim storage  facilities in Texas and New Mexico -- including the companies, and even  the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission -- simply assume the Yucca  Mountain dump on Western Shoshone land in Nevada will open someday (or  some decade, or some century). That's how they justify calling CISFs  "interim storage," rather than de facto permanent surface storage  "parking lot dumps."
How outrageously can  the NRC behave? NRC is supposed to be the safety regulator, not the  policy setter. NRC is supposed to be the unbiased, objective "judge"  presiding over the Yucca Mountain dump licensing proceeding, which has  never even really begun yet, and hopefully never will. But NRC's support  for the construction and operation licenses at the TX and NM CISFs has  already made clear what its ultimate ruling would be -- a rubber-stamp  for construction and operation at the Yucca dump in NV as well.
As  I used to say re: the congressional delegations from Nevada* and Utah,  during the fight against the Private Fuel Storage, LLC CISF targeted at  the Skull Valley Goshutes Indian Reservation (the PFS CISF scheme also  assumed Yucca as the permanent repository), either they hang together,  or they would hang separately. In the end, they hung together, and  blocked the PFS CISF. NM, NV, and TX need to hang together now, in  opposition to the current round of dumps targeted at them -- rather than  being divided and conquered by dump proponents in industry and  government.
---Kevin Kamps, Beyond Nuclear and Don't Waste Michigan
*P.S. A number of the obituaries for U.S. Senator 
Harry Reid (Democrat-Nevada) have mentioned his congressional leadership role in  the successful (thus far, anyway!) resistance to the Yucca Mountain  dump, going back decades. See, for example, the 
Washington Post obit, and the 
Las Vegas Review-Journal obit. Jon Ralston, dean of Nevada political reporting and CEO of the 
Nevada Independent (which broke the news yesterday on Sen. 
Reid's passing on), also spoke about 
Reid's  congressional leadership in the fight against the Yucca dump, on  MSNBC's "The Last Word" last night. Much less known is that Sen. 
Reid also had a key role in the last ditch, bipartisan, successful efforts  to block the PFS CISF in UT, even after NRC had already approved the  construction and operation license. (Despite all that, Sen. 
Reid also, most unfortunately, attempted to undermine the 1863 "peace and friendship" Treaty of  Ruby Valley between the U.S. and Western Shoshone,  apparently/effectively in service to gold mining and other land use  interests.)
-- 
Kevin Kamps
Radioactive Waste Specialist
Beyond Nuclear
7304 Carroll Avenue, #182Takoma Park, Maryland 20912
Cell: (240) 462-3216
kevin@beyondnuclear.orgwww.beyondnuclear.orgBeyond  Nuclear aims to educate and activate the public about the connections  between nuclear power and nuclear weapons and the need to abolish both  to safeguard our future. Beyond Nuclear advocates for an energy future  that is sustainable, benign and democratic.