***************************************************************** 10/12/07 **** RADIATION BULLETIN(RADBULL) **** VOL 15.240 ***************************************************************** RADBULL IS PRODUCED BY THE ABALONE ALLIANCE CLEARINGHOUSE ***************************************************************** Send News Stories to news@energy-net.org with title on subject line and first line of body NUCLEAR REACTORS 1 IPS-English INDIA/US: Nuke Deal on Pause 2 The Hindu: Arjun Singh justifies Left stand on nuclear deal 3 US: Herald - Life: DHEC to test wells around Catawba Nuclear Station 4 US: North County Times: Unleash power of the atom - 5 US: Centre Daily Times: Radioactive pool leaking 6 US: Charlotte Observer: Group questions Duke Energy's water use 7 The Hindu: Left parties welcome PM, Sonia's remarks on nuclear deal 8 London Times: Nuclear deal in jeopardy after coalition bows to commu 9 US: The Associated Press: Penn State Reports Minor Reactor Leak 10 themorningcall.com: Nuclear power is best alternative to fossil fuel 11 US: Times Leader: PSU still searching for minor leak at nuclear reac 12 US: Rutland Herald: Yankee protest turns to levity 13 US: Times Argus: NRC panel hears Vt. Yankee concerns 14 US: CN: TVA Official Says Nuclear Is Best Option For Meeting Power N 15 US: Detroit Free Press: Fermi II probes find worker error to blame f 16 US: toledoblade.com: Sabotage is ruled out in steam line damage at F 17 toledoblade.com: Inspections for all 18 US: Brattleboro Reformer: NRC panel hears about Yankee concerns 19 China Daily: Work on nuclear plant gets started 20 US: SEIU: Nuclear Regulatory Commission Confirms Security Lapses at 21 US: EPA: comment on Pilgrim license renewal 22 US: Charlotte Business Journal: Nuclear plants' costs assailed - 23 UPI: Chernobyl-hit Belarus to build nuke plant 24 US: Vermont Public Radio: Regulators get an earful from plant critic 25 The Local: Volvo in nuclear energy retreat 26 AU: Herald Sun: Nuclear not an election issue - Switkoswki | 27 US: WTOL-TV Toledo, OH: Officials still searching for cause of Fermi 28 The Telegraph: Left awaits nuclear last word 29 times and star: H-bomb race caused nuke blaze NUCLEAR SECURITY NUCLEAR SAFETY 30 US: Revealing News: Assassination by Radiation, Spy Drones, EPA Appr 31 US: Deseret Morning News: Surviving downwind ? Mary Dickson's play b 32 US: RMN: Congress to look into compensation for nuke workers 33 US: Detroit News: Officials: Worker mistake caused holes at Fermi II 34 US: Rocky Mountain News: Congress to hold Oct. 23 hearing on nuke wo 35 US: ABC4.com: Art exhibit depicts plight of Downwinders - 36 News & Star: it was not in anyones mind that it could catch fire NUCLEAR FUEL CYCLE 37 US: The State: DHEC: Barnwell leaks pose no threat 38 US: The Tribune: Two meetings this weekend about uranium mine 39 US: Salt Lake Tribune: Safety issues threaten plan to move Moab tail 40 KVBC: DOE's Yucca deadline looming 41 Las Vegas Now: Two Nuke Waste Trucking Routes Proposed Through Las V 42 times and star: Experts seek help with nuke waste PEACE 43 BBC NEWS: US rejects Russian missile call 44 PakTribune: Our nuclear scientists 45 US: UPI: Electric Boat wins new Navy sub contract 46 AFP: Rice, Gates tackle missile defence, Iran in Moscow talks - 47 AFP: Russia threatens to leave missile treaty - 48 Guardian Unlimited: Rice: Missile Defense Plans to Proceed 49 Guardian Unlimited: Putin Says Missile Plan Risks Relations 50 Guardian Unlimited: US-Russia Missile Defense Talks Fail 51 Guardian Unlimited: We will dump nuclear treaty, Putin warns US DEPT. OF ENERGY 52 Tri-City Herald: Jet encounter over Hanford a test exercise 53 DOE: Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement for a Geologi 54 Ventura County Star: State to take over former Rocketdyne site ***************************************************************** ***************************************************************** FULL NEWS STORIES ***************************************************************** ***************************************************************** 1 IPS-English INDIA/US: Nuke Deal on Pause Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2007 15:08:29 -0700 Analysis by Praful Bidwai NEW DELHI, Oct 12 (IPS) - Stiff opposition from coalition partners in the ruling United Progressive Alliance, as well as hesitation within its own ranks, has compelled India's Congress party to put on hold negotiations for completing the controversial nuclear cooperation deal with the United States. This casts serious doubt over whether the agreement will be completed, or fall through owing to lack of domestic and international consensus. If it goes through, the deal would allow India to import. nuclear fuel and reactors, despite the fact that India has nuclear weapons, has tested them, and has not signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty. Although there is no clarity yet about the duration of the suspension of the negotiation process, it is likely to last till the end of December, and possibly into early next year. Matters will become somewhat clearer on Oct. 22, when a 15-member joint committee set up by the UPA and the Left parties meets after a 13-day break to discuss the deal, which the Communists vigorously oppose, but whose parliamentary support is crucial to the government's survival. The Left parties demand that further talks on the deal be put on hold; or they would withdraw support to the UPA, in all probability precipitating parliamentary elections ahead of the scheduled date of 2009. Speculation about the next round of talks, expected to be held with the International Atomic Energy Agency, peaked this week thanks to the arrival of the agency's director-general Mohamed El-Baradei in India. El-Baradei met various leaders but held no discussions on the nuclear deal here. He is partly on a private visit. However, El-Baradei repeatedly expressed his support for the deal and said there is no time limit for India to approach the IAEA, and he would wait till India is ready to discuss the issue with the agency. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said on Friday that he hopes to complete his full five-year term and avoid mid-term elections. This signals that completing his tenure has become a higher priority than pushing through the nuclear deal. ”Elections are still far away. This government still has one-and-a-half years to complete its time,” Singh told a conference in New Delhi. ”It is my hope and expectation we will stay the course.” In another indication that the government could sacrifice the deal or put it at risk in order to save the coalition and avoid early elections, Singh said: ”We are not a one-issue government...we have made changes in several areas. It is certainly true if the deal doesn't come through, it will be a disappointment, but it will not be the end of life.” Congress party president Sonia Gandhi echoed Singh's comments and emphasised that the government does not want an early election and wants to fulfil its promises to the electorate. This is the clearest official statement so far that the UPA is not averse to a rethink on the deal, into which Singh has invested a huge amount of energy. ”It would be fair to say that it is the UPA that blinked first in its months-long confrontation with the Left parties,” says Kamal Mitra Chenoy, a political analyst attached to Jawaharlal Nehru University in Delhi. ”Just a few days ago, it seemed as if the two were headed for a showdown, with Sonia Gandhi calling the Left ‘enemies' of development and peace, and declaring that the Congress was prepared to meet the challenge of a mid-term election.” The Congress this week pulled back from the brink of an election when it realised that the Left's threat of withdrawal of support is not empty, and when its own UPA allies are loath to face an early election whose outcome seems uncertain. Some of the regional allies openly voiced their opposition at the last meeting of the UPA-Left committee on Tuesday. This emboldened many Congress leaders too to warn against an early election in inner-party discussions. ”Clearly, the Indian political debate on the nuclear deal has moved away from its merits and demerits, to the practical implications of pushing it through in the face of domestic opposition,” argues Chenoy. ”Most UPA leaders do not want to go into an election on a complex foreign policy issue like the deal, and that too with the U.S., which is hardly a popular power in India.” UPA leaders, especially of the smaller parties, are uneasy at the prospect of risking their political future on this controversial agreement. Recent opinion polls show the deal is a low priority for most Indians. The Left criticises the deal on ”principled grounds” because it will draw India into the U.S. strategic orbit and erode her independence in nuclear decision-making, besides promoting nuclear power generation in costly imported reactors. The Left's opposition to the deal remained strong despite last-ditch efforts by Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee, last weekend, to moderate it through a conditional offer regarding talks to further its completion, mediated through senior Communist Party of India (Marxist) leader and former West Bengal Chief Minister Jyoti Basu. The Left's opposition confronted the UPA's constituents with a stark choice: push the deal through and risk losing power; or put the deal on hold at least for some time in the hope that some reconciliation with the agreement's critics might be possible. The first option, argued some UPA leaders like Nationalist Congress Party chief and agriculture minister Sharad Pawar, would probably mean losing both the government and the deal -- an expensive strategy that would extract a high political price. In the event, they seem to have prevailed, at least for the moment, over the deal's zealous supporters who would risk the government's collapse to push through the agreement. The domestic debate is unlikely to be the sole determinant of the fate of the nuclear deal. It has to clear three other obstacles: negotiation and approval by the IAEA of a special inspections (safeguards) agreement with India, unconditional exemption for India by the 45-nation Nuclear Suppliers' Group from its nuclear commerce rules, and ratification by the United States Congress. ”The first two hurdles could themselves prove difficult to cross if some IAEA and NSG members raise awkward questions about the rationale of making a special exception for India in the global non-proliferation order,” says M.V. Ramana, an independent nuclear affairs analyst based at the Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in the Environment and Development in Bangalore. ”There are indications that Ireland, New Zealand and the Nordic countries are gearing up to do so, especially in the NSG,'' said Ramana. Others like Germany, the Netherlands and Japan might join them too. And then there is a China, which is known to be unhappy with the deal, although it might not want to be seen as its sole opponent.” If the international community gets the impression that the deal does not enjoy broad support within India, and can even cause the fall of the Manmohan Singh government, its critics are likely to become more vocal in questioning it and delaying its completion. ”That's where the time-horizon becomes crucially important,” says Ramana. ”In the final analysis, the deal must get ready for approval by the U.S. Congress before President Bush becomes a total lame-duck. No one else can muster the political capital and will necessary to pilot the deal through Congress, many of whose members, especially Democrats, have reservations about it.” The UPA, then, may only have time till next spring or so to get the deal approved in the IAEA and the NSG. And that may be cutting it extremely fine. The length of the current pause will be critically important. At any rate, the contestation over the nuclear deal promises to be a photo finish. ***** + INDIA/US: Nuke Deal May Trigger Mid-Term Polls (http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=39366) + Nuclear Ambitions - IPS Special Coverage (http://www.ipsnews.net/new_focus/nuclear/index.asp) (END/IPS/AP/WD/IP/NU/NR/IF/CO/PB/RDR/07) = 10121752 ORP007 NNNN ***************************************************************** 2 The Hindu: Arjun Singh justifies Left stand on nuclear deal Friday, October 12, 2007 : 2120 Hrs Bhopal (PTI): Virtually defending the Left parties' protest on Indo-US civil Nuclear deal, senior Congress leader and Union Minister Arjun Singh on Friday said "no pressure is unjustified in a democratic set up". "In a democracy, no pressure is unjustified," Singh told reporters when asked to comment on whether the 'pressure' exerted by the Left parties on the issue of proposed nuclear deal with US is unjustified. Talking to reporters, after unveiling the foundation stone of the new building of a Kendriya Vidyalaya here, Singh said that the decision on the nuclear deal was taken by the Union cabinet after taking into account several issues. On the issue of mid-term polls in the wake of standoff between UPA and Left parties on the nuclear issue, Singh avoiding a categorial reply on the issue merely said, "I would not be contesting polls. Even if it has to be held, then political parties will decide about it." On the alleged irregularities in the Maulana Azad National Institute of Technology (MANIT) here, he said that orders have been issued to take action in the matter. To a question on education standard in Madhya Pradesh, the HRD minister quipped, "same as mine and your's". The decision to abolish board exams for standard fifth and eighth in the state is a subject of the state government, he added. Earlier, addressing a function, Singh said that at present there are nearly 900 Central schools in the country and during the 11th five-year plan more such vidyalayas would be set up wherever necessary in the country. Copyright © 2007, The Hindu. Republication or redissemination of the ***************************************************************** 3 Herald - Life: DHEC to test wells around Catawba Nuclear Station Serving York, Chester, and Lancaster Counties. Action comes day after high tritium levels found in one well By Adam MacInnis · Enquirer-Herald Published 10/12/07 - 12:00 AM | The S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control will be testing today for radioactive tritium in about 30 wells around the Catawba Nuclear Station on Lake Wylie. The testing comes after the Duke Energy-owned station discovered one of 30 new wells at the plant had tritium levels twice as high as the Environmental Protection Agency considers safe for drinking water. DHEC spokeswoman Mary Nguyen Bright said testing should be completed in the afternoon, and results should be available in about three weeks. "It's just preventative because we're wanting to make sure that there isn't any indication that it's gotten off site," Bright said. There's no need to panic, Duke Energy officials say. The well containing the tritium was not a source for drinking water. It was put at the site for the sole purpose of testing groundwater, said Valerie Patterson, Duke spokeswoman. There has been no indication that tritium has spread outside Duke property, Patterson said. Duke Energy was still investigating the leak's origins on Thursday. Here's more information about tritium and what residents can do to feel safe. Just what is tritium? Tritium is a radioactive form of hydrogen that occurs naturally when cosmic rays collide with air molecules. It's also formed as a byproduct of nuclear plants to help control heat. Tritium emits a weak form of radiation that could increase risk of cancer or cause birth defects if consumed in large quantities. Some experts, however, have said tritium can be used to foreshadow the eventual flow of more toxic radioactive materials in groundwater. Has this happened before? This is the first-known tritium leak at the York station, but it has happened at six other nuclear plants outside the Carolinas in recent years. There was no threat to public health in each incident. How much tritium-contaminated water would I have to consume before I'm in danger? A lot. It would take a significant amount of tritium over a long period of time to be harmful. The EPA says it is safe to drink water with 20,000 picocuries per liter, assuming that a person drinks two liters a day for a year. That amount of radiation from 20,000 picocuries would be about a third of the radiation you're exposed to from one chest X-ray. If I live downstream from the Catawba Nuclear Plant and own a well, is there anything I should do now to ensure safety? There isn't much to do now other than give DHEC permission to test your water. If your well tests positive, you should still be OK because the three weeks it will take for test results to come back isn't long enough to consume significant amounts of tritium. Should I have taken my KI pill? No. The KI pill (potassium iodine pill) is designed to protect your thyroid from absorbing radioactive iodine. KI should only be taken in the event of a nuclear emergency, when directed by health officials. Would it do any good for me to boil my water? No, boiling water may actually increase your risk, because when the water is boiled, steam may make the tritium airborne. If you're concerned about possible contamination, your best bet may be to drink bottled water and wait until your water is tested. Can I test my own water? Yes, there are private companies across the region that will test your water, but DHEC is testing water for free in the at-risk areas. If you think you're in an at-risk area, call DHEC at (800) 476-9677 to request a test. What happens if tritium is found outside the Catawba Nuclear Plant? If tritium is found outside of the plant, DHEC will continue to test to see how far out the water is contaminated. Water sources deemed unsafe to drink will likely be restricted and owners would have to look for alternative sources. Is it likely this tritium will end up in the Catawba River system? No. This particular tritium was found in groundwater that doesn't move very far. It was found in just one well. -- Sources: Duke Energy, DHEC, EPA All rights reserved. This copyrighted material may not be published, The Herald is owned by The McClatchy Company and is a Member of the South Carolina Press Association Copyright © 2006 The Herald, Rock Hill, South Carolina ***************************************************************** 4 North County Times: Unleash power of the atom - / The Californian - Last modified Thursday, October 11, 2007 7:07 PM PDT By: North County Times Opinion staff - Our view: It's time to lift California's ban on new nuclear energy plants Sixty years into the Atomic Age, apocalypse has not yet been visited upon us. That fact and our surging demand for energy compel Californians to seriously consider the effort by Assemblyman Chuck DeVore, R-Irvine, to overturn the state's 1976 moratorium on nuclear power plants. With California's population predicted to rise 36 percent by 2050 to almost 60 million people, energy demand seems likely to keep growing. Those arguing against the need for more nuclear power, especially in coastal California, are losing ground ---- almost literally, as concerns grow over rising sea levels due to global warming. A tough new state law that seeks to cut greenhouse gases by 25 percent all but requires new nuclear reactors. Clearly, Californians want to stop relying on dirty fossil fuels, such as coal, for electricity production. But there is little evidence that clean alternative energies ---- wind, solar, geothermal or wave-generated ---- can meet increased demand. That leaves nuclear. Although nuclear energy production will never be safe enough to satisfy opponents, advances in technology promise to reduce the already remote chance of a catastrophic meltdown. Opponents stand on sturdier ground when they warn about the lack of storage for nuclear waste. Fortunately, the United States built the Yucca Mountain repository in Nevada for precisely that purpose. It is primarily politics that prevents us from using that facility. More nuclear power will mean building new generators at old sites, like San Onofre. Though its vulnerability to tsunamis and earthquakes shakes our confidence in our nearby site, building a state-of-the-art, smarter reactor there won't tip the safety equation on the site significantly. We support striving for cleaner air, reduced reliance on fossil fuels and lower greenhouse emissions. Like it or not, those goals won't be achieved without more help from nuclear power. A bill introduced earlier this week by Assemblyman Chuck DeVore, R-Irvine, would allow the building of a new nuclear reactor at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. Part of the power produced by a third reactor at the nuclear plant would be used to run a desalination plant to turn seawater into drinking water, DeVore said. The bill would lift a decades-old ban on nuclear facilities to build the reactor at San Onofre. In 1976, the state banned building more nuclear plants pending a permanent place to store used nuclear waste. Only two plants are in operation in California: San Onofre near the San Diego County/Orange County line and Diablo Canyon near San Luis Obispo. San Diego County has two of the state's four nuclear reactors, and it could get more if enough voters support a statewide petition that seeks to overturn California's prohibition on new plants. The initiative, which needs more than 400,000 signatures to qualify for the November ballot, is championed by Orange County Assemblyman Chuck DeVore, R-Irvine, as a way of generating more electricity without producing more carbon dioxide, which scientists link to global warming. DeVore's initiative, which was recently approved for signature gathering by the California Attorney General's office, declares much of the California coast off limits for building nuclear plants because of the likelihood of severe earthquakes. But most of the San Diego County coastline ---- including Camp Pendleton where the two units of the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station sit, and the coast near San Luis Obispo where the Diablo Canyon nuclear power station operates two units ---- is in the clear, according to earthquake safety limits listed in the initiative. In 1976, California legislators banned building nuclear plants pending a permanent place to store used nuclear fuel. The federal government is making plans to store the nation's growing pile of highly radioactive waste in an underground vault deep beneath Yucca Mountain in Nevada, but that state's leadership and anti-nuclear groups have opposed the plan. For now, spent nuclear fuel is stored in deep pools and heavy concrete bunkers at both of California's plant sites. DeVore's proposed initiative relies on reprocessing old nuclear fuel to solve the problem of permanent waste disposal. Countries such as France use special facilities to separate plutonium from used uranium, then recombine it with new uranium to create more fuel. DeVore said he sees reprocessing as the solution to the disposal problem. Steve Fetter, dean of the School of Public Policy at the University of Maryland and a co-author of a book that compares reprocessing and direct disposal of spent nuclear fuel, said the French solution does not completely solve the problem of long-term disposal. "It is a type of recycling, but it doesn't save money, and it doesn't eliminate the need for deep geological long-term storage," Fetter said. webmaster@nctimes.com © 1997-2007 North County Times ? Lee Enterprises editor@nctimes.com ***************************************************************** 5 Centre Daily Times: Radioactive pool leaking CentreDaily.com Archives Web for Friday, Oct. 12, 2007 PENN STATE: Breazeale Nuclear Reactor By Adam Smeltz - asmeltz@centredaily.com Several hundred gallons of mildly radioactive water have leaked in recent days from the Breazeale Nuclear Reactor at Penn State, the university reported late Thursday. Breazeale Nuclear Reactor at Penn State. In an interview and in a written statement, a public information officer said the water poses no health risk to personnel at the 52-year-old reactor, to the community at large, or to the environment. The water pool where the reactor is based holds 71,000 gallons. As of late Thursday, the university had shut down the reactor to help crews find the source of the leak, said Andrea Messer, the information officer. She said water from the pool is leaking into the ground below. “That’s as far as we know,” Messer said. “It’s not like there’s a puddle outside the reactor.” Fred Sears, a senior scientist who oversees the reactor, referred questions to Messer. She said radiation in the leaked water is minute. A person using it as his sole drinking-water supply for a year would be exposed to less than half the radiation absorbed during a single X-ray exam, Messer said. “The water is essentially at radioactive levels that are just slightly above the legal limits for drinking water,” said Jack Brenizer, the chairman in nuclear engineering at Penn State. He said an unusual dip in the water level there prompted the staff to shut down the reactor Tuesday. Research that depends on radiation from the device has been put on hold until a fix is found, Brenizer said. Because the leak is relatively small — estimated by the university at some 10 gallons an hour — tracking it down could require a lot of investigation, he said. “Once you find it,” Brenizer added, “it’s relatively easy to fix,” especially with modern grout. Ongoing research involving the noncommercial reactor had included some work on fuel cells, Brenizer said. He estimated that three to four research experiments are conducted at the facility in a typical week. Also, this semester, two classes have been using the reactor, he said. He recalled two other similar, minor leaks at the facility — one in the late 1990s, the other in the mid-’70s. “Every pool — including swimming pools — has these types of issues occasionally,” Brenizer said. He said the trouble at the reactor “is about as minor as it could be, but it’s not something we take lightly.” “This is a necessary but precautionary shutdown. It’s prudent to shut down and figure out what’s going on,” Brenizer said. “ ... It’s like if you see oil underneath your car. You’d better figure out what’s going on.” The university reported that it notified the state Department of Environment Protection and the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Workers at the reactor are inspecting valves, tanks and piping, according to a news release. Water in the tank acts as a shield around the radiation. It also helps cool the reactor. Other than the slight radiation it carries, the water is remarkably pure, university officials said. The reactor itself, on the east side of the University Park campus near University Drive, is a relatively small device. Messer said its controls and monitoring devices have been updated numerous times since the facility was built. Adam Smeltz can be reached at 231-4631. * Copyright 2007 The Centre Daily Times ***************************************************************** 6 Charlotte Observer: Group questions Duke Energy's water use 10/12/2007 | BROAD RIVER NEAR HISTORIC LOW Environmentalists say Cliffside plant draws more than permitted BRUCE HENDERSON bhenderson@charlotteobserver.com An environmental group Thursday challenged Duke Energy's use of water at its Cliffside power plant in Rutherford County, which the utility plans to expand. The N.C. Waste Awareness & Reduction Network, based in Durham, asked a state administrative court to suspend a wastewater-discharge permit for the plant issued in August. The group claims the plant routinely uses more cooling water from the Broad River than what Duke listed in its permit application. It says neither Duke nor the N.C. Division of Water Quality, the target of the challenge, fully evaluated the impact of the plant's water usage. Duke spokesman Rick Rhodes said the company won't respond to a legal challenge it hasn't seen. WARN and other environmentalists have fought Duke's $1.8 billion expansion plans -- one new boiler, updating a second and retiring four old units -- for Cliffside. Coal-fired power plants are major sources of air pollution and greenhouse gases linked to global warming. Such plants use enormous amounts of water to cool the equipment inside. Most of it is returned to the source, but some is lost to evaporation -- nearly 10 million gallons a day at Cliffside. Water questions are timely because of the ongoing drought, said WARN Executive Director Jim Warren. The Broad is near its historic low stream flow. Duke might also build a new nuclear plant, which would need cooling water, downstream in Cherokee County, S.C. Duke says the expanded plant, expected to start up in 2012, will use about 88 percent less water than it does now. Cooling towers on the new and upgraded unit will end the discharge of heated water to the Broad. But water lost to evaporation after the expansion will more than double. ***************************************************************** 7 The Hindu: Left parties welcome PM, Sonia's remarks on nuclear deal Friday, October 12, 2007 : 2200 Hrs New Delhi (PTI): Left parties on Friday welcomed the statements of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and UPA chief Sonia Gandhi on the nuclear deal, saying the government was committed to considering the findings of the joint mechanism set up to allay their concerns on the issue. "The government will proceed on the deal only after the committee formed to give an opinion on ramifications of the deal gives its opnion. On the basis of the written agreement between the Left and the government, we will deliberate on the October 22," CPI(M) Polit Bureau member Sitaram Yechury said here. CPI General Secretary A B Bardhan said the deal has never been the "end-all" of the government but that is what has been propogated for all these days. "I have always been saying that why do you want to sacrifice your own government on the altar of this nuclear deal," he said, adding perhaps "sobreity" has returned. His party colleague D Raja said "it is good that they see a point now on what the Left has been saying on the deal. It is a positive development (that) they will give consideration to the concerns expressed by the Left in national interests." Singh said the failure to carry the deal through would not not be "the end of life" and Gandhi said the Left parties, which were opposing the deal, were not being "unreasonable" and the government was not not looking for a confrontation with them. Copyright © 2007, The Hindu. Republication or redissemination of the ***************************************************************** 8 London Times: Nuclear deal in jeopardy after coalition bows to communists - Times October 13, 2007 Jeremy Page in Delhi India’s landmark nuclear deal with the United States was in jeopardy last night after the Government indicated that it was unwilling to sacrifice the country’s ruling coalition and force early elections. The communist parties that back the Government have threatened repeatedly to withdraw their support over the deal, prompting widespread talk of a snap poll next year instead of in 2009. Manmohan Singh, the Prime Minister, told a conference in Delhi that he would continue to try to persuade the communists to back what he called an “honourable deal that is good for India and good for the world”. But both he and Sonia Gandhi, the Congress Party leader, emphasised that their priority was to see out the Government’s current term rather than to force the deal through at any cost. “This Government still has one and a half years to complete its time. It is my hope and expectation we will stay the course,” said Mr Singh, who spearheaded two years of negotiations over the nuclear deal. “We are not a one-issue Government,” he added. “It is certainly true that if the deal doesn’t come through, it will be a disappointment, but it will not be the end of life.” It is designed to secure energy sources for the booming Indian economy and underpin a new strategic relationship between Washington and Delhi. But the communist parties that give the coalition its majority in Parliament say that it will make India subservient to US strategic interests and compromise its own military programme. They have threatened to withdraw their support if the Government “operationalises” the deal by starting to negotiate an agreement on safeguards with the International Atomic Energy Agency. The crisis came to a head this week just as Mohammed ElBaradei, the agency chief, visited India to meet Mr Singh and other senior officials. Until yesterday, the Government appeared determined to call the communists’ bluff, and an early election seemed inevitable. On Sunday, Mrs Gandhi denounced opponents of the nuclear deal as “enemies of progress and development”. Yesterday, she insisted that her comments had been misinterpreted and played down the importance of the deal. “This is just another issue among a large number of issues,” she said. “We’re not in favour of early elections . . . our deadline is 2009 and we’re going to do all we can to see to it that work to that deadline.” Some analysts said that the Government was trying to cool the atmosphere before the next round of talks with the communists, scheduled for October 22, and was not necessarily backing down. Others said that the coalition had got cold feet about an early election and the future of the deal was now in question. India had wanted to conclude an agreement with the atomic energy authority by the end of the month and get approval from the US Congress before the American presidential election. But the deal has also been criticised by Congress members, who say it undermines American efforts to stop the spread of nuclear weapons. © Copyright 2007 Times Newspapers Ltd. This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69. ***************************************************************** 9 The Associated Press: Penn State Reports Minor Reactor Leak By GENARO C. ARMAS – 1 day ago STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) — Penn State University reported a minor leak of "slightly radioactive water" at its nuclear research reactor but said Thursday that the leak poses no risk to workers, the community or the environment. Workers discovered water leaking Tuesday from the pool in which the reactor sits into the ground beneath the Penn State campus. State and federal officials were notified, and the reactor was shut down and will remain out of service until the source of the leak is found, the university said. "There's no impact on the community. It's just something that, now that we know what's going on, we are telling the community and continuing to look for the leak," A'ndrea Elyse Messer, the university's senior science and research spokeswoman, said Thursday night. The state Department of Environmental Protection was notified after the problem arose Tuesday and is in contact with the university and the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission, state environmental spokesman Neil Weaver said. A call Thursday night to the commission was not immediately returned. "Just like what they said, there is no concern for public safety," Weaver said. "We will continue to monitor the situation and make sure it's rectified." Staff at the Breazeale nuclear research reactor noticed "a small reduction of several hundred gallons over the past several days" from the 71,000-gallon pool, which shields the core's radiation and cools the reactor, the university said. The level had not dropped enough to trigger an alarm from monitoring devices, Messer said. Classes, meetings and other research not connected to the reactor were still taking place at the facility, Messer said. There was no threat to the water supply and the public "should not be worried" by the leak, she said. Someone drinking the contaminated water for a year would be exposed to only half the amount of radiation deemed safe by the Environmental Protection Agency and less than half the amount received from a conventional X-ray, the university said in a news release. "Residents of central Pennsylvania routinely receive much larger exposure from natural sources in their environment," Penn State said. The reactor is used for research by nuclear engineering students and by 20 to 30 other departments on campus but does not produce electricity, according to the reactor center's Web site. Since it was built in 1955, there have been "no accidents or evacuations involving a degradation or problem with the reactor," the site said. On the Net: * Breazeale Nuclear Reactor: http://www.rsec.psu.edu/index.html Copyright © 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. ***************************************************************** 10 themorningcall.com: Nuclear power is best alternative to fossil fuels -- Another View By David Dawson October 12, 2007 In September, the cooling towers at the world's oldest industrial-scale nuclear power plant were reduced to a pile of rubble. The Calder Hall plant in northern England is being taken apart after 50 years of service. The plant has special significance to my family. Shortly after earning his engineering degree, my father in 1954 moved our family from Liverpool to England's Lake District to work on that plant. Calder Hall went on line in 1956. A year later, the first commercial U.S. plant began generating right here in Pennsylvania, in Shippingport, Beaver County. A half-century later, it seems nothing has changed. At that time, nuclear power promised to solve what was, to the industry, an obvious problem even then: that fossil fuels were a finite source of energy and that a viable substitute had to be found. My father spent his career in the design of nuclear power plants, becoming a specialist in the massive concrete structures that house and support them. He always believed that, like it or not, nuclear power was the only viable answer to the world's ever-growing energy needs. In the 1950s and through the 1960s, there was good reason to beleive that the fission plants being built at that time were bridge technology, a power source to hold us over until cleaner, safer and more powerful fusion plants were developed. The Calder Hall plant is history, and England has decided to move away from nuclear power. But in the United States, we see a new interest in atomic power, supported by legislation that reduces the financial risks for the utilities that build them. Among the companies interested is PPL, which plans to add a third reactor to its Susquehanna Plant in Luzerne County. My father always argued that nuclear power was never developed to its potential in the United States due to misguided regulation -- regulation that drove up the cost beyond reason and which, at its heart, was intended to halt the industry's growth. As do many supporters of nuclear power, he pointed to France's program as a model of what could have been done. Today, France derives 80 percent of its power from nuclear plants. The United States is at about 20 percent. The specter of energy shortages in the postwar era drove atomic power forward in the 1950s and early 1960s, but these fears were largely forgotten in subsequent decades as massive new reserves of oil and gas were discovered around the world. But as world population continues to grow apace and as energy needs expand to match with no end in sight, we find our thinking back where it was in the late 50s. Nuclear, like it or not, is the only technology that can satisfy world power requirements over the long term. It was in 1957 that our family emigrated to the United States, where my dad took a job with a Boston engineering firm that was to see its fortunes grow and then fade with the nuclear power industry. Five decades of nuclear history do not make the lessons any easier to swallow. There have been accidents. The cost of decommissioning the old plants is considerable. And disposal of nuclear waste remains a political football. More difficult still, the belief that fusion power would supplant that first generation of fission reactors has been lost. Looking ahead, we must be realistic. There is no ideal option. We can build windmills and spread solar panels across the landscape; we can do much to curb the growth of our energy needs. But even the most ardent backers of these approaches can't argue that this will be enough. A new generation of nuclear plants will be built -- and it behooves us to see in them the same promise they offered 50 years ago. That promise is a bridge, the only bridge that's big enough, to carry us forward until a better alternative is discovered. David Dawson of Cherryville is an editor at The Morning Call. His e-mail address is david.dawson@mcall.com. More articles Copyright © 2007, The Morning Call ***************************************************************** 11 Times Leader: PSU still searching for minor leak at nuclear reactor Wilkes-Barre and Northeastern PA News from the Associated Press | timesleader.com - (AP) Penn State workers searching for what the university called a minor leak of "slightly radioactive water" from a pool at the school's nuclear research reactor plan to drain part of the pool to try to find the problem. Nuclear Regulatory Commission spokesman Neil Sheehan said Friday that the university has 15 people working on the leak discovered Tuesday and is looking to bring in outside help. University officials have said that the leak in the 71,000-gallon pool that shields the core's radiation and cools the reactor poses no risk to students, employees, the community or the environment. Someone drinking the contaminated water for a year would be exposed to only half the amount of radiation deemed safe by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and less than half the amount received from a conventional X-ray, the university said in a statement. The reactor is used for research by nuclear engineering undergraduate and graduate students and by 20 to 30 other departments on campus but does not produce electricity, according to the reactor facility's Web site. Research reactors use fuel that is less radioactive than that used in commercial power reactors, and also less fuel overall than power reactors. For instance, Penn State's fuel can generate about 1 megawatt of heat, while the amount of heat generated by a typical commercial power reactor would be about 3,000 megawatts, according to the NRC. While oversight is required at research facilities, the guidelines aren't as stringent as for power reactors, Sheehan said. ___ On the Net: Breazeale Nuclear Reactor: http://www.rsec.psu.edu/index.html © Copyright 2007 The Times Leader. All Rights Reserved. Times Leader 15 N. Main Street Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711 (570) 829-7101 or (800) 427-8649 ***************************************************************** 12 Rutland Herald: Yankee protest turns to levity October 12, 2007 By Susan Smallheer Herald Staff BRATTLEBORO — Residents used humor, satire and outright pleas for help to try and convince a panel from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission Thursday that Entergy Nuclear shouldn't be allowed to operate Vermont Yankee for another 20 years. The Atomic Safety and Licensing Board listened to dozens of residents' concerns, with most people pointing to the collapse of one of Vermont Yankee's cooling towers in August, and an emergency shutdown a week later as proof that something was wrong at the 35-year-old plant. Entergy Nuclear has applied for a license amendment so it can continue operating Vermont Yankee beyond its original shutdown date of 2012. Federal regulators and state regulators must approve the request. But to listen to the people who turned out at an NRC hearing at the Latchis Theater, the public's confidence in the plant, never very strong in the communities surrounding the plant, has hit a new low. John Ward, an auto mechanic from Gill, Mass., which is not far from the Vernon reactor, told the ALSB panel that the NRC was "complicit with the industry" and that more scrutiny was warranted of the Vernon plant. Ward, who said he also raced cars, said he was very familiar with metal fatigue, which he said was bound to be a problem at a plant that is approaching 40 years old. "Radiation does cross state lines," Ward said, echoing the remarks of several Massachusetts and New Hampshire residents, who took umbrage at remarks by Vermont Gov. James Douglas, who said last week that he didn't want the governors of those states meddling in the issues of Vermont Yankee. U.S. Sen. Bernard Sanders, I-Vt., has introduced legislation that would give neighboring governors the right to ask for a special inspection at nuclear power plants, not just the home state. Ward said Entergy had ignored an identical cooling tower collapse 10 years ago at the Prairie Island reactor. Ward said he attended his first meeting about Vermont Yankee last week, when the Vermont State Nuclear Advisory Panel held a hearing about the recent events at Yankee. He said while the cooling tower collapse was startling, the emergency shutdown was actually much more serious, since it was an indication of poor maintenance in the plant itself. "At this age, unanticipated problems are beginning to show up. Who is doing aging management?" he asked. Derrik Jordan of Putney said a former worker at Vermont Yankee had told him that the tower collapse was a result of a deliberate decision by the company not to do maintenance. "I hope you are here to listen to what the people in the county are feeling," he said. Earlier in the evening, two Brattleboro women — "Mrs. Will O'Bay" and "Mrs. Merrie Newcomb" injected some humor in the proceedings, when they testified that they were glad that the NRC was in charge of reviewing Vermont Yankee since they didn't really understand the issues. The two women, Brattleboro area activists, were dressed in 1950s era clothing, complete with white gloves, spectator pumps, fancy hats and wigs. "O'Bay" praised the NRC panel for "refusing to talk about waste," noting that in genteel society, people didn't talk about waste, human or nuclear. "To discuss waste is in extremely poor taste," she said, referring to the waste at the nuclear reactor. "Newcomb" said she was there instead of her husband, Will Newcomb. "Newcomb" said that it was only natural that accidents happen. "Anyone can overlook a tower, after all," she said, telling Alex Karlin, the head judge of the Atomic Safety Licensing Board, that she had a nephew who was a carpenter. "Would you like his name?" she asked. "Yes," said Karlin, playing along. "That would be great." Earlier in the evening, the Safe Power Coalition, an organization of anti-nuclear groups, held a rally in downtown Brattleboro, attracting about 70 people. Vermont can get along without the power generated at Vermont Yankee, several speakers said, pointing to the recent problems at the plant when it reduced power for 17 days and actually shut down for a few days. "You didn't see the lights go out," said Michael Daley of Westminster. "There is no safe nuclear plant." Vermont should invest more in efficiency, from buying compact fluorescent light bulbs to new refrigerators, to decrease the demand for electricity, he said. "Eliminate Vermont Yankee in your life," he said. Contact Susan Smallheer at susan.smallheer@rutlandherald.com. © 2007 Rutland Herald ***************************************************************** 13 Times Argus: NRC panel hears Vt. Yankee concerns October 12, 2007 By Dave Gram Associated Press Jean Broome of Brattleboro holds a sign during a rally to protest the Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant in Brattleboro Thursday. Photo: AP Photo/Toby Talbot BRATTLEBORO — The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission panel came for a narrow purpose, but its three members got the broad brush from both sides in the debate over nuclear power Thursday. The NRC's Atomic Safety and Licensing Board wanted to hear public comments on three technical issues connected with Vermont Yankee's application to extend its operating license for 20 years beyond its current expiration date in 2012. Instead, it heard impassioned speeches on how storing high-level radioactive waste at the plant was making its host town a terrorist target, complaints that the NRC can't be an effective regulator and a defense of the plant as being good for Vermont's economy. Storing high-level waste in "dry casks" — large concrete and steel canisters on the banks of the Connecticut River — "puts Vernon, Vt., on Iran's map, on (North) Korea's map and on the map of every terrorist group that wants to take us off the map," said Paul Busquet of West Townshend. Shari Zabriskie of Guilford asked the NRC panel, "Is the NRC here to do its job and protect us, or is it simply going to support the industry on which its existence depends?" Amanda Ibey, representing pro-Vermont Yankee group Vermont Energy Partnership, said her group's member businesses and business-friendly organizations want to keep the plant running as long as possible. "Our mission is to advocate for sound policies that will provide an ample supply of clean and affordable electricity for the long-term economic and environ-mental vitality of our state," Ibey said. "Vermont Yankee is an important part of that long-term equation." Those were three samples of comments the NRC panel heard on an evening when it said speakers should be addressing three specific formal complaints or "contentions" filed by the nuclear watchdog group New England Coalition and later joined by the state Department of Public Service. Those concerns: Whether Vermont Yankee is being careful enough in tracking "metal fatigue" of various plant components caused by its 35 years of operation; Whether it has a good plan to monitor cracks in its steam dryer, a key plant part that removes water from the steam that comes from the reactor before it is sent to the turbine; Whether it is adequately watching for "flow-accelerated corrosion"— or wear on pipes caused by their needing to carry water and steam at huge volumes and pressures. But it was clear that Alex Karlin — who presided — knew he and his colleagues were in for a spirited discussion about other issues at Vermont's lone nuclear plant — including an automatic shutdown triggered by a valve malfunction and the collapse of a 50-foot cooling tower, both in August. "There's no contention before us on that issue," Karlin said of the Aug. 21 collapse of a cooling tower at the plant. But, "I guess you can talk about it." Only about 30 people showed up at Brattleboro's Latchis Theater for an afternoon session, but about 75 attended a 6:30 p.m. session. Meanwhile, anti-nuclear activists marched from a downtown park to the theater, led by a band featuring Newfane Selectman Dan DeWalt, who recently separated his shoulder, playing trombone with his right arm in a sling. At the rally, Deb Katz of the Citizens' Awareness Network implored the crowd to step up their anti-nuclear activism as Vermont lawmakers begin to consider whether to exercise the veto power over the plant's license extension that exists in state law. "This is the window of opportunity," she said, an opportunity at "changing history for your children." Nuclear critics see the Aug. 21 cooling tower collapse — which produced striking photographs of a broken six-foot pipe pouring thousands of gallons of water onto a pile of rubble — as indicative of the overall condition of the 35-year-old nuclear plant. They want Vermont Yankee retired. "It is clear to me, as evidenced by the recent cooling tower collapse, that many of the NRC-sanctioned, industry-approved inspection processes rely on remote-controlled cameras, not hands-on inspection," said longtime plant critic Gary Sachs. "This may lead to catastrophic collapse." Some saw the cooling tower collapse as a bad sign. "For all of us here it raises the question of what else is being under-maintained," Derrik Jordan of Dummerston asked during the evening hearing. The panel also heard from retired nuclear engineer Howard C. Shaffer III, of Enfield, N.H., whose business card shows he represents Nuclear Public Outreach and features the classic nuclear symbol of swirling electrons. Shaffer took aim at Sachs' contention that Vermont Yankee was similar to an old car, with various major parts going or about to go at once. Scrapping an old car "is a matter of economic choice, not technology," Shaffer said, noting that his son has a 1968 classic car that is still operable. Vermont Yankee is four years younger, dating from 1972. © 2007 Times Argus ***************************************************************** 14 CN: TVA Official Says Nuclear Is Best Option For Meeting Power Needs 10/12/2007 - Breaking News - Chattanoogan.com Nuclear is the best option for meeting the growing power needs of the Tennessee Valley, a TVA official said Friday. Jack Bailey, vice president of TVA nuclear generation development, told the Civitan Club that nuclear has zero emissions, is not so expensive after the initial investment and is reliable. He called such options as solar and wind "boutique sources" that can be in the mix, but are not valid options to meet high demand. Mr. Bailey said to produce an equivalent amount of power supplied by a nuclear plant it would require 1,440 wind towers along 240 miles of ridge line. He said, "In this area, we don't have a lot of wind." He said the wind blows 25-30 percent of the time. The speaker said to match a nuclear plant it would take 55 square miles of solar installations covering 37,000 acres. He said the sun often does not beat down in the South, and solar is 25-35 percent efficient. He said even in Arizona solar did not prove a viable option. Mr. Bailey said biomass has been considered, including burning wood or switch grass. He said to equal a nuclear plant it would take nearly 12,000 square miles of land for wood or switch grass. On the option of using animal waste, he said it would require waste from 60 million pigs or 800 million chickens to equal the output from a nuclear facility. Mr. Bailey said there are some 30 current applications for new nuclear operations, including proposals from TVA for the Bellefant plant. He said TVA is also backing a demonstration project that would be carried out at Oak Ridge on recycling radioactive spent rods from nuclear facilities. He said he would like additional focus put on ways to handle nuclear wastes rather than so much on alternative forms of energy. He said, despite the limitations of alternative energy sources, governments seem to be proceeding toward mandating that a certain share of energy supply come from those sources The speaker said this region has an ample supply of coal, but he said it causes significant air pollution problems. He said the carbon dioxide emissions from coal have not been addressed. He said dealing with that would significantly raise the cost of operation of coal-fired plants. He said the problem with natural gas is its price volatility. He suggested that it be retained for home heating and for use in producing various consumer products. Mr. Bailey said the power needs for the Tennessee Valley are already high, but they are projected to be up another 40 percent by 2030. news@chattanoogan.com (423) 266-2325 © 2004 Site designed and copyrighted by HD ***************************************************************** 15 Detroit Free Press: Fermi II probes find worker error to blame for alert FREEP.COM Holes in piping linked to safety valve were discovered during maintenance October 12, 2007 BY ALEJANDRO BODIPO-MEMBA FREE PRESS BUSINESS WRITER A low-level emergency was declared at DTE Energy’s Fermi 2 nuclear power plant in Monroe County, Thursday morning, after several holes drilled into a steam-line associated with a safety relief valve were discovered by workers. A preliminary investigation conducted by DTE, Michigan’s largest utility, and the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) found that the holes were apparently caused when workers began removing insulation from the pipes as part of the regular maintenance. The findings, which were based on DTE-led interviews of personnel on site and a mock-up of the drilling work that was being performed, ruled out tampering or sabotage, according to officials at the federal agency. Several holes were discovered in steam-line pipes that are used to relieve pressure in the nuclear reactor in certain circumstances, according to officials. Apparently, one of the holes pierced the piping and went all the way through, while others of varying depths penetrated but didn’t exit the other side. “We don’t normally talk about preliminary conclusions,” said Viktoria Mitlyng, a spokeswoman for the NRC’s Midwest Regional Office in Lisle, Ill. “But, obviously this is an unusual situation and we want people to know what’s happening so there is no panic.” Mitlyng added that the NRC agrees with the preliminary finds of DTE. A low-level emergency is defined by the NRC as an unusual event in the lowest classification of an emergency. It is declared when there is a potential degradation of safety margins to the facility. It is usually in stable condition and no radiation is expected. DTE officials, who have yet to complete their own investigation in coordination with the NRC, said there were no safety concerns to workers at the facility or the surrounding public. Workers were cleared from the part of the reactor where the holes were discovered to allow for investigators to complete their work. “We found some holes in some piping in a drywell area during a routine inspection while the plant was shutdown for regular maintenance and repair work,” said Lorie Kessler, a spokeswoman for DTE. “The area was cleared to facilitate a more thorough investigation, not for safety reasons.” The Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Office of Homeland Security were both contacted by the NRC. In a statement released Friday afternoon, the NRC said DTE considered tampering as one of the potential causes of the holes. This is what led the utility to declare the incident as an unusual event. Located in Frenchtown Township, Fermi 2, which generates 1,100 megawatts of electricity, has been temporarily shut down for the last two weeks as part of a routine refueling and maintenance process that generally takes place every 18 months. Kessler added that the investigations into the incident would likely spread to other areas of the plant. The routine maintenance, including 2,300 individual tests, is done when the plant is refueled. Fermi’s staff of about 900 workers is supplemented by 1,400 workers during the refueling and testing. According to the NRC Fermi 2 was issued an operating license on July 15, 1985, which expires on March 20, 2025. Contact ALEJANDRO BODIPO-MEMBA at 313-222-5008 or abodipo@freepress.com. jamesm1 Mr. Burns: "Homer be a good chap, will you? and go and remove pipe insulation. The old girl's pipes are sweating, and no one likes a sweaty girl. Homer Simpson: Ooh, I was just about to eat this donut...stupid burns...stupid sweaty pipes! I'll use this drill bit to just...DOH! Posted: Fri Oct 12, 2007 11:44 pm mcdirt Sure would be nice if the industry and the nation would find a better solution than storing dangerous nuclear waste under armed guard scattered about the shoreline of the Great Lakes. Posted: Fri Oct 12, 2007 5:42 pm ====================================================================== Copyright ©2007 the Detroit Free Press. All rights reserved. ***************************************************************** 16 toledoblade.com: Sabotage is ruled out in steam line damage at Fermi 2 Article published Friday, October 12, 2007 BLADE STAFF NEWPORT, Mich. — While the sequence of events that resulted in damage to Fermi 2’s steam lines remains under investigation, officials today have ruled out sabotage as a possible cause. A statement issued this afternoon by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said that Detroit Edison Co., the plant’s operator, has determined that the damage occurred during the removal of pipe insulation. What initially was reported by the Associated Press as several holes turned out to be one, with multiple indentations “of varying depths,” the NRC said. John Austerberry, plant spokesman, said it appears a drill was used to remove the pipe insulation in the vicinity of safety relief valves in the plant’s drywell area, which sits below the nuclear reactor. It was not immediately known how much damage occurred, how many workers were involved, or how the situation will be resolved, he said. The plant is in the second week of a scheduled refueling-and-maintenance outage that is expected to last until early November. It has about 2,300 workers on site, including 1,400 contractors, doing hundreds of tasks. The damage was discovered Thursday during a routine inspection. The plant will not restart until the damaged area is fixed or replaced, Mr. Austerberry said. The plant confirmed the FBI was called to the scene because the incident had been declared an unusual event. FBI spokesmen in Detroit and Washington could not be immediately reached. Read more in later editions of The Blade and toledoblade.com © 2007 The Blade. By using this service, you accept the terms of our privacy statement and our visitor agreement. Please read them. The Toledo Blade Company, 541 N. Superior St., Toledo, OH 43660 , (419) 724-6000 ***************************************************************** 17 toledoblade.com: Inspections for all Article published Friday, October 12, 2007 A NUCLEAR fuel and technology deal that the United States negotiated with India is running into fierce political opposition in an unlikely place — India. The agreement, negotiated under President Bush, was controversial in the United States because it was incompatible with prior U.S. policy. That policy excluded cooperation in the nuclear field with countries such as India, Israel, and Pakistan that possess nuclear weapons but have not signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. Those countries shunned the treaty because it requires that they submit their nuclear facilities to inspection by the International Atomic Energy Agency. Both Iran and North Korea, the administration’s betes noires in the nuclear field, have signed the NPT. The Bush Administration wanted the nuclear accord with India to improve political ties and, more specifically, because India intends to spend some $40 billion in coming years in arms purchases, a potential bonanza for U.S. arms producers. Congress approved the agreement in December, although it will still have one more cut at it after other preconditions to final agreement have been fulfilled. One of these is approval of the deal by the 45-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group. A second is IAEA agreement. The third, where serious problems have now arisen, is in India itself. The coalition government of Prime Minister Manowan Singh, led by his Congress Party but including the Communist Party of India and three other parties on the left, is encountering serious opposition in Parliament to the U.S. agreement and might even fall, forced into early elections over the issue. Indian opposition seems to be based on general wariness of a closer relationship with the United States, not particularly on the nuclear agreement itself. In New Delhi, Mr. Singh’s government is digging in for the fight. In Washington, India’s lobbyists, led by the U.S.-India Political Action Committee, have become increasingly active as the pace quickens for the 2008 U.S. elections. American defense contractors are also weighing in, eyeing India’s likely arms purchases. This is an issue where it is important that Congress not lose sight of principle as it is importuned by lobbyists wielding campaign donations. Principle must prevail. If India wants a nuclear deal with the United States, it should open its nuclear weapons and other nuclear programs to IAEA inspection. What we are requiring of North Korea and Iran we should require of our friends as well. Big arms contracts are not a valid reason to abandon an important principle that makes the world a less dangerous place. © 2007 The Blade. By using this service, you accept the terms of our privacy statement and our visitor agreement. Please read them. The Toledo Blade Company, 541 N. Superior St., Toledo, OH 43660 , (419) 724-6000 ***************************************************************** 18 Brattleboro Reformer: NRC panel hears about Yankee concerns BRATTLEBORO, VT By PAUL H. HEINTZ, Reformer Staff (Zachary P. Stephens/Reformer)

People parade down Main St. in Brattleboro from an anti-nuclear power rally at Pliny Park to the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission hearings at the Latchis Theatre, Thursday evening. Friday, October 12 BRATTLEBORO -- The three Atomic Safety and Licensing Board judges who will preside over hearings related to Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant's proposed license extension got quite an earful Thursday evening from neighbors of the plant. The judges were in town for a tour of the facility Wednesday, and a pair of hearings Thursday afternoon and evening at the Latchis Theatre. Members of the self-described judicial branch of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the three judges will be tasked with deciding on three contentions raised by the anti-nuclear New England Coalition. While Thursday's hearings -- formally known as "limited appearance statements" -- were supposed to be restricted to the three specific concerns raised previously by the NEC, most speakers chafed at the NRC's limited scope and attempted to broaden the discussion to other issues. "The truth is the people have no confidence in your process. That's the truth," said Deb Katz, executive director of the Citizens Awareness Network. "We turn to you as judges, but you don't have the power (to rule on other issues)." ASLB judge Michael Karlan told members of the audience at both hearings that the panel's jurisdiction is limited to NEC's three contentions, which were accepted by the board in Sept. 2006, and will be decided upon after the board holds a formal hearing six months after the release of the NRC's Safety Evaluation Report. In those contentions, NEC argues that Entergy Nuclear, which owns VY, does not have a plan to monitor aging reactor components, its piping and its steam dryer if it is allowed to operate an additional 20 years after its scheduled 2012 closure. Few in the audience, however, stuck to the technical issues at hand. Summing up the frustrations of many in attendance, Brattleboro Selectboard Chairwoman Audrey Garfield told the judges she felt the NRC routinely comes to town seeking input and then "it seems to have no effect on your decision-making process." "I'd like to know how our comments are incorporated into your decision-making process," she said. Garfield also invited the ASLB judges to a selectboard meeting to further discuss the issue. While Karlan said he and his colleagues would "take that into consideration," he said it would be "highly unusual" for judges charged with deliberating on a case to come before a local board. He also reiterated that the purpose of the hearings was to solicit input from members of the public that formal parties to the contentions may not have previously brought forward. Many in the audience argued the NRC should require the plant to undergo an independent safety assessment, like that performed at Maine Yankee in 1996, leading to its closure. "I don't have the proof, but I do know the proof resides within the walls of Vermont Yankee," said Shari Zabriskie of Guilford. "Many, many lives depend on your decisions." Ellen Tenney of Saxtons River said, "If the NRC believes this plant is so safe, then prove it to us. Do an independent safety assessment. It's a beautiful area and I'd hate to see it abandoned because of profits," she said. Several audience members from Massachusetts and New Hampshire said that, as residents of those states, their input was not taken into consideration -- even though they, too, live nearby to the nuclear plant. "It is not fair to have a plant so close to other states and not let those states have input into its future," said Loren Kramer of Greenfield, Mass. Speaking of a "litany of problems" he said are occurring at VY, Kramer told the board, "We don't feel they quite are under control, and so much is at stake." While many in the audience likely felt Entergy was their prime opponent, their harshest comments were leveled at the NRC, which some accused of being in league with the nuclear industry. Katz took that course further than most, comparing the ASLB to the architects of the Holocaust. "I want you to think of the Nuremberg trials, because at the Nuremberg trials even 'good Germans' were found guilty," she said. While every single speaker at the evening hearing -- which drew roughly 80 people -- spoke against extending VY's license, two proponents of the extension spoke at the sparsely attended afternoon session. One of them, Amanda Ibey of Vermont Energy Partnership, said, "While the key to Vermont's future prosperity is through a broad, diversified electricity portfolio, without Vermont Yankee it will be difficult, if not nearly impossible, to achieve a portfolio that is clean, reliable and affordable." Referring perhaps to a rally that took place prior to the evening hearing, she said, "We urge you to focus on the facts and not the rhetoric, and not to give in to political pressure exhibited through street rallies, anti-nuclear activists, politicians or others. This is an important process that needs to be governed by dispassionate facts." Entergy spokesman Rob Williams, who was on hand for the hearing, said afterwards, "This is a good opportunity for people to speak directly to the licensing board that has the three contentions before them. They have every right to make their opinions known and we respect that, but we do feel our plant is a good candidate for license renewal." The evening was not without political humor. Two anti-nuclear activists dressed as old women and calling themselves Mrs. Will O'Bey and Mary Nukem, addressed the panel, facetiously scolding their fellow Vermonters for questioning the NRC. "I don't know where their manners are," O'Bey said to an appreciative audience and the three judges -- two of whom remained stone-faced while one smiled good-naturedly. Paul Heintz can be reached at pheintz@reformer.com or 802-254-2311, ext. 275. ***************************************************************** 19 China Daily: Work on nuclear plant gets started By Zheng Caixiong (China Daily) Updated: 2007-10-12 14:43 Construction of infrastructure for the Yangjiang Nuclear Power Plant (YNPP) began recently in the coastal city of Yangjiang in Guangdong Province. "This initial building work at the YNPP is preparation for the construction of the main part of the nuclear power plant," according to He Yu, general manager of China Guangdong Nuclear Power Group. "More than 2.5 billion yuan has, so far, been spent on infrastructure for the project," He was quoted as saying by Xinhua News Agency. The nuclear island project, which will be the country's biggest nuclear power plant, will cost more than $8 billion. The nuclear island's major equipment, including digital meters and control systems, will be made locally in China, He said. Large-scale construction is expected to begin within a year, He said. The first phase of the YNPP is expected to be ready for commercial operation in 2013. It will generate more than 30 billion kilowatt-hours of power annually for the province in a bid to ease supply pressure. Guangdong's electricity supply gap is estimated at around 30 percent this year. The province's electricity consumption peak period usually takes place from May to September annually. The YNPP is located in Dongping of Yangdong County in Guangdong's western coastal area. It will have six generating units in operation, each with production capacity of 1 million kilowatts, when the second phase is completed. Four generating units will be constructed in the first phase. The YNPP is one of several nuclear power plants being constructed and planned in the southern Chinese province. Guangdong has stepped up efforts to produce more nuclear power during the 11th Five-Year Plan period (2006-10) by expediting existing projects at the construction and pre-construction stages. The Ling'ao Nuclear Power Plant is scheduled to complete its second phase and come onstream by the end of 2010. ***************************************************************** 20 SEIU: Nuclear Regulatory Commission Confirms Security Lapses at Exelon ; Findings Come a Year After the Company was Warned by SEIU Service Employees International Union :: WASHINGTON, Oct. 11 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- A year after SEIU advised nuclear power plant operator Exelon about Wackenhut Corp.'s security deficiencies, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has faulted Exelon for security lapses at the Peach Bottom nuclear plant. At a public meeting on Tuesday October 9th the NRC said they found that Exelon "missed opportunities" to find and correct the problem of sleeping guards at its nuclear power plant in Peach Bottom, PA. "Over a year ago we met with Exelon and informed them of Wackenhut's inadequacies," said Valerie Long, head of SEIU's Property Services division. "At this point we hope they seriously reconsider all ten of their contracts with Wackenhut." Yesterday the Project on Government Oversight (POGO) expressed a number of concerns about why these officers were sleeping. POGO's nuclear power plant investigations have repeatedly found that post-9/11, security contractors, including Wackenhut, overwork security officers to the point of exhaustion. POGO's reports have found security officers working as many as six 12-hour days on a regular basis. In fact, Wackenhut security guards have already been found sleeping at a nuclear power plants in Limerick, PA and Three Mile Island, PA, both of which are operated by Exelon Corporation, which still contracts Wackenhut for security. Even after incidents of sleeping on the job, guards report working excessive overtime at Three Mile Island, the site of America's worst commercial nuclear power plant failure. This past July, Wackenhut was the subject of a congressional hearing conducted by Edolphus Towns (D-New York), chair of the Subcommittee on Government Management, Organization, and Procurement. Wackenhut is owned by the London-based security conglomerate G4S. G4S, the largest company trading on the London stock exchange, is under fire from international human rights groups and trade unions for the company's practices in southern Africa and elsewhere. More about Wackenhut Services, Inc. and the campaign to improve conditions for security workers can be found on the website eyeonwackenhut.org. SEIU, the fastest-growing union in North America, with 1.9 million members in the United States, Canada, and Puerto Rico, is also the largest union of security officers in the nation. Website: http://www.eyeonwackenhut.org/ Website: http://www.seiu.org/ Copyright © 1996-2007 PR Newswire Association LLC. All Rights Reserved. A United Business Media company. ***************************************************************** 21 EPA: comment on Pilgrim license renewal FR Doc E7-20149 [Federal Register: October 12, 2007 (Volume 72, Number 197)] [Notices] [Page 58080-58081] From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov] [DOCID:fr12oc07-45] ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY [ER-FRL-6691-9] Environmental Impact Statements and Regulations; Availability of EPA Comments Availability of EPA comments prepared pursuant to the Environmental Review Process (ERP), under section 309 of the Clean Air Act and section 102(2)(c) of the National Environmental Policy Act as amended. Requests for copies of EPA comments can be directed to the Office of Federal Activities at 202-564-7167. An explanation of the ratings assigned to draft environmental impact statements (EISs) was published in FR dated April 6, 2007 (72 FR 17156). Draft EISs Final EISs EIS No. 20070325, ERP No. F-NRC-B06006-MA, Generic--License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, Supplement 29 to NUREG-1437, Regarding the License Renewal of Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station, Cape Cod Bay, Town of Plymouth, Plymouth County, MA. Summary EPA expressed environmental concerns about the effectiveness of various mitigation measures to address adverse impacts from continued operation of Pilgrim over the relicensing period. EPA also continues to believe that more detailed information should be provided to describe the impacts of relicensing, to examine alternative operating modes, technologies, and mitigation measures. EIS No. 20070335, ERP No. F-NRC-B06007-VT, Generic--License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, Supplement 30 to NUREG1437, Regarding Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Station, Vernon, VT Summary EPA continues to express concerns about entrainment and impingement of fish and other aquatic organisms and impact from thermal discharge. Dated: October 9, 2007. Ken Mittelholtz, Environmental Protection Specialist, Office of Federal Activities. [FR Doc. E7-20149 Filed 10-11-07; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 6560-50-P ***************************************************************** 22 Charlotte Business Journal: Nuclear plants' costs assailed - Friday, October 12, 2007 Charlotte Business Journal - by John Downey "If we are not serious about supporting more nuclear power plants in this country, then we are not serious about climate change." Jim Rogers, Duke Energy Corp. chief executive, in June 28 testimony to the U.S. Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Former U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission member Peter Bradford came through Charlotte last week sounding an alarm on nuclear energy: not that it's dangerous, but too expensive. He argues nuclear energy supporters brandish global warming as a club to force government subsidies for unjustifiably expensive nuclear plants. This article is for Paid Print Subscribers ONLY. View Charlotte Jobs - 1396 jobs today bizjournals | BizSpace.com | Jobs | bizwomen.com © 2007 American City Business Journals, Inc. and its ***************************************************************** 23 UPI: Chernobyl-hit Belarus to build nuke plant United Press International - International Security - Energy - Published: 12, 2007 at 1:18 PM MINSK, Belarus, Oct. 12 (UPI) -- Belarus on Friday said it would go ahead with plans to build a nuclear power plant next year. RIA Novosti reported that President Alexander Lukashenko made the call for the nuclear power plant to be built next year as the country has few energy options. Planned construction work is to be completed in 2008, allowing for further work. Belarus depends mainly on Russia for its energy needs, but ties between the two have become frosty since Gazprom, the Russian monopolist, raised prices for its gas sold to Belarus. Nuclear energy, Belarus says, is the only way for it to achieve some semblance of energy independence. Belarus was adversely affected by the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, and there is some domestic opposition to the proposed 2,000-megawatt nuclear plant. © Copyright United Press International. All Rights Reserved. ***************************************************************** 24 Vermont Public Radio: Regulators get an earful from plant critics and supporters Friday October 12, 2007 BRATTLEBORO, Vt. (AP) People on both sides of the nuclear power issue turned out in Brattleboro to speak their minds to a panel of the U-S Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The hearing last night part of the NRC's fact-finding on Vermont Yankee's request for permission to operate for 20 years past its scheduled 2012 shutdown. Opponents say the 35-year-old plant is showing its age lately and should be shut down permanently, but supporters told the panel that Vermont needs the electricity produced by the Vernon power plant. AP Photo/Toby Talbot © Copyright 2007, Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. © 2007 Vermont Public Radio Privacy Policy | Site Map | Contact ***************************************************************** 25 The Local: Volvo in nuclear energy retreat BokningsBolaget – find a venue in Sweden Published: 12th October 2007 14:15 CET Online: http://www.thelocal.se/8770/ Truck maker Volvo has announced that it will cease buying Swedish nuclear power at the end of this year. Volvo has signed a deal with Vattenfall ensuring that it does not receive energy from nuclear power sources, which it said did not sit well with the company's environmental goals. "We place nuclear energy far down the scale. It's not sustainable from a number of aspects," Volvo's environmental chief Inge Horkeby told Dagens Nyheter. "The raw materials used to produce nuclear energy are a finite resource and the waste management problem has not been solved," she added. While agreeing that Volvo should make use of renewable energy sources, CEO Leif Johansson was careful to note that the company was not opposed to Swedish nuclear energy. "In my view, Sweden should really consider using new technology for nuclear power," he told Dagens Nyheter. Trade Union IF Metall was unimpressed by Volvo Trucks' anti-nuclear stance. "It sounds like Volvo is using environmental profiling as a PR stunt," spokesman Per Öhman told Dagens Nyheter. Volvo has the stated aim of fuelling all its plants worldwide using renewable energy sources. The company has already built three farms at its Belgian plant in Gent, with a further wind farm in the pipeline for the Tuve plant outside Gothenburg. TT/The Local (news@thelocal.se ***************************************************************** 26 AU: Herald Sun: Nuclear not an election issue - Switkoswki | NEWS.com.au | Cameron England October 13, 2007 12:00am NUCLEAR power is unlikely to be a federal election issue according to Ziggy Switkoswki, chairman of the Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation. He believes the debate about whether nuclear power is appropriate for use in Australia is in its early stages. "It reminds me a bit of the debate around the privatisation of Telstra," he said. "People often have strong views about the issue of nuclear power, but they're not views that shape their voting intentions," the former chief executive of Telstra said. He was speaking after an Australia Israel Chamber of Commerce lunch in Adelaide. "From my point of view, with the nuclear debate being only a year old, it's too early to expect people to form an informed view. The debate needs to run a little bit further. "I hope it's not an election issue." Dr Switkowski said there was, however, a clear divide between the major political parties. He said the Federal Government was willing to examine the use of nuclear power in Australia, while the Labor Party was against any further participation in the nuclear fuel cycle, beyond uranium mining. Dr Switkowski led the Federal Government's 2006 Review of Uranium Mining, Processing and Nuclear Energy, which raised the possibility of Australia having 25 nuclear reactors by 2050. © Herald and Weekly Times. All times AEST (GMT + 10). ***************************************************************** 27 WTOL-TV Toledo, OH: Officials still searching for cause of Fermi II steam line holes o EEO Public File Report for WTOL-TV, Toledo, OH Associated Press - October 12, 2007 8:15 AM ET MONROE, Mich. (AP) - Officials are trying to determine what caused several holes found in steam lines at a nuclear power plant north of Toledo. A spokesman for the DTE Energy company says several quarter-inch holes were discovered yesterday by workers performing routine maintenance at the Fermi II plant near Monroe, Michigan. That's about 20 miles from Toledo. The facility was already shut down for about two weeks of maintenance. The utility says there was never a public safety concern, and the discovery has been reported to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the FBI. All content © Copyright 2000 - 2007 WorldNow and WTOL, a Raycom Media Station. ***************************************************************** 28 The Telegraph: Left awaits nuclear last word Calcutta : Nation Saturday, October 13, 2007 | Advertise with us OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT New Delhi, Oct. 12: The Left was guarded in its response to Manmohan Singh and Sonia Gandhi?s statements today suggesting the government would last its full term. The parties indicated the remarks by the UPA Big Two weren?t the last word on the nuclear deal and they would wait for a formal communication on or before October 22, when the UPA-Left panel meets in an effort to end the stalemate. ?The government will proceed only after the committee formed to consider the ramifications of the deal gives its opinion. On the basis of the agreement between the Left and the government, we will deliberate on October 22,? CPM politburo member Sitaram Yechury said. CPI general secretary A.B. Bardhan insisted the deal had never been the ?end-all? for the government, though that was the idea propagated in recent weeks. ?I have always been saying, why do you want to sacrifice your own government at the altar of this nuclear deal?? Copyright © 2006 The Telegraph. All rights reserved. Disclaimer | ***************************************************************** 29 times and star: H-bomb race caused nuke blaze Published on 12/10/2007 IT IS 50 years this week since the Windscale nuclear disaster. ALAN IRVING talks to Vic Goodwin, who as a young physicist found himself at the forefront of the battle to contain a devastating blaze SELLAFIELD used to be a bomb-making factory. If it hadn’t been, the Windscale fire of 1957 would never have happened. Since 1951, in top secret on the West Cumbrian coast, the twin 400 foot high Windscale piles had been producing plutonium for Britain to make its own atomic and hydrogen bombs - until October, 1957, when a fuel cannister ruptured causing one of the piles to catch fire, spewing radioactivity over the countryside. The explosive material from the operation of the first Sellafield reactor was used for the UK's first nuclear weapons test in Australia on October 3, 1952, but five years later came the disaster, which at the time was believed to be the world’s most serious nuclear accident. Nearly 200 cancers, half of them fatal, resulted but although neither of the Windscale Pile reactors ever worked again, the accident did not stop the government from continuing to use Sellafield as its bomb factory. Calder Hall, in the national interest, became a close at hand alternative for Britain’s defence in the cold-war arms race. Experts have concluded that the operation of the Windscale Piles was an accident waiting to happen. They include Vic Goodwin, who as a young physicist was sent to work at Windscale a year before the accident. It was literally a baptism of fire at the start of a distinguished nuclear career. He became part of a heroic Sellafield team under site boss Tom Tuohy which fought day and night to put out the blaze and minimise the consequences. Was it really an accident waiting to happen? “I am afraid that while it might not have been true when the piles were first built, I fear it was true in 1957,†says Mr Goodwin, now 75 and living at Ravenglass. So why weren’t the warnings heeded? He says: “There was growing unease, but the military programme tended to be dominant. “Capable and successive men at Sellafield called for improvements and changes, particularly in measuring temperatures.†Was there a case in 1956 for shutting down the piles? “Oh, hindsight is a wonderful thing but I am sure that with the knowledge we have now, and which we obtained fairly quickly after the fire, it would have been better if, after the Queen opened Calder Hall, which had a much more secure design, that these old piles were shut down. “But the military programme was demanding, and the country decided it would go nuclear in the sense of making its own bomb.†He explains that British researchers effectively repeated what had been developed in the USA, with designs based on reactors which had some problems. He adds: “The next Macmillan administration was racing to get the hydrogen bomb going, because America and Russia had already done it. The military programme was paramount.†Effectively Sellafield was a bomb-making factory long before it became a civil nuclear plant. Mr Goodwin says: “A great deal of effort was rightly put into work which would underpin the military programme. “It was just that in doing so, other work that should have been done to show how close to the edge the Windscale Piles were, was not done until after the fire itself. “We came to realise that while this particular design was really quite dodgy, Cinderella to some extent, we had no knowledge that it would actually catch fire in this way.†On the fire itself, he says: “You could see it was red hot at first, white hot later. “In the area where we could not discharge the fuel, the fire was getting worse; carbon dioxide did not do anything, so the site’s deputy general manager Tom Tuohy took the decision that water had to go on. “There was a good big flow of water which just carried away the heat and doused the fire. “My task was to get a water injection system made. I already had some tubes for another purpose but they proved ideal for making long lances which Eddie Davies and his little engineering workshop quickly lashed on to conventional fire hoses. “We got water injection points installed up near the top of the reactor core and connected to a fire engine to give a jolly good flow.†So, does he think that Windscale helped to prevent a Third World War in what was a cold war arms race? He says: “That might well be. We could easily have been pig in the middle between America and the Russians, so going it on our own did enable us to have a say and stick up for ourselves at a time when the Soviet Union did appear to be terribly threatening.†The Windscale piles, along with Calder Hall, were operated by the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority but the task of decommissioning the reactors has been in the hands of BNFL. One of the company’s former leading scientists, Richard Wakeford, now at Manchester University, has written a paper “The Windscale reactor accident 50 years on†in which he concludes that whatever the actual cause of the fire, it was one waiting to happen. He states: “The Windscale Piles posed problems to their operators throughout their service. “Indeed, even before construction was completed, Sir John Cockcroft insisted that filters be installed to remove radioactive material potentially present in the exhaust cooling air.†Eminent researchers concluded that the Windscale fire caused or would case 100 fatal cancers and 90 non-fatal cancers due to radiation exposure. So, was it a catastrophe? Says Mr Goodwin: “No, that would be too strong a word but it was serious enough. “We measured the radioactivity in the pile afterwards. I can’t remember how much there was but it was quite a lot, so if the filters hadn’t been there the stuff would have got out on to the grass and into the milk. Cattle were still outside at the time. “The decision to impose a ban on the consumption and distribution of local milk was a good piece of work.†The ban ran from six miles north of Windscale to 15 miles to the south. A BBC investigation into the 1957 fire at Windscale described how nuclear staff were blamed for the disaster to protect Britain’s “special relationship†with America. Windscale: Britain’s Biggest Nuclear Disaster, on BBC2 on Monday, featured former staff angered by their treatment at the hands of an official investigation carried out by the Macmillan government. In a 90-minute documentary the men revealed how they fought the fire in Pile Number 1 reactor at Windscale on October 10 and 11, 1957. They told of their anger at being made scapegoats. The programme told how safety margins inside the reactor were being eroded. Politicians and the military ignored the warnings, it was claimed, and instead increased demands on Windscale to produce material for a H-bomb. Prime Minister Harold Macmillan believed that if Britain could develop the H-bomb on the scale of the Americans, they would treat us as a nuclear equal and form an alliance. Macmillan realised that if the American Congress knew that the fire had been the result of reckless decisions taken to try to produce the-H bomb, they might veto the alliance plans. Macmillan instead issued a report that said the Windscale accident had been caused by “an error of judgement†by Windscale workers. “He covered it up, plain and simpleâ€, revealed his grandson and biographer, Lord Stockton. For 50 years, the official record stated that the men who had averted a potentially devastating accident were to blame for causing it. “I resented it at the time,†said Peter Jenkinson, an assistant physicist at the reactor. “I hoped the record would be put straight.†* Another programme - The Men Who Saved Cumbria - celebrating the heroism of those involved, was screened on Border TV last night. & A new study claims the cancer effects of the fire were under-estimated. The study, carried out by John Garland, formerly of the UK Atomic Energy Authority and Richard Wakeford, a visiting professor at the University of Manchester, suggests that contamination of the environment may have been much higher. They confirmed that radioactive iodine and caesium were released, as well as polonium. There was also a small amount of plutonium, but found that the levels would have been higher than previously thought. Mr Garland said: “The reassessments showed that there was roughly twice the amount than was initially assessed." Previously, it was thought that the radiation would have eventually led to about 200 cases of cancer but the new contamination figures suggest it could have caused about 240. View this story and the latest newspaper in full digital reproduction, just like the printed copy at www.timesandstar.co.uk/digitalcopy ***************************************************************** 30 Revealing News: Assassination by Radiation, Spy Drones, EPA Approves Dangerous Pesticide, More Resent-Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2007 11:12:29 -0500 (CDT) To subscribe to or unsubscribe from this list (one email every few days) or to reply to this message, see end of email This message is available online at http://www.WantToKnow.info/071012assassinationradiationspydronesdangerouspesticide Dear friends, Below are one-paragraph excerpts of important news articles you may have missed. These news articles include revealing information on the U.S. Army research program into methods of assassination by radiation in the late 1940s, the current programs funded by the U.S. government to develop and deploy miniature spy drones, the approval by the E.P.A. of a highly dangerous pesticide despite strong objections from many renowned scientists, and more. Each excerpt is taken verbatim from the major media website listed at the link provided. If any link fails to function, click here. Key sentences are highlighted for those with limited time. By choosing to educate ourselves and to spread the word, we can and will build a brighter future. With best wishes, Tod Fletcher and Fred Burks for PEERS and the WantToKnow.info Team U.S. Weighed Radioactive Poisons October 9, 2007, Washington Post/Associated Press http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/08/AR2007100801432.html/ In one of the longest-held secrets of the Cold War, the U.S. Army explored the potential for using radioactive poisons to assassinate "important individuals" such as military or civilian leaders, according to newly declassified documents obtained by The Associated Press. Approved at the highest levels of the Army in 1948, the effort was a well-hidden part of the military's pursuit of a "new concept of warfare" using radioactive materials from atomic bombmaking to contaminate swathes of enemy land or to target military bases, factories or troop formations. Military historians who have researched the broader radiological warfare program said in interviews that they had never before seen evidence that it included pursuit of an assassination weapon. No targeted individuals are mentioned in references to the assassination weapon in the government documents declassified in response to a Freedom of Information Act request filed by the AP in 1995. The decades-old records were releas! ed recently to the AP, heavily censored by the government to remove specifics about radiological warfare agents and other details. The documents give no indication whether a radiological weapon for targeting high-ranking individuals was ever used or even developed by the United States. They leave unclear how far the Army project went. One memo from December 1948 outlined the project and another memo that month indicated it was under way. The main sections of several subsequent progress reports in 1949 were removed by censors before release to the AP. The broader effort on offensive uses of radiological warfare apparently died by about 1954, at least in part because of the Defense Department's conviction that nuclear weapons were a better bet. Whether the work migrated to another agency such as the CIA is unclear. Note: For revealing reports from major media sources on government-sponsored assassinations and assassination programs, click here. Dragonfly or Insect Spy? Scientists at Work on Robobugs. October 9, 2007, Washington Post http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/08/AR2007100801434.html Vanessa Alarcon saw them while working at an antiwar rally in Lafayette Square last month. "I heard someone say, 'Oh my god, look at those,' " the college senior from New York recalled. "I look up and I'm like, 'What the hell is that?' They looked kind of like dragonflies or little helicopters. But I mean, those are not insects." Out in the crowd, Bernard Crane saw them, too. "I'd never seen anything like it in my life," the Washington lawyer said. "They were large for dragonflies. I thought, 'Is that mechanical, or is that alive?' " Some suspect the insectlike drones are high-tech surveillance tools, perhaps deployed by the Department of Homeland Security. No agency admits to having deployed insect-size spy drones. But a number of U.S. government and private entities acknowledge they are trying. So what was seen by Crane, Alarcon and a handful of others at the D.C. march -- and as far back as 2004, during the Republican National Convention in New York, when one observant ..! . peace-march participant described on the Web "a jet-black dragonfly hovering about 10 feet off the ground, precisely in the middle of 7th Avenue . . . watching us?" Three people at the D.C. event independently described a row of spheres, the size of small berries, attached along the tails of the big dragonflies -- an accoutrement that [Jerry Louton, an entomologist at the National Museum of Natural History,] could not explain. And all reported seeing at least three maneuvering in unison. "Dragonflies neve r fly in a pack," he said. Mara Verheyden-Hilliard of the Partnership for Civil Justice said her group is investigating witness reports and has filed Freedom of Information Act requests with several federal agencies. If such devices are being used to spy on political activists, she said, "it would be a significant violation of people's civil rights." Note: To read further reliable reports of threats to our civil liberties, click here. EPA approves new pesticide despite scientists' concerns October 6, 2007, Los Angeles Times http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-pesticide6oct06,0,2247860.story Despite the protests of more than 50 scientists, including five Nobel laureates in chemistry, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on Friday approved use of a new, highly toxic fumigant, mainly for strawberry fields. The new pesticide, methyl iodide, is designed for growers, mainly in California and Florida, who need to replace methyl bromide, which has been banned under an international treaty because it damages the Earth's ozone layer. In a letter sent last month to EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson, 54 scientists, mostly chemists, warned that "pregnant women and the fetus, children, the elderly, farmworkers and other people living near application sites would be at serious risk." Methyl iodide is a neurotoxin and carcinogen that has caused thyroid tumors, neurological damage and miscarriages in lab animals. But EPA officials said Friday that they carefully evaluated the risks and decided to approve its use for one year, imposing restrictions such as buffer zones to pr! otect farmworkers and neighbors. Growers, particularly those who grow strawberries and tomatoes, have been searching for 15 years for a new soil fumigant to replace methyl bromide. Fumigants are valuable to growers because they can be injected into the soil before planting to sterilize the field and kill a broad spectrum of insects and diseases without leaving residue on crops. But fumigants are among the most potentially dangerous pesticides in use today because the toxic gas can evaporate from the soil, exposing farmworkers and drifting into neighborhoods. Methyl iodide ... will be allowed on fields growing strawberries, tomatoes, peppers, ornamentals, turf, trees and vines. Probe Into Tainted Rice Ends October 6, 2007, Washington Post http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/05/AR2007100502176.html More than 14 months after the Agriculture Department began an investigation into how the U.S. supply of long-grain rice became tainted with an unapproved genetically engineered variety -- an event that continues to disrupt U.S. exports -- the government announced yesterday that it could not figure out how the contamination happened. Agency officials said documents from several years ago that might have helped them determine what went wrong had been lost or destroyed. Lacking clear evidence of who was responsible, they said, the government will not take enforcement action against any person or entity, including Bayer CropScience, the company whose gene-altered products slipped into the food supply. The widespread, low-level contamination with experimental genes that make the rice pesticide-tolerant, one of several such events in recent years, prompted countries around the world to cut off imports of U.S. long-grain rice. Rice prices plummeted, and many farmers, scientists and! biotechnology activists called for an overhaul of the oversight system for gene-altered crops. While some countries have begun to accept U.S. rice with added testing, the European Union and Russia have not -- a trade loss valued in the hundreds of millions of dollars a year. Critics assailed the report as yet more evidence that the nation's regulatory system for gene-altered crops is broken. "This underlines the anxiety people have about more such incidents occurring," said Margaret Mellon of the Union of Concerned Scientists, a science-based advocacy group that has called for a more rigorous approval process for biotech crops. Note: For important reports from major media sources which reveal the dangers of genetically modified foods and other organisms, click here. Save the Gnostics October 6, 2007, New York Times http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/06/opinion/06deutsch.html The [US] didnt set out to eradicate the Mandeans, one of the oldest, smallest and least understood of the many minorities in Iraq. This extinction in the making has simply been another unfortunate ... consequence of our invasion of Iraq though that will be of little comfort to the Mandeans, whose 2,000-year-old culture is in grave danger of disappearing from the face of the earth. The Mandeans are the only surviving Gnostics from antiquity, cousins of the people who produced the ... Gospel of Thomas, a work that sheds invaluable light on the many ways in which Jesus was perceived in the early Christian period. The Mandeans have their own language ... an impressive body of literature, and a treasury of cultural and religious traditions amassed over two millennia of living in the southern marshes of present-day Iraq and Iran. Practitioners of a religion at least as old as Christianity, the Mandeans have witnessed the rise of Islam; the Mongol invasion; the arrival of Europe! ans, who mistakenly identified them as Christians of St. John, because of their veneration of John the Baptist; and, most recently, the oppressive regime of Saddam Hussein. They have withstood everything until now. Like their ancestors, contemporary Mandeans were able to survive as a community because of the delicate balance achieved among Iraqs many peoples over centuries of cohabitation. But our reckless prosecution of the war destroyed this balance, and the Mandeans, whose pacifist religion prohibits them from carrying weapons even for self-defense, found themselves victims of kidnappings, extortion, rapes, beatings, murders and forced conversions carried out by radical Islamic groups and common criminals. When American forces invaded in 2003, there were probably 60,000 Mandeans in Iraq; today, fewer than 5,000 remain. Note: A fascinating introduction to the culture and history of this ancient people is Edmondo Lupieri's The Mandaeans: the Last Gnostics. The Democrats Who Enable Bush October 4, 2007, Salt Lake Tribune/Hearst Newspapers http://www.sltrib.com/opinion/ci_7074632 President Bush has no better friends than the spineless Democratic congressional leadership and the party's leading presidential candidates when it comes to his failing Iraq policy. Those Democrats seem to have forgotten that the American people want U.S. troops out of Iraq, especially since Bush still cannot give a credible reason for attacking Iraq after nearly five years of war. Last week at a debate in Hanover, N.H., the leading Democratic presidential candidates sang from the same songbook: Sens. Hillary Clinton of New York, and Barack Obama of Illinois and former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards refused to promise to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq by 2013, at the end of the first term of their hypothetical presidencies. Can you believe it? When the question was put to Clinton, she reverted to her usual cautious equivocation, saying: "It is very difficult to know what we're going to be inheriting." Obama dodged, too: "I think it would be irresponsible" to say what he wo! uld do as president. Edwards, on whom hopes were riding to show some independence, replied to the question: "I cannot make that commitment." Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del., ... wants to break up Iraq into three provinces along religious and ethnic lines. In other words, Balkanize Iraq. To have major Democratic backing to stay the course in Iraq added up to good news for Bush. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is another Democratic leader who has empowered Bush's war. Pelosi removed a provision from the most recent war-funding bill that would have required Bush to seek the permission of Congress before launching any attack on Iran. Is it any wonder the Democrats are faring lower than the president in a Washington Post ABC approval poll? Bush came in at 33 percent and Congress at 29 percent. So what are the leading Democratic White House hopefuls offering? It seems nothing but more war. So where do the voters go who are sick of the Iraqi debacle? Note: This article by veteran White House reporter Helen Thomas shows the power of the war machine controlling Washington DC today. For a highly revealing historical context on the "War Racket", click here. Theories abound on Israeli bombing of Syria October 2, 2007, Miami Herald/McClatchy News http://www.miamiherald.com/news/world/story/258294.html Nearly a month after an Israeli military airstrike in Syria generated political aftershocks from Washington to North Korea, the Israeli government lifted its official veil of secrecy Tuesday. It didn't provide much new information about what took place on Sept. 6, however. While its government censor cleared the way for journalists here to report that the incident had taken place, rigid rules remained in effect that ban reporting what the target was, what troops were involved or why the strike was ordered. Israel lifted its ban on reporting that the attack took place after Syrian President Bashar Assad told the British Broadcasting Corp. that Israeli jets had hit an "unused military building." But Israeli officials refused to say anything about the attack, and almost no one who would be expected to know -- from government officials to former intelligence officers -- is talking. The dearth of information has allowed fertile speculation: The strike was a dry run for an attack ! on Iran's nuclear facilities. The target was an Iranian missile cache bound for Hezbollah fighters in Lebanon. The attack hit a fledgling Syrian-North Korean nuclear weapons program. Or it was meant to thwart efforts to provide Hezbollah with a "dirty bomb" to use against Israel. One of the latest theories is that North Korea told the United States it had sold nuclear technology to Syria, which prompted the U.S. to pass that information to Israel, leading Israel to attack the technology. The problem of separating fact from fiction is compounded by the practice on all sides of routinely leaking distorted, exaggerated or downright bogus information to conceal the truth and wage psychological warfare. "Everything reported about the raid is wrong and is part of a psychological warfare that will not fool Syria," Deputy President Farouq Shara said in Damascus. Supreme Court denies hearing for fired 'honk for peace' teacher October 2, 2007, San Francisco Chronicle http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/10/02/MNEASHSN0.DTL An elementary-school teacher who was dismissed after telling her class on the eve of the Iraq war that "I honk for peace" lost [her] U.S. Supreme Court appeal. The justices ... denied a hearing to Deborah Mayer, who had appealed lower-court decisions upholding an Indiana school district's refusal to renew her contract in June 2003. The most-recent ruling, by a federal appeals court in Chicago, said teachers in public schools have no constitutional right to express personal opinions in the classroom. A teacher's speech is "the commodity she sells to an employer in exchange for her salary," the [court] said in January. "The Constitution does not enable teachers to present personal views to captive audiences against the instructions of elected officials." The appellate ruling is ... one of a series of recent decisions taking a narrow view of free speech for teachers, other government employees and students. Mayer, who now teaches sixth grade in Florida, was distraught. "I don't! know why anybody would want to be a teacher if you can be fired for saying four little words," she said Monday. "I'm supposed to teach the Constitution to my students. I'm supposed to tell them that the Constitution guarantees free speech. How am I going to justify that?" She said her class of fourth- through sixth-graders was discussing an article in the children's edition of Time magazine, part of the school-approved curriculum, on protests against U.S. preparations for an invasion of Iraq in January 2003. When a student asked her whether she took part in demonstrations, Mayer said, she replied that she blew her horn whenever she saw a "Honk for Peace" sign, and that peaceful solutions should be sought before going to war. After a parent complained, the principal ordered Mayer never to discuss the war or her political views in class. Note: To read further reliable reports of threats to our civil liberties, click here. New revelations in attack on American spy ship October 2, 2007, Chicago Tribune http://www.chicagotribune.com/services/newspaper/printedition/tuesday/chi-liberty... Bryce Lockwood, Marine staff sergeant, Russian-language expert, recipient of the Silver Star for heroism, ordained Baptist minister, is shouting into the phone. "I'm angry! I'm seething with anger! Forty years, and I'm seething with anger!" Lockwood was aboard the USS Liberty, a super-secret spy ship on station in the eastern Mediterranean, when four Israeli fighter jets flew out of the afternoon sun to strafe and bomb the virtually defenseless vessel on June 8, 1967, the fourth day of what would become known as the Six-Day War. Four decades later, many of the more than two dozen Liberty survivors located and interviewed by The Tribune cannot talk about the attack without shouting or weeping. Their anger has been stoked by the declassification of government documents and the recollections of former military personnel, including some quoted in this article for the first time, which strengthen doubts about the U.S. National Security Agency's position that it never intercepted ! the communications of the attacking Israeli pilots -- communications, according to those who remember seeing them, that showed the Israelis knew they were attacking an American naval vessel. The documents also suggest that the U.S. government, anxious to spare Israel's reputation and preserve its alliance with the U.S., closed the case with what even some of its participants now say was a hasty and seriously flawed investigation. In declassifying the most recent and largest batch of materials last June 8, the 40th anniversary of the attack, the NSA, this country's chief U.S. electronic-intelligence-gatherer and code-breaker, acknowledged that the attack had "become the center of considerable controversy and debate." It was not the agency's intention, it said, "to prove or disprove any one set of conclusions, many of which can be drawn from a thorough review of this material," available at http://www.nsa.gov/liberty. Note: For photos, a BBC documentary, and more excellent information on this major cover-up, click here. Bleakonomics September 30, 2007, New York Times http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/30/books/review/Stiglitz-t.html The Shock Doctrine is [Naomi] Kleins ambitious look at the economic history of the last 50 years and the rise of free-market fundamentalism around the world. Disaster capitalism, as she calls it, is a violent system that ... requires terror to do its job. Extreme capitalism loves a blank slate, often finding its opening after crises or shocks. Klein compares radical capitalist economic policy to shock therapy administered by psychiatrists. She interviews Gail Kastner, a victim of covert C.I.A. experiments in interrogation techniques that were carried out by the scientist Ewen Cameron in the 1950s. His idea was to use electroshock therapy to break down patients. Once complete depatterning had been achieved, the patients could be reprogrammed. For Klein the larger lessons are clear: Countries are shocked by wars, terror attacks, coups ditat and natural disasters. Then they are shocked again by corporations and politicians who exploit the fear and disorientation ! of this first shock to push through economic shock therapy. People who dare to resist are shocked for a third time, by police, soldiers and prison interrogators. Klein offers an account of Milton Friedman she calls him the other doctor shock. In the 1950s, as Cameron was conducting his experiments, the Chicago School was developing the ideas that [dominate capitalist planning today]. She quotes the Chilean economist Orlando Letelier on the inner harmony between the terror of the Pinochet regime and its free-market policies. Letelier said that Milton Friedman shared responsibility for the regimes crimes, rejecting his argument that he was only offering technical advice. Letelier was killed in 1976 by a car bomb planted in Washington [DC]. For Klein, he was another victim of the Chicago Boys who wanted to impose free-market capitalism on the region. In the Southern Cone, where contemporary capitalism was born, the war on terror was a war against all obstacl! es to the new order, she writes. Note: For highly revealing, verifiable information on government mind control programs, click here. Eggheads: How bird brains are shaking up science September 16, 2007, Boston Globe http://www.boston.com/news/globe/ideas/articles/2007/09/16/eggheads/ The New Caledonian crow is surprisingly smart about its food. Its favorite insects live in tiny crevices that are too narrow for its beak. So the crow takes a barbed leaf and, using its beak and claws, fashions a primitive hook. It then lowers the hook down into the cracks, almost like a man fishing, and draws up a rich meal. Some scientists even suggest that crows are more sophisticated tool builders than chimps, since they can transmit their knowledge on to successive generations and improve the tools over time. These birds have a culture. The world lost its most famous bird brain this month: Alex, an African gray parrot who lived in a Brandeis laboratory and possessed a vocabulary of nearly 150 words. Yet as remarkable as Alex was - he could identify colors and shapes - he was not alone. The songs of starlings display a sophisticated grammar once thought the sole domain of human thinking. A nutcracker can remember the precise location of hundreds of different food storage! spots. And crows in Japan have learned how to get people to crack walnuts for them: They drop them near busy intersections, then retrieve the smashed nuts when the traffic light turns red. These feats are part of a growing recognition of the genius of birds. Scientists are now studying various birds to explore everything from spatial memory to the grammatical structure of human language. This research is helping to reveal the secrets of the human brain. But it is also overturning the conventional evolutionary story of intelligence, in which all paths lead to the creation of the human cortex. The tree of life, scientists are discovering, has numerous branches of brilliance. "It used to be that people would only talk about intelligence in terms of primates," says Nicola Clayton, a professor of comparative psychology at the University of Cambridge. "But now I think that birds have achieved a sort of honorary ape status, just with a few feathers attached." Key Articles From Years Past Mexican A.F. Pilots Film 'UFOs' May 12, 2004, CBS News/Associated Press http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/05/12/world/main616937.shtml Mexican Air Force pilots filmed 11 unidentified flying objects in the skies over southern Campeche state, a Defense Department spokesman confirmed. A videotape made widely available to the news media ... shows the bright objects, some sharp points of light and others like large headlights, moving rapidly in what appears to be a late-evening sky. The lights were filmed on March 5 by pilots using infrared equipment. They appeared to be flying at an altitude of about 11,480 feet, and allegedly surrounded the Air Force jet as it conducted routine anti-drug trafficking vigilance in Campeche. Only three of the objects showed up on the plane's radar. "Was I afraid? Yes. A little afraid because we were facing something that had never happened before," said radar operator Lt. German Marin in a taped interview. "I couldn't say what it was ... but I think they're completely real," added Lt. Mario Adrian Vazquez, the infrared equipment operator. Vazquez insisted that there was no way to! alter the recorded images. The plane's captain, Maj. Magdaleno Castanon, said the military jets chased the lights "and I believe they could feel we were pursuing them." When the jets stopped following the objects, they disappeared, he said. A Defense Department spokesman confirmed ... that the videotape was filmed by members of the Mexican Air Force. The spokesman declined to comment further and spoke on customary condition of anonymity. The video was first aired on national television [and] then again at a news conference .. by Jaime Maussan, a Mexican investigator who has dedicated the past 10 years to studying UFOs. "This is historic news," Maussan told reporters. "Hundreds of videos (of UFOs) exist, but none had the backing of the armed forces of any country. ... The armed forces don't perpetuate frauds." Note: To watch TV reports of this sighting on Fox News and CNN, click here. Special Note: For those who are ready to be inspired by the rapid spread of the new paradigm in our world, click here. For a revealing 10-minute Fox News clip revealing the dangers of aspartame and related political manipulations, click here. For those who feel one of the main reasons they are here is to help transform our world to a new paradigm based on love and empowerment, click here. Final Note: WantToKnow.info believes it is important to balance disturbing cover-up information with inspirational writings which call us to be all that we can be and to work together for positive change. Please visit our Inspiration Center at http://www.WantToKnow.info/inspirational for an abundance of uplifting material. See our archive of revealing news articles at http://www.WantToKnow.info/medianewsarticles Your tax-deductible donations, however large or small, help greatly to support this important work. To make a donation by credit card, check, or money order: http://www.WantToKnow.info/donationswtk Explore these empowering websites coordinated by the nonprofit PEERS network: http://www.momentoflove.org - Every person in the world has a heart http://www.WantToKnow.info - Reliable, verifiable information on major cover-ups http://www.inspiringcommunity.org - Building a Global Community for All http://www.weboflove.org - Strengthening the Web of Love that interconnects us all Educational websites promoting transformation through information and inspiration To reply to this message, visit http://www.WantToKnow.info/contactus.php To subscribe to or unsubscribe from the WantToKnow.info list (one email every few days): http://www.WantToKnow.info/subscribe _____________________________ Change address / Leave mailing list: http://ymlpr.net/u.php?WTK Hosting by YourMailingListProvider ***************************************************************** 31 Deseret Morning News: Surviving downwind ? Mary Dickson's play blasts nuclear testing By Ivan M. Lincoln Deseret Morning News Published: Oct. 12, 2007 12:14 a.m. MDT When "downwinders" comes up in a conversation, many ? if not most ? probably think it applies only to a small corner of southwestern Utah, not far from the drifting, poisonous dust that came from four decades of nuclear testing across the border in the Nevada desert. But Mary Dickson, a well-known Utah journalist and writer, has a deeply personal perspective on the deadly aftermath of the testing. And now, she's put her experiences ? originally part of an as-yet-to-be-finished book ? into a "docudrama"-style play. "Exposed," which Plan-B Theatre Company is staging as a world premiere next week in the Studio Theatre of the Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center, is comprised of Dickson's well-documented findings, which show that what the U.S. government first saw as an experiment that would have little or no effect on the few inhabitants in southwest Utah actually impacted thousands across a much wider area. "The winds didn't stop at a chain-link fence or at county or state borders," Dickson told the Deseret Morning News, during an interview with her, the play's director and the two actresses playing both Mary and her late sister, Ann. Delving into formerly classified government documents, Dickson is providing a dramatic new dimension to what one New York Times journalist called "the most prodigiously reckless program of human experimentation in U.S. history." "We believed our government when they told us, 'There is no danger,"' Dickson said. While the focus of Plan-B's drama is Mary and her sister ? both of whom suffered from the consequences of the fallout ? Dickson's play also brings in dozens of additional characters, including real-life government officials and composites of other figures. When Mary refers to herself and her sister as "downwinders," you just assume they must have lived somewhere down around St. George. But they were actually among more than 54 people who got sick or died from fallout-related illnesses but live within a relatively small five-block Salt Lake neighborhood. During the interview, Dickson said there are also many "downwind" victims who lived in Los Angeles. The deadly fallout was trapped between layers of L.A.'s infamous inversions. A dramatic map shows that the spread of the fallout takes in almost the entire United States, including large portions of Idaho and Montana. Above-ground testing in the Nevada desert involved the dropping of more than 100 nuclear bombs between 1951 and 1962. Atmospheric testing was banned in 1962, but underground tests continued for another three decades. More than half of these 828 underground tests leaked radiation into the atmosphere. In Plan-B's production, local Equity actress Joyce Cohen will play Mary Dickson. In an ironic twist, when Cohen first moved to Salt Lake City nearly two decades ago, strangers on the street would address her as "Mary." Meanwhile Dickson was having the same, unnerving experience ? people calling her "Joyce." Both women are petite blondes and both, at various times back then, wore their hair in similar styles. Seeing them together during Plan-B Theatre Company's collaborative production process, it's easy to see how they could be mistaken for each other. They're almost, but not quite, twins in appearance. Teri Cowan will be playing Mary's sister, Ann Dickson DeBirk, who died on March 18, 2001, following a nine-year battle with lupus. During a joint interview with the three women, along with director Jerry Rapier, they seem to have developed into a backstage family, finishing each other's sentences as topics quickly change from one aspect of the drama to another. "I'm not trying to imitate Mary," Cohen said. Cowan added, "After we did one read-through, someone said Joyce was just like Mary," adding that "Normally, you're doing that backstory just based on what's in front of you (in the script), and you have to fill in the blanks. We have the luxury of Mary telling us that 'Ann was like this.' But it's also a little daunting to know that." "The trick with this play," said Cohen, "is that there is so much information. You have to keep some of the stuff in and leave other stuff out." "What's amazing is this whole collaborative process," said Dickson, "from Jerry to the actors." Cohen added that "when you work on a play, you form a family. Sometimes it's intense and sometimes it's dysfunctional." All agreed that the process of producing Dickson's play has become a communal experience. Dickson's script brings up such well-known figures as eccentric Hollywood mogul Howard Hughes, whose 1956 Genghis Kahn spectacle "The Conqueror" became notorious for being one of the worst pictures ever made. And an alarming number of cast and crew (including stars John Wayne, Susan Hayward and Agnes Moorhead, and director Dick Powell) were stricken with cancer after the "on-location" shooting in Utah and Nevada, where the film's desert settings were in the direct path of the fallout. Over the past few months, following limited "workshop" and staged readings of the script, Dickson has collected hundreds of names of people who were either ill themselves or who lost loved ones from the fallout. The cast also includes Jason Tatom as Government Official No. 1, and a tour guide in the Atomic Testing Museum in Las Vegas, and Mark Fossen as Official No. 2, Howard Hughes and Dr. Harold Knapp. Kirt Bateman will play a variety of men's roles, including outspoken protagonist Preston Truman of Malad, Idaho; newsman Peter Jennings; and retired Col. Raymond Brim, who was involved with the early years of testing and who later questioned the government's ethics. Teresa Sanderson will also play several roles, including Elizabeth Bruhn Catalan of St. George, one of many who testified during congressional hearings, and Carole Gallagher, a Brooklyn, N.Y., native who became immersed in documenting the stories of many downwinders. Studies by the National Cancer Institute indicate that the radioactive fallout affected virtually every state and county in the continental United States ? as far as 2,300 miles from the Nevada Test Site. "Exposed" touches on events ranging from the Cold War trauma of the early 1950s to the recent controversy of plans for the "Divine Strake" blasts at the Nevada Test Site. The latter was called off following strong protests by members of Downwinders United and other anti-nuclear activists. Dickson herself was diagnosed with cancer when she was 29, which eventually led to her having a hysterectomy. Like fallout scattered across the North American terrain, Dickson's drama is a collection of tales of government cover-ups. "The hardest thing is not the dying," Dickson says toward the end of her play. "It's that the dead are so easily forgotten." If you go What: "Exposed" Where: Rose Wagner Center, 138 W. 300 South When: Oct. 19-Nov. 4 How much: $18 Phone: 355-2787 Web: www.planbtheatre.org E-mail: ivan@desnews.com deseretnews.com: Home ***************************************************************** 32 RMN: Congress to look into compensation for nuke workers Rocky Mountain News | ScrippsNews By LAURA FRANK Scripps Howard News Service Friday, October 12, 2007 A congressional hearing Oct. 23 will assess whether ill workers from Rocky Flats and other nuclear weapons sites are being treated fairly by a federal program that is supposed to compensate them for work-related illnesses. Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., heads the committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, which will try to determine whether the program is "friendly to our Cold War heroes." Coloradan Terrie Barrie is getting ready to go. She became a national advocate for ill workers like her husband George, a former Rocky Flats worker. She plans to meet with lawmakers' staff members. "It's very important that we go," Barrie said. "They need to know that this program is not fair to claimants." Two top officials of the Energy Employees Occupational Illness and Compensation Program confirmed they will testify. They are Shelby Hallmark, director of the program for the U.S. Department of Labor, and John Howard, director of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. A spokesman for Howard said the director will be testifying about efforts to make the program "claimant friendly." Currently, there are no workers scheduled to testify. But Ken Silver, an advocate from Oak Ridge, Tenn., said he was soliciting input from workers at several sites for his testimony. The program has been under fire, most recently after a government contractor found officials had ignored evidence trying to prove a link between ailments and exposures from the nuclear weapons work. "If they're ignoring evidence, it's not claimant friendly," Barrie said. Reach Laura Frank at frankl(at)RockyMountainNews.com A special investigative report examining 40,000 cases of infant mortality around the nation reveals that sloppy investigations and muddled records come with a very high price: the deaths of more babies who might have been saved through medical research. Discover and compare with a searchable database, watch compelling video, and share your stories and reactions. * Enter Saving Babies Scripps Newspaper Group — Online © 2007 The E.W. Scripps Co. ***************************************************************** 33 Detroit News: Officials: Worker mistake caused holes at Fermi II * Detnews.com Friday, October 12, 2007 MONROE -- Officials today blamed mysterious holes found at the Fermi II nuclear power plant Thursday on worker errors. Preliminary findings by DTE Energy and the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission are that workers removing insulation material accidentally drilled the ¼-inch holes inside steam lines. The holes were discovered during routine maintenance checks. "The key piece to the findings is that it didn't appear to be deliberate," said DTE spokesman John Austerberry. "We are concluding our investigation and outage work has continued even though we had suspended work in that part of the plant." Officials shut down the plant Sept. 29 for maintenance work that is scheduled every 18 months. The 900 regular employees of the plant along with 1,400 workers brought in for the maintenance checks were in the plant. No injuries occurred and no hazards have been found due to the holes, Austerberry said. You can reach Iveory Perkins at (734) 462-2672 or iveory.perkins@detnews.com. © Copyright 2007 The Detroit News. All rights reserved. ***************************************************************** 34 Rocky Mountain News: Congress to hold Oct. 23 hearing on nuke workers By Laura Frank, Rocky Mountain News October 11, 2007 A congressional hearing Oct. 23 will assess whether ill workers from Rocky Flats and other nuclear weapons sites are being treated fairly by a federal program that is supposed to compensate them for work-related illnesses. Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., heads the committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, which will try to determine whether the program is "friendly to our Cold War heroes." Coloradan Terrie Barrie is getting ready to go. The Craig woman became a national advocate for ill workers like her husband George, a former Rocky Flats worker. She is not set to testify, but plans to meet with lawmakers' staff members. "It's very important that we go," Barrie said. "They need to know that this program is not fair to claimants." Two top officials of the Energy Employees Occupational Illness and Compensation Program confirmed they will testify. They are Shelby Hallmark, director of the program for the U.S. Department of Labor, and John Howard, director of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. A spokesman for Howard said the director will be testifying about efforts to make the program "claimant friendly." Currently, there are no workers scheduled to testify. But Ken Silver, an advocate from Oak Ridge, Tenn., said he was soliciting input from workers at several sites for his testimony. The program has been under fire, most recently after a government contractor found officials had ignored evidence trying to prove a link between ailments and exposures from the nuclear weapons work. "If they're ignoring evidence, it's not claimant friendly," Barrie said. frankl@RockyMountainNews.com or 303-954-5091 Scripps Newspaper Group — Online © 2007 The E.W. Scripps Co. Privacy Policy | User Agreement ***************************************************************** 35 ABC4.com: Art exhibit depicts plight of Downwinders - Reported by: Chris Vanocur Last Update: 10/12 11:00 pm SALT LAKE CITY (ABC 4 News) - In Salt Lake an opening reception was held Friday for an unusual and highly emotional exhibit. It's called "Exposed" and tells the tale of Utah's Downwinders - those exposed to the nuclear bomb tests in southern Nevada. The Pickle Company’s Katrina Robb says, "It's crushing to me that these humans in this area were so potentially disposable." Many Utahns still bear the physical and emotional scars of hundreds of nuclear tests and the radioactive air that poisoned them. Photographer Carole Gallagher hopes those who look at her photographs will be inspired to: "Question authority. If you're told something read both sides don't take anything as the god's honest truth." And for many of these artists, it’s not just the past which scares them. Some also fear nuclear tests in the future. Proof of that can be found in a work called "Cold War Jesus." The stake seen driven thru the the artwork is called a "Divine Strake." Artist Eric Ristau says, "It’s not pleasant stuff to think about but without public outcry, I think that there is a great danger of it returning and becoming a part of our lives again." This Downwinder exhibit is on display at Salt Lake's Pickle Company. It officially opens to the public October 19th during the city's monthly gallery stroll. © 2007 Clear Channel Broadcasting, Inc. | ***************************************************************** 36 News & Star: it was not in anyones mind that it could catch fire Published on 12/10/2007 Dark secret: The Windscale piles which the nation thought heralded a bright, clean, nuclear age but which, instead, now stand as a monument to the folly of the arms race. Inset, Vic Goodwin There was no emergency drill. Nothing like it had been experienced or predicted. But a handful of men defied searing heat and radiation contamination to avert nuclear devastation at Windscale, 50 years ago this week. The Windscale Pile 1 and Pile 2 reactors had been built to produce plutonium for atomic bombs as post-war British governments struggled to keep up with America and Russia in the nuclear arms race. The reactors were designed and built to a strict deadline and Pile 1 began operating in October 1 1950 while Pile 2 followed in June 1951. In October 1952, plutonium from Windscale was used in Britain’s first atomic bomb test in the Monte Bello Islands north west of Australia. But the drive to match the nuclear superpowers almost led to disaster as the reactors were pushed to their limits. Vic Goodwin was one of a handful of technicians who battled to prevent catastrophe at Windscale. He was the first to notice that the reactor core in Pile 1 was behaving strangely. Now a 75-year-old enjoying quiet retirement in west Cumbria, his mind clicks back through the decades with precision and clarity. A graduate trainee at Windscale, he was finishing his shift at midnight on Wednesday, October 9, 1957, when he became aware of the unusual temperatures in part of the core. He reported them to the night watch and when he returned at midday on Thursday, radiation was registering in the filters of the chimney, signalling a ‘burst’ or escape of radioactive material. The massive graphite core contained 3,440 channels into which fuel isotopes would be loaded, then sealed by charge plugs. Mr Goodwin helped find the over-heating area of the reactor at about 3pm and when the plugs were removed, they could see the fuel rods were red hot. Two teams of four men were immediately drafted in to empty the core of uranium fuel rods to isolate the fire and cool the system. Bamboo poles with clamps were normally used for the job, but as the heat and fears of disaster rose, metal poles and hammers were used to dislodge some of the rods around the hottest part of the core to create a fire-break. Fire temperatures peaked at 1,300C. The reactor was air-cooled by a giant fan, but the fire had started when there was almost no air going through it. The fan was switched on to cool the area enough to allow the men to work. While the men sweated to remove the fuel, Mr Goodwin raced round the reactor, taking different readings as there was no central control. He said: “There was a well-established emergency procedure at the site, but no drill for a reactor fire because it was not in anyone’s mind that it could catch fire. “I was going round the building, looking at gauges to estimate what was happening and work out what we could do. “My thoughts were ‘what is the next step?’ We had to ensure as much of the radiation was kept inside and the least amount was getting out.†The firebreak was not working, there was not enough inert gas to submerge the reactor. A supply of CO2 was brought over from nearby Calder Hall and at about 3am, it was used to try to suffocate the fire, but it had little effect. It was decided to douse the core in water, even though there were fears that it could cause a nuclear explosion. Mr Goodwin was responsible for rigging a water injection system. The water was turned on at 9am and the air fan turned off at 10am. “There were risks pumping in water,†he said. “But it was pretty well all over by midday on the Friday.†He said the disaster did not compare to conditions at Chernobyl and he was never scared about the situation or fearful of radiation exposure. While some men did suffer radiation exposure, no one actually died working on the fire. Mr Goodwin said: “We all carried radiation measuring devices and we all knew perfectly well what the dosage was that would kill you. “This was nothing like the much later Chernobyl problems, this was all inside a big concrete shield. “Men were rotated at the charge face because it was physically demanding work and it was hot, not because of exposure to radiation.†There was no time afterwards for reflection, or to think of what could have happened. “It all had to be cleaned up and safely dealt with, we had to work out what was the trigger, what had caused the fire, then there was the inquiry and we had to get on with the job,†he said. “It had not finished, it just went on.†A new study claims that the radioactive fallout from the incident was underestimated 50 years ago. The ‘cloud’ of contaminants released through the Pile 1 chimney spread out over the UK, Scandinavia and north eastern Europe. Fear of contamination sparked a six week ban on milk from farms within a 200-mile radius of the reactor, and the fallout has since been blamed for causing hundreds of cancers. But a ‘virtual’ recreation of the fire has led to claims that the contamination may have been much greater than originally thought. John Garland, formerly of the UK Atomic Energy Authority, and Professor Richard Wakeford, a visiting professor at the University of Manchester, re-analysed the data taken from monitoring the air, grass and vegetation at the time of the event. They fed it into a powerful Met office computer model to reveal how the radioactive cloud would have spread from the reactor with the weather conditions at that time. They confirmed radioactive iodine and caesium were released, as well as polonium and a very small amount of plutonium, but found that the levels would have been higher than previously thought, and would have affected more people. Originally, the government said prevailing winds took most of the contamination out into the Irish Sea. But Prof Wakeford said: “We were able to assess that the plume went further to the east than anticipated which is why the amount and activity of radiation were doubled. “This would have affected the number of cancers caused which would have been closer to 240 than the 200 previously believed to have been caused.†The professors said most of the radioactive materials released had decayed and now posed no risk, while small quantities of caesium and plutonium remained. For 50 years, the official record on the accident has been that the men who had bravely battled to prevent a devastating accident were to blame for causing it. Prime Minister Harold Macmillan issued a report that said the accident had been caused by “an error of judgementâ€. But scientists had warned about the increasing dangers of an accident for some time. They feared that safety margins for radioactive material in the Piles were being over-stretched. Yet politicians pressed ahead with increased demands on Windscale to produce material for an H-bomb. They believed it would strengthen the “special relationship†with America and mean they would be treated as a nuclear equal and form an alliance against the Soviet states. Macmillan realised that if the American Congress knew the fire had been the result of risky decisions taken to try to produce the bomb, they might veto his partnership plans. To protect the “special relationshipâ€, Macmillan lied – and Mr Goodwin doesn’t blame him. “Macmillan did the right thing,†he said. “If he had to tell a lie or two to get the agreement, I would have done the same thing. “It just so happens that it was hard on the people who had put their back into things and were now getting the blame. “There was no great harm done, except to one’s pride.†Mr Goodwin, who lives near Ravenglass, carried on a varied career within the nuclear industry. But despite the near-catastrophe, he never had any doubts about returning to the area to retire. He said: “I bought a house here just after the fire. “Although I did not live in it for a long time because I was posted around the country, I thought this place was marvellous, where better than here to live?†And he is convinced that nuclear power should be a source of our future energy provision. “My main concern now is just that we have enough electricity and fuel.†nw evening mail | cumberland news | times and star | whitehaven news ***************************************************************** 37 The State: DHEC: Barnwell leaks pose no threat 10/12/2007 By SAMMY FRETWELL - sfretwell@thestate.com SNELLING — Radioactive tritium levels are increasing in groundwater in the area of South Carolina’s 36-year-old nuclear waste dump as the atomic refuse seeps away from the burial ground, Barnwell County residents were told Thursday night. Susan Jenkins, a regulator with the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control, said the area below the landfill had seen tritium levels rise in recent years. “The readings in the wells south of the southern trench area increased,” she said during a public meeting in Snelling. “Tritium has begun to move off-site.” But regulators said tritium levels in monitoring wells across the site are not uniform, and they provided few answers to explain the trend after a public meeting in this tiny crossroads about an hour southwest of Columbia. “Some wells are increasing and some wells are decreasing” in their tritium levels, state health department spokesman Thom Berry said, referring to monitoring wells tested by his agency. Asked whether the agency knew why there was a disparity, Berry said he did not. DHEC called the meeting to explain whether people’s drinking water near the landfill is in danger of radioactive contamination. Officials said the landfill poses no immediate threat. Tritium is a byproduct of nuclear power that can increase a person’s chances of cancer and signal the flow of other, more dangerous pollutants. More than 30 monitoring wells on the site contain tritium levels that exceed the Environmental Protection Agency’s safe drinking water standard, in some cases by hundreds of times, The State newspaper reported Aug. 19. The newspaper obtained a plume map that had been sealed from public view at Chem-Nuclear’s request. Some of the contaminated wells were found to be between the landfill and a creek that flows toward the Savannah River. DHEC has since found that none of the 39 private drinking water wells it checked for tritium late last summer contained unsafe levels. But agency regulator Richard Haynes said Thursday that DHEC will continue checking about seven to 10 private wells near the waste dump to see whether that changes in the future. Snelling resident Steven Zimmerman said he’s glad to hear that. During the meeting, Zimmerman expressed concern about the impact the landfill might have on his drinking water one day. Although Zimmerman said he believes DHEC sincerely wants to help prevent that from happening, he has four children to worry about. “I’m concerned with their well-being,” he said after the meeting, explaining that most public health standards are set up to protect active adults. But toxic material can affect children differently, he said. Others at the meeting said they were not worried about the landfill’s impact on their drinking water. “I never had any concerns,” Emily Williams said. But Williams said negative publicity about the landfill could hurt her county’s economy. “I’m concerned about the way the media have put Barnwell County in a negative light that was unwarranted.” Barnwell County Council chairman Keith Sloan said publicity about landfill leaks was overblown and was part of a media agenda against his county. The low-level atomic waste landfill has been a source of controversy in South Carolina for decades. Since opening in 1971, it has taken more than 28 million cubic feet of the nation’s low-level nuclear waste. That waste includes lightly contaminated materials from hospitals and more heavily radioactive refuse, such as nuclear reactor parts. The landfill is scheduled to close to the nation next summer, when only South Carolina, Connecticut and New Jersey can use it. Last March, state legislators turned back an effort by Chem-Nuclear, a division of Energy Solutions of Utah, to extend the life of the landfill for all states through 2023. Reach Fretwell at (803) 771-8537. ***************************************************************** 38 The Tribune: Two meetings this weekend about uranium mine State lawmakers to announce new legislation October 12, 2007 The weekend will be busy for people with concerns about a proposed uranium mine in northern Weld County. State and federal lawmakers are hosting meetings on Saturday and Sunday in Nunn and Denver to listen to residents’ concerns. State lawmakers also plan to announce legislation to deal with the mine. On Saturday, U.S. Rep. Marilyn Musgrave, R-Fort Morgan, and State Sen. Steve Johnson, R-Fort Collins, will be among lawmakers and interested residents hosting a meeting in Nunn about the mine. The following day, Democratic lawmakers will join Johnson and others at the state Capitol in Denver to announce new legislation for the upcoming session of the Colorado General Assembly, which convenes in January. Horses, area residents and yellow sheet cake — in homage to yellowcake, the final product that mined uranium becomes — will be present at the Capitol rally. The Centennial Project, north of Nunn and between that town and Wellington, contains 5,760 acres of land to which Powertech has purchased mineral rights. The company estimates 9.7 million pounds of uranium lie beneath a 15-mile chunk of northern Colorado, a veritable mother lode of radioactive resources. But neighbors in the sparsely populated areas are wary of the mining company’s plans and worry about their health and the safety of Colorado’s water. Powetech plans to use water from the massive Dakota-Cheyenne aquifer, which spreads beneath much of the Front Range, to extract the uranium. The Larimer County Medical Society recently joined a list of people opposing the mine. Powertech representatives were invited to Saturday’s meeting in Nunn so residents’ concerns can be addressed. To Go: Community forum Saturday, Oct. 14 When: 2 p.m. Where: Nunn Community Center, 185 Lincoln Ave., Nunn Speakers: U.S. Rep. Marilyn Musgrave Dr. Lilias Jardin – Coloradoans Against Resource Destruction (CARD) Jeffrey C. Parson – Western Mining Action Project (Senior Attorney) Dr. Cory Carroll – President, Larimer County Medical Society Representative from the Rocky Mountain Farmers Union There will be time for Q & A with those in attendance Capitol rally Sunday, Oct. 14 What: Larimer County lawmakers will announce legislation to address the proposed mine. When : 2 p.m.    Where : Colorado State Capitol, West Steps, 200 W. Colfax Ave., Denver Speakers: State Rep. John Kefalas, D-Fort Collins State Rep. Randy Fischer D-Fort Collins Senator Steve Johnson, R-Fort Collins Robin Davis, Northern Colorado Landowner Daryl Burkhart, Northern Colorado Landowner Dr. Cory Carroll, President, Larimer County Medical Society In attendance: Larimer County Medical Society and Weld County Medical Society Colorado Environmental Coalition and Environment Colorado Tentative: Senator Bob Bacon, Senator Brandon Shaffer, State Rep. Jim Riesberg October 13, 2007 - Meetings in Nunn and Denver to discuss proposed uranium mine October 9, 2007 - We must stop PowerTech before plans go any further September 20, 2007 - Uranium, JFK and the Warren Commission September 13, 2007 - Time to stop denying hazards of uranium September 5, 2007 - What's all the fuss about a uranium mine near Nunn? September 2, 2007 - I, too, worry about uranium mining August 31, 2007 - Clean water + wind energy = uranium mining? August 31, 2007 - Musgrave: NRC to allow more time to comment on uranium mine August 20, 2007 - Uranium drilling sparks concern August 15, 2007 - Will uranium sites be adequately restored? June 24, 2007 - Will Fort Collins soon be the worst place to live? All contents © Copyright 2007 greeleytrib.com The Greeley Publishing Co. - P.O. Box 1690 - Greeley, CO 80632 ***************************************************************** 39 Salt Lake Tribune: Safety issues threaten plan to move Moab tailings The Salt Lake Tribune Article Last Updated: 10/12/2007 06:37:11 PM MDT Posted: 6:30 PM- Plans to move 16 million tons of uranium tailings and contaminated waste from the old Atlas Mill site near Moab might be sent back to the drawing board before they get rolling. The Energy Department awarded a contract in June to EnergySolutions to load the mountain of Cold War-era uranium residue onto rail cars and move it from the banks of the Colorado River north to a disposal site 30 miles north near Crescent Junction. But Joette Langianese, a Grand County councilwoman who heads a local steering committee tracking the tailings project, says she told her committee this week "to be prepared" for changes in to the rail shipment plan. "I think then we're going to see a little change in direction," she said. Two factors are driving the issue, she said: Flash flooding near where the tailings are expected to be loaded onto the rail cars has raised safety issues, and a legislative provision that substantially speeds up the timetable for the cleanup project. For now, the Energy Department is focused on the original plan to move the material by rail. Talk of changing that plan is premature, said Don Metzler, the department's project manager for the cleanup. "If there are rumors out there, they don't have legs," Metzler said. Nearly 60 percent of the design studies on the rail line are complete and progressing. The rail plan may have to be reassessed, Metzler said, if a provision that Sen. Bob Bennett, R-Utah, has added to a Defense Department spending bill is passed. It would require the tailings to be moved by 2019. Trucking the waste would cost as much as 15 percent less than the rail plan, but the Energy Department picked rail because it "has a lower accident rate, lower potential impacts to wildlife and lower fuel consumption," the department said in issuing its decision. Mark Walker, a spokesman for EnergySolutions, said the company is taking its orders from the Energy Department. "We're moving forward with engineering and preparing to rail the material," Walker said. "If they give us a different direction, we'll do whatever direction they take." The other issue that could affect the movement of the waste is a series of flash floods in the area where the tailings are expected to be transferred from trucks to the rail cars. "That in my mind is a real concern," Langainese said. "We certainly don't want any accidents up there." Metzler said he, too, is concerned, but believes the flooding issue can be addressed. "That area's got to be shored up and made stable," Walker said. One of the potential alternatives, said Langianese, is to truck the tailings to a transfer station near the turn-off from U.S. Highway 191 to Dead Horse Point, but the National Park Service might object to that because of its proximity to Canyonlands National Park. ***************************************************************** 40 KVBC: DOE's Yucca deadline looming o News 3 Las Vegas Web Cams There's new optimism that the Yucca Mountain Project will never store nuclear waste northwest of Las Vegas. That's according to Richard Bryan, a former governor of our state. He was among those telling southern Nevada officials what's recently changed in the fight against Yucca, and what's at stake for all of us. News 3's Mitch Truswell reports. June 8, 2008. It's a deadline for the Department of Energy. That's the day the DOE has to complete its license application to store nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain. Many don't think the DOE will make it. "It's (the project) really on life support and this attempt to get this license application in by June 8 is a last ditch effort to breathe life back into the project," Joseph Strolin with the Nevada Agency for Nuclear Projects said. "From the state's perspective, I am more optimistic today than I have ever been," former Nevada governor Bryan said added. Now that's not to suggest we fold our tents, declare victory and go home. Because the nuclear power industry is a formidable presence on Capital Hill; they spend a fortune lobbying this." So what's changed? Two of the big supporters in Congress are on their way out. Senator Larry Craig will leave office at the end of his term, maybe sooner. Senator Pete Domenici, the ranking member on the Energy Committee, has announced he won't seek reelection. There are other concerns. Years after work began at the site, evidence seemed to show an earthquake fault line was running through the repository. That caused many state officials to question the DOE's expert opinions. In the DOE's favor, while many people say they're opposed to the repository, it fails to draw a big crowd during public hearings. That may change, state officials think, once it becomes known how nuclear waste will get to Nevada. The Department of Energy has a much different take on the issue. Spokesman Allen Benson said: I'm not sure Congress would appropriate money for a program that was not needed or necessary. We're complying with the congressional will. We've been directed to develop a repository for the nation, and that's what we're doing. All content © Copyright 2000 - 2007 WorldNow and KVBC. All Rights Reserved. ***************************************************************** 41 Las Vegas Now: Two Nuke Waste Trucking Routes Proposed Through Las Vegas Edward Lawrence, Reporter DOE Proposes 215 as Alternate Nuclear Waste Trucking Route The state commission formed to fight the nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain says the timetable is politically motivated. The head of the Nevada Commission on Nuclear Projects says the Department of Energy wants to ram through the license for the nuclear waste repository before the current president leaves office. Eyewitness News has uncovered new information about transportation and safety, which could impact the entire Las Vegas Valley. More trucks with spent high level nuclear waste would be rolling through Las Vegas than first thought according to two more supplemental drafts of the Environmental Impact Study released relating to the overall project. Friday, the state agency fighting the Yucca Mountain repository was briefed about the fine print in the reports. This is a fight that has the state of Nevada hunkered down behind a collective "not in my back yard" approach. Elected officials from Nevada, including the governor to the most powerful senator in the United States all say storing nuclear waste at the Yucca Mountain repository would endanger our health, way of life, and future. The executive director of the state agency fighting the federal government says new Department of Energy reports validate the fears. Bob Loux, with the Nevada Agency for Nuclear Projects, said, "We have seen documents from Sandia [in New Mexico] that say schedule is more important than scientific integrity. Schedule is more important than anything else. Others that say if we don't make the June filing date the DOE has told us we are all out of jobs." Loux says the Department of Energy is recklessly rushing to submit a license application to open the nuclear waste dump before President George Bush leaves office so it can be rubber stamped. "There are only going to be 30-percent of the designs for these facilities available. There is not going to be emergency plans and plans for retrieval available because they don't have time to do them," Bob Loux continued. Also, Loux says the Department of Energy added an 11th hour plan into new environmental impact draft statements. The latest surprise shows the numbers of high level nuclear waste shipments on Nevada roads will more than double what was originally proposed. z The new report shows 2,700 truck shipments would come in on two possible routes: Interstate 15 to US-95, or Interstate 15 to the 215 Beltway to US-95. That goes through Las Vegas City Councilman Larry Brown's district. Councilman Brown said, "Then you start impacting communities like Sun City Summerlin. You are getting into the core of residential areas in Southern Nevada. The politics will raise itself at this stage of the game." The Department of Energy says no formal trucking route has been selected. The federal agency also says the license application will meet all rules and regulations. Clark County recently did a study showing 76-percent of residents oppose storing nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain. Following that information, the state formally asked the city of Las Vegas and Clark County to become partners in the fight. Up to now both local governments officially watched from the sidelines. The city's resolution will be voted on in the next meeting. The county's vote will be in another month. z E-mail your comments to Reporter Edward Lawrence. All content © Copyright 2000 - 2007 WorldNow and KLAS. All Rights Reserved. ***************************************************************** 42 times and star: Experts seek help with nuke waste Published on 12/10/2007 THE PUBLIC is being asked to help come up with solutions to deal with radioactive low level waste. Experts are looking for more effective and faster ways of dealing with a variety of materials as the clean-up of Sellafield gathers pace. The capacity of the nearby Drigg low level waste site, which also takes slightly radioactive materials from hospitals, universities and other industries, will be stretched by the process. Now Sellafield Ltd has decided to consult the public on possible solutions including re-use and recycling of contaminated materials and continued treatment and direct disposal. Sellafield Ltd head of waste Laurence Cook said: “For low level material there is a need to deal with some historically stored wastes that have yet to be properly treated as well as new wastes arising from risk reduction activities and the demolition of ageing facilities on the Sellafield site. Storage space on the site and in the nearby low level waste repository is becoming severely limited. If solutions are not developed bottlenecks could arise that would result in a slow-down of risk reduction, clean-up, decommissioning and demolition work.†Solutions have to be found for oil, metals and asbestos on top of the large volumes of general process wastes. A large majority of this is expected to be contaminated at very low radioactive levels, including about a million tonnes of concrete. An estimated 15,000 tonnes of asbestos will be generated from clean up, half of it from the decommissioning of Calder Hall, although most of this is said to be free from radioactivity. People are being urged to register for a series of workshops discussing the issue at www.sellafieldsites.com. View this story and the latest newspaper in full digital reproduction, just like the printed copy at www.timesandstar.co.uk/digitalcopy ***************************************************************** 43 BBC NEWS: US rejects Russian missile call Last Updated: Friday, 12 October 2007, 22:22 GMT 23:22 UK The US goal was to make progress on some crucial strategic issues Talks between the US and Russia about a US anti-missile system in Europe have ended acrimoniously and without any sign of progress. The US rejected Russian appeals at the talks in Moscow to halt the scheme. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said his country would take steps to neutralise the threat posed by the missile system if it went ahead. US Defence Secretary Robert Gates said the shield system was not directed at Russia. Mr Gates said he and US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had put several new ideas to the Russians but indicated that they had not yet been accepted. Map of US missile defence systems "Our talks reflected the complex, multi-faceted relationship the US and Russia have," he said. "We remain eager to be open and full partners with Russia in missile defence... We discussed a range of proposals we hope they will accept." How US missile shield works Q&A: US missile defences But Mr Lavrov said the proposals needed to be studied and that meanwhile Washington should halt work on the shield. "We believe that to make the joint work of Russian and US experts most effective, plans on deploying [the missile defence system in Europe] should be frozen," he said. Ms Rice said talks with Poland and the Czech Republic on deploying elements of the shield on their soil would continue. "We will work during this time to address Russian concerns... We believe that we can address those concerns and we are prepared to do it," she said. The US says it needs a missile defence system to counteract "rogue states" like Iran and North Korea. The Kremlin has asked the US why it cannot instead use Russian-operated early warning radar in Azerbaijan. Mr Gates said while that radar might be used, it was not capable of guiding interceptor missiles. Treaty threats The BBC's diplomatic correspondent, Jonathan Marcus, says the news conference after the talks showed the underlying tensions between Washington and Moscow. He says that this should have been an opportunity to work on the climate of US-Russia relations but the outcome may well have made things worse. Earlier, Russian President Vladimir Putin signalled he would not support US plans and threatened to abandon a key nuclear missile treaty which he said was outdated. One day you and I may decide that missile defence systems can be deployed on the Moon, but before we get there the possibility of reaching an agreement may be lost because you will have implemented your own plans Vladimir Putin US fails to bridge gap President Putin said it would be difficult to remain part of the Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty unless it was expanded to include more countries than just the US and Russia. The reason, he said, was that other countries were developing these kinds of weapons systems - including those close to Russia's borders. Analysts say President Putin's threat to withdraw from the treaty is yet another diplomatic move to put pressure on the Americans. The treaty, which limits US and Russian short and medium range missiles, was signed 20 years ago and led to the elimination of almost 3,000 Russian and US missiles. Russia has additionally threatened to leave the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe if it is not ratified by all Nato nations. The US-Russian talks also covered the Iranian nuclear issue. Mr Lavrov criticised US sanctions and hints about using military force against Iran, which he said "contradict our collective efforts" to negotiate a solution. US MISSILE DEFENCE: LONG RANGE THREAT PROTECTION US wants to build defence system against possible missile attacks Part of defences would be in Eastern Europe - which Russia opposes Russia suggests US should use its Gabala, Azerbaijan base instead * BBC Copyright Notice ***************************************************************** 44 PakTribune: Our nuclear scientists Pakistan News Service - Friday October 12, 2007 (1000 PST) Our chief justice is an amazing person. During the hearing of a bank case where some officers of the bank were rewarded with millions of rupees for their so-called excellent performance, he aptly remarked that there was hardly any justification for doling out so much money to such people. In his opinion such an amount should have been given to our nuclear scientists who took Pakistan to the top of the world. The CJ may be amused and even shocked to know that for carrying out successful nuclear tests in 1998 the nuclear scientists were granted 15 days’ salary and honorarium for their meritorious services. Those who made pioneering contribution to our nuclear capability were ‘generously’ granted one month’s salary and the high civilian award of Hilal-i-Imtiaz (which hardly brought any solace or relief to the scientists or their families). The then prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, who untiringly exploited Pakistan’s nuclear capability for his personal political aggrandisement, ignored the scientists after the nuclear event. The scientists were too egoistic to demand anything for themselves. It is really gracious on the part of the chief justice to raise this point nine years after the event when everybody else had seemed to have forgotten the whole thing. President Musharraf’s government is generous in recognising excellence. The recent example is an award of Rs6 million to each member of our cricket team for their outstanding performance in the Twenty20 World Cup. The president has made great a contribution towards development of science and technology. I appeal to him that he should announce a befitting reward for those who enabled Pakistan to become a member of the prestigious nuclear club. RASHID ABBAS Islamabad Web paktribune.com Pakistan News Service © PakTribune.com Pvt Ltd 2003-2004 ***************************************************************** 45 UPI: Electric Boat wins new Navy sub contract United Press International - International Security - Industry - Published: 12, 2007 at 6:11 PM GROTON, Conn., Oct. 12 (UPI) -- General Dynamics Electric Boat has won a new sub modernization contract from the U.S. Navy. "The U.S. Navy has awarded General Dynamics Electric Boat two contract modifications worth a total of $53.5 million for nuclear submarine modernization and planning yard services and support," General Dynamics said in a statement Thursday. "Electric Boat is a wholly owned subsidiary of General Dynamics," it said. "Under a $37.3 million modification, Electric Boat will continue operating the New England Maintenance Manpower Initiative -- NEMMI -- at the Naval Submarine Base in Groton. Specifically, Electric Boat will provide a wide range of overhaul, repair and modernization services in support of nuclear submarines, floating dry-docks, support and service craft and other platforms and equipment at the submarine base. About 270 Electric Boat employees are involved in the work," the company said. "Additionally, Electric Boat will provide reactor-plant planning yard services for nuclear submarines and support yard services for moored training ships under a separate $16.2 million contract modification," the statement said. General Dynamics is based in Falls Church, Va., and has a staff of around 82,900. It projects 2007 revenues of more than $27 billion. General Dynamics describes itself as "a market leader in business aviation; land and expeditionary combat systems, armaments and munitions; shipbuilding and marine systems; and information systems and technologies." © Copyright United Press International. All Rights Reserved. ***************************************************************** 46 AFP: Rice, Gates tackle missile defence, Iran in Moscow talks - by Jim Mannion Fri Oct 12, 3:43 AM ET MOSCOW (AFP) - US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and US Defence Secretary Robert Gates meet Russian leaders Friday for talks on the Iran nuclear showdown, US missile defence plans and other disputes chilling East-West relations. The two top US officials will meet President Vladimir Putin, then hold joint talks with their Russian counterparts, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Defence Minister Anatoly Serdyukov, in an attempt to break the diplomatic logjam. Negotiations are expected to focus on a series of Cold War agreements facing collapse amid increasingly rancorous relations between a newly assertive Kremlin and hawkish White House. Rice's decision to meet with human rights activists in Moscow was unlikely to please Putin, who is accused in the West of dismantling post-Soviet democratic gains in the run-up to December parliamentary and March presidential elections. US plans for a missile defence shield in Eastern Europe, a Russian threat to suspend its participation in a treaty limiting troops and tanks in Europe, and the approaching expiration of the START treaty limiting strategic nuclear weapons will all be on the agenda, the US State Department said. The talks also will touch on pressing disagreements over the fate of the breakaway Serbian province of Kosovo and Iran's nuclear programme, officials said. The high-powered US delegation was unlikely to make much progress in persuading Moscow to back a Western push for tougher sanctions on Iran. Putin said on Wednesday that he saw no evidence the Islamic republic was masking a bomb-making project behind the largely Russian-built civilian nuclear power programme. But Rice, who hopes to persuade Moscow to back stronger action against Tehran, said en route to Moscow that the Russians were indeed worried by Iran's intentions. A Russian proposal to handle Iran's uranium processing on Russian territory and to control any spent fuel revealed "suspicion about Iran's intentions," she said. On Kosovo, Russia has sided with Serbia in opposing Western backing for independence in the breakway province, currently administered by the United Nations. A December 10 deadline in talks between Belgrade and Pristina will increase the urgency of hammering out a compromise. But with Gates in attendance, the focus is likely to be on the explosive debate over US plans to intall a missile defense shield in Central Europe. Russia vehemently opposes the stationing of interceptor missiles in Poland and a powerful targeting radar in the Czech Republic by 2012, but has offered access to a Russian-controlled early warning radar in Azerbaijan as an alternative. The Pentagon says it hopes for a compromise that could lead to far-reaching cooperation. "We're open to anything," said a senior Defence Department official traveling with Gates. But he said the Russians had yet to respond to detailed US proposals in April for sharing early warning radar data and establishing a joint center in Moscow to track ballistic missile launches from the Middle East. The United States and its NATO allies face another deadline on December 12 when Putin has said Russia will suspend its participation in the Conventional Forces in Europe treaty if it is not ratified by all NATO nations. NATO countries insist that Russia first withdraw its troops from ex-Soviet Moldova and Georgia, both of which are seeking closer ties with Western institutions. Rice and Gates will also discuss proposals for a follow-on to the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, which limited both sides to 6,000 warheads but expires in 2009, the state department said. Copyright © 2007 Agence France Presse. All rights reserved. The ***************************************************************** 47 AFP: Russia threatens to leave missile treaty - by Jim Mannion Fri Oct 12, 7:16 AM ET MOSCOW (AFP) - Russian President Vladimir Putin threatened Friday in talks with top US administration officials to abandon a key nuclear missile treaty, while also telling Washington to freeze plans for a European anti-missile shield. Speaking at the start of talks with US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defence Secretary Robert Gates, the Kremlin leader said the Cold War-era INF treaty limiting Russian and US shorter and medium range missiles was outmoded because other countries were acquiring such weapons. "If we are unable to make such a goal of making this treaty universal, then it will be difficult for us to keep within the framework of such a treaty, especially when other countries do have such weapons systems," Putin said. Putin also urged the US delegation, which was in Moscow to address spiralling Russian-US tensions, "not to force" the planned deployment of an anti-missile system in new NATO members Poland and the Czech Republic. Gates said that talks on Friday and Saturday were to tackle "an ambitious agenda for security issues that concern both of us, including the development of missile systems by others in the neighbourhood -- I would say in particular Iran." Rice and Gates, who sat stern-faced through Putin's opening remarks, later began talks with their Russian counterparts on a range of issues including US missile defense plans and Russia's threatened withdrawal from another Cold War-era treaty, the Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) treaty, which limits the numbers of troops and tanks stationed in Europe. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov welcomed what he said were "detailed (US) proposals on missile defense, the CFE treaty, as well as the arrangements for following the lapse of the CFE treaty." The two sides were also to raise Iran's nuclear programme, the status of Kosovo, and proposals to renew the Cold War-era START strategic missile treaty. "I know we don't always see eye to eye on every element of the solution to these issues," said Rice. "Nevertheless, I believe we will do this in a constructive spirit, that we will make progress during these talks, and continue to pursue cooperation." Adding to the sensitivity of the trip, which comes at a time of rancorous relations between an increasingly assertive Kremlin and the hawkish White House, Rice was to meet with human rights activists. Domestic and foreign critics of Putin accuse him of dismantling post-Soviet democratic gains in the run-up to December parliamentary and March 2008 presidential elections. Lavrov said on arrival for the talks at Putin's Novo-Ogaryevo residence in the Moscow suburbs that deals were far from certain. Asked if he expected a breakthrough, Lavrov quipped: "Breaks definitely, (but) through or down, I don't know." The high-powered US delegation was unlikely to make much progress in persuading Moscow to back a Western push for tougher sanctions on Iran. Putin said on Wednesday that he saw no evidence the Islamic republic was masking a bomb-making project behind the largely Russian-built civilian nuclear power programme. But Rice, who hopes to persuade Moscow to back stronger action against Tehran, said en route to Moscow that the Russians did harbour "suspicion about Iran's intentions." On Kosovo, Russia has sided with Serbia in opposing Western backing for independence in the breakway province, currently administered by the United Nations. A December 10 deadline in talks between Belgrade and Pristina will increase the urgency for a compromise. The most divisive Washington-Moscow row, though, is the Pentagon's plan to intall a missile defense shield in Central Europe. Russia vehemently opposes the stationing of interceptor missiles in Poland and a powerful targeting radar in the Czech Republic by 2012, but has offered access to a Russian-controlled early warning radar in Azerbaijan as an alternative. Russia claims the system could diminish the force of its nuclear deterrent, but the United States argues that the shield would be far too small to have any impact except against hypothetical attacks by countries such as Iran or North Korea. Copyright © 2007 Agence France Presse. All rights reserved. The ***************************************************************** 48 Guardian Unlimited: Rice: Missile Defense Plans to Proceed Friday October 12, 2007 8:01 AM By ROBERT BURNS and MATTHEW LEE Associated Press Writers MOSCOW (AP) - Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice says plans to expand the U.S. missile defense system in Poland and the Czech Republic will proceed, but she wants to seek Russian suggestions for cooperation to address Moscow's opposition to the program. Rice and Defense Secretary Robert Gates gathered Friday morning at President Vladimir Putin's dacha, or residence, outside Moscow to kick off a series of high-level meetings on missile defense and other thorny issues including Iran's nuclear program, U.S.-Russian arms control and Russia's commitment to democracy. Shortly before the talks began, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov strolled into the dacha's billiards room, where American reporters had gathered, for a cigarette break. He was asked whether he expected any breakthroughs in the talks. ``Breaks, definitely. Through or down, I don't know,'' he said. The Pentagon plans to install 10 missile interceptors in Poland, linked to a missile tracking radar in the Czech Republic. The Pentagon says the system will provide some protection in Europe and beyond for long-range missiles launched from Iran, but Russia believes the system is a step toward undermining the deterrent value of its nuclear arsenal. Rice said the U.S. would go ahead with the program as planned. ``We've been very clear that we need the Czech and Polish sites,'' she said Thursday, although there's ``considerable interest'' in Russian ideas for cooperation such as sharing a Soviet-era tracking station in Azerbaijan. ``We're going to keep exploring ideas, we want to explore ideas,'' she said. ``We are interested in other potential sites as well and we may be able to find ways to put that together.'' Beyond the discussion with Putin, Gates and Rice also were to meet with Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov. Rice and Gates also scheduled a dinner with First Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov, whose portfolio includes national security issues and who until recently held the defense minister's job. On Gates' last trip to Moscow, in April, he explained a U.S. proposal for U.S.-Russian cooperation on missile defense, including information sharing and some joint experiments. So far the Russians have not responded, according to a defense official traveling with Gates who spoke on condition of anonymity. Rice acknowledged Thursday that she would welcome a face-to-face discussion with Putin about his future political plans, including his interest in becoming prime minister. The prospect of Putin clinging to power after his presidential term ends has caused U.S. dismay, with the Bush administration expressing concerns about democratic backsliding in Russia, a consolidation of power in the Kremlin, and crackdowns on independent media and opposition groups. Rice, an expert on the former Soviet Union before she joined the administration, said she would not raise the issue herself. ``I wouldn't turn down that offer,'' Rice said with a smile when asked by reporters how she would respond if Putin raised the topic. But she refused to be drawn out on the subject. Earlier this month, Putin said he would lead the ticket of the main pro-Kremlin party in the parliamentary elections coming up in the next few months and could later take the prime minister's job - a hint that he could remain at the helm and eclipse a weaker president. On Iran, Putin says there's no proof Tehran is trying to build a nuclear weapons program. Rice, on her way to Moscow, accused Iran of ``lying'' about the aim of its nuclear program and deceiving the U.N.'s atomic watchdog about its intentions. ``There is an Iranian history of obfuscation and, indeed, lying to the IAEA,'' Rice said, referring to the International Atomic Energy Agency. U.S. officials long have accused Iran of trying to develop nuclear weapons behind the facade of a civil atomic energy program, charges Tehran denies. The Bush administration is pushing for new sanctions to punish Iran, but has yet to gather enough backing at the U.N. for such a move. The U.S. and Russia also differ on the future of a treaty limiting deployment of conventional military forces in Europe as well as the prospect of Kosovo declaring independence from Serbia as early as December. Guardian Unlimited © Guardian News and Media Limited 2007 ***************************************************************** 49 Guardian Unlimited: Putin Says Missile Plan Risks Relations Friday October 12, 2007 1:01 PM By ROBERT BURNS and MATTHEW LEE Associated Press Writers MOSCOW (AP) - In a tense start to talks on a range of thorny issues, President Vladimir Putin on Friday warned U.S. officials to back off a plan to install missile defenses in eastern Europe or risk harming relations with Moscow. Addressing Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert Gates, the Russian president appeared to mock the U.S. missile defense plan, which is at the center of a tangle of arms control and diplomatic disputes between the former Cold War adversaries. ``Of course we can sometime in the future decide that some anti-missile defense system should be established somewhere on the moon,'' Putin said, according to an English translation. ``But before we reach such arrangements we will lose the opportunity for fixing some particular arrangements between us.'' Putin also said Russia might feel compelled to pull out of a 20-year-old arms control deal unless it is expanded. Later, at the start of a meeting with Rice and Gates, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov referred to the Americans having presented ``detailed proposals'' in the Putin talks to address U.S.-Russian differences on missile defense and arms control. He offered no details but said the Russian government is ready to seek compromise. ``We have differences and there is no need to hide them,'' Lavrov said. But both he and Rice said the two countries were committed to bridging those gaps. ``I know that we don't always see eye-to-eye on every element of the solutions to these issues, nonetheless, I believe we will do this in a constructive spirit, that we will make progress during these talks as we continue to pursue cooperation,'' Rice said. The Russian government sees the U.S. missile defense plan, which Washington describes as a hedge against the threat of missile attack from Iran, as a worrisome step toward weakening Russian security. It has been a longstanding dispute, and Putin's remarks seemed to raise the level of tensions. Rice and Gates appeared taken aback at the firm tone and forcefulness of Putin's remarks, which were made from notes in the presence of American and Russian news media before they began a closed-door meeting around an oval table in an ornate conference room at his country house outside the capital. ``We will try to find ways to cooperate,'' Rice said in response. ``Even though we have our differences, we have a great deal in common because that which unites us in trying to deal with the threats of terrorism, of proliferation, are much greater than the issues that divide us.'' After Putin addressed further comments about U.S.-Russian military cooperation to Gates, the American defense secretary responded by saying the Pentagon was ready to intensify a dialogue on military relations. ``We have an ambitious agenda of security issues that concern both of us, including, as you suggest, development of missile systems by others in the neighborhood - I would say in particular, Iran,'' Gates said. Gates did not directly comment on the missile defense dispute. After keeping Rice and Gates waiting for 40 minutes, Putin began the session with a lengthy monologue in which he also said that Russia may feel compelled to abandon its obligations under a 1987 missile treaty with the United States if it is not expanded to constrain other missile-armed countries. Referring to the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces treaty that was negotiated with the United States before the breakup of the Soviet Union, Putin said it must be applied to other countries, including those ``located in our near vicinity.'' He did not mention any by name, but in response, Gates said Washington was interested in limiting missile proliferation in Iran. Putin said the treaty must be made ``universal in nature.'' The pact eliminated the deployment of Soviet and American ballistic missiles of intermediate range and was a landmark step in arms control just two years before the fall of the Berlin Wall and later the breakup of the Soviet Union. ``We need to convince other (countries) to assume the same level of obligation as assumed by the Russian Federation and the United States,'' Putin said. ``If we are unable to obtain such a goal ... it will be difficult for us to keep within the framework of the treaty in a situation where other countries do develop such weapon systems, and among those are countries located in our near vicinity.'' Putin also has threatened to suspend Russian adherence to another arms control treaty, known as the Conventional Forces in Europe pact, which limits deployments of conventional military forces. Moscow wants it to be revised in ways that thus far have been unacceptable to U.S. and European signatories. On missile defense, Putin was particularly pointed in his remarks, in which he sought to lay out his view of what Rice and Gates should be discussing later Friday with Lavrov and Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov. ``We hope that in the process of such complex and multi-faceted talks you will not be forcing forward your relations with the eastern European countries,'' the president said. He then made his remark about the possibility of one day putting a missile defense system on the moon. Shortly before the talks with Putin began, Lavrov strolled into the house's billiards room, where American reporters had gathered, for a cigarette break. He was asked whether he expected any breakthroughs in the talks. ``Breaks, definitely. Through or down, I don't know,'' he said. The Pentagon plans to install 10 missile interceptors in Poland, linked to a missile tracking radar in the Czech Republic. The Pentagon says the system will provide some protection in Europe and beyond for long-range missiles launched from Iran, but Russia believes the system is a step toward undermining the deterrent value of its nuclear arsenal. Rice told reporters on Thursday on her flight to Moscow that the U.S. would go ahead with the program as planned. ``We've been very clear that we need the Czech and Polish sites,'' she said, although there's ``considerable interest'' in Russian ideas for cooperation such as sharing a Soviet-era tracking station in Azerbaijan. ``We're going to keep exploring ideas, we want to explore ideas,'' she said. ``We are interested in other potential sites as well and we may be able to find ways to put that together.'' Guardian Unlimited © Guardian News and Media Limited 2007 ***************************************************************** 50 Guardian Unlimited: US-Russia Missile Defense Talks Fail Friday October 12, 2007 7:01 PM By MATTHEW LEE Associated Press Writer MOSCOW (AP) - Russian President Vladimir Putin warned President Bush's top two Cabinet officials on Friday to back off U.S. missile defense plans for eastern Europe as high-level talks yielded little more than a pledge to meet again. Despite presenting new cooperation proposals intended to bring Moscow on board, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert Gates failed in a series of tough meetings to turn around Moscow's opposition to the system and other strategic issues. Putin set the tone early on when he hosted Rice and Gates and their Russian counterparts at his country home outside Moscow and delivered a stern rebuff to U.S. plans to push ahead with establishing missile defense facilities in Poland and the Czech Republic. In combative comments that took the U.S. side aback during a photo session, Putin criticized Bush's pet project and threatened to pull out of a Cold War-era treaty that limits intermediate-range missiles. ``We may decide someday to put missile defense systems on the moon, but before we get to that we may lose a chance for agreement because of you implementing your own plans,'' he told Rice and Gates in Russian, according to an Associated Press translation. ``We hope that in the process of such complex and multifaceted talks you will not be forcing forward your previous agreements with eastern European countries,'' Putin said. The United States has repeatedly rejected Russian demands to freeze U.S. negotiations with Poland and the Czech Republic and Rice did so again Friday, said three senior U.S. officials present at the sessions with Rice, Gates, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov. The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe diplomatic discussions, maintained that differences were narrowed but progress was incremental and might not produce ultimate understandings. ``I agree that we did not agree on anything today,'' one official told reporters. He added quickly that neither Washington nor Moscow had expected significant breakthroughs. Rice and Lavrov announced at a news conference after the meetings that the two sides would meet again in Washington in six months to review a ``strategic framework'' on evaluating and addressing the missile threat posed by rogue states, principally Iran. The U.S. proposals are intended to ease fears that its missile defense plans threaten Russia's nuclear deterrent and include the creation of a so-called ``joint regional missile defense architecture'' that would protect the United States, NATO allies in Europe and Russia. As part of that scheme, experts from all nations covered by the system would be based at missile defense facilities to try to improve coordination and transparency. A spokesman for Putin, Dmitry Peskov, told reporters in a conference call that ``some of them are quite interesting and the Russian side will start examining this proposal.'' But, he stressed: ``It will take some time before we are able to make public our estimation.'' Initial reaction from Lavrov and Serdyukov, though, was less gracious. ``We see two serious problems with these proposals,'' Lavrov told reporters at the news conference with Rice, Gates and Serdyukov. He said the two sides still disagree about the threat to Europe and complained that the negotiations with the Poles and Czechs were continuing. Serdyukov agreed. ``The principal thing to which we did not agree today is the deployment of anti-missile elements which have an anti-Russian character and which are to be placed in Europe,'' he said. Rice said the ideas that she and Gates presented are ``conceptual at this point'' and would be handed to experts to consider further. ``I know that we don't always see eye-to-eye on every element of the solutions to these issues,'' Rice said. ``Nonetheless, I believe we will do this in a constructive spirit, that we will make progress during these talks as we continue to pursue cooperation,'' she added. The Pentagon plans to install 10 missile interceptors in Poland, linked to a missile tracking radar in the Czech Republic. The Pentagon says the system will provide some protection in Europe and beyond for long-range missiles launched from Iran, but Russia believes the system is a step toward undermining the deterrent value of its nuclear arsenal. The day got off to a rocky start when Putin kept Rice and Gates waiting for 40 minutes before meeting them and then began the session with a lengthy monologue detailing Russian complaints. In addition to the problems with missile defense, Putin warned that Russia might abandon its obligations under a 1987 missile treaty with the United States if it is not expanded to constrain other missile-armed countries. Referring to the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces treaty negotiated with the U.S. before the breakup of the Soviet Union, Putin said it must be applied to other countries, but did not mention any by name. ``If we are unable to obtain such a goal ... it will be difficult for us to keep within the framework of the treaty in a situation where other countries do develop such weapon systems, and among those are countries located in our near vicinity,'' he said. The pact eliminated the deployment of Soviet and U.S. ballistic missiles of intermediate range and was a landmark step in arms control just two years before the fall of the Berlin Wall and later the breakup of the Soviet Union. U.S. officials said Russia had the right to withdraw from the treaty but expressed skepticism that the bilateral agreement could be extended to other countries, which have their own defense needs. Putin has also threatened to suspend Russian adherence to another arms control treaty, known as the Conventional Forces in Europe pact, which limits deployments of conventional military forces. Moscow wants it to be revised in ways that thus far have been unacceptable to U.S. and European signatories. Shortly before the talks with Putin began, Lavrov strolled into the house's billiards room, where American reporters had gathered, for a cigarette break. He was asked whether he expected any breakthroughs in the talks. ``Breaks, definitely. Through or down, I don't know,'' he said. Guardian Unlimited © Guardian News and Media Limited 2007 ***************************************************************** 51 Guardian Unlimited: We will dump nuclear treaty, Putin warns Luke Harding in Moscow Saturday October 13, 2007 Vladimir Putin warned yesterday that Russia was considering withdrawing from a major cold war arms treaty banning intermediate nuclear missiles unless it was expanded to include other states. President Putin said that Moscow was planning to dump the intermediate range nuclear forces treaty (INF) - signed in a landmark deal between the US and Soviet Union in 1987 - unless countries such as China were included in its provisions. His comments came during talks in Moscow yesterday involving the US secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice, and defence secretary, Robert Gates, and Russia's foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, and defence minister, Anatoly Serdyukov. Mr Putin repeated his opposition to US plans to site elements of a missile defence shield in central Europe. The project threatened the US and Russia's strategic relationship, he said. "We need other international participants to assume the same obligations which have been assumed by the Russian Federation and the US," he said. "If we are unable to attain such a goal ... it will be difficult for us to keep within the framework of the treaty in a situation where other countries do develop such weapons systems, and among those are countries in our near vicinity." He appeared to refer to the INF treaty - between Mikhail Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan - under which both sides agreed to scrap their arsenals of intermediate range nuclear and conventional ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles. Russian defence experts said yesterday that the Kremlin was unhappy with the treaty because of concerns over the growing mid-range nuclear arsenals of countries such as China, Pakistan and India. Iran is also developing a medium-range missile programme. "We are speaking about the plans of a number of neighbouring countries developing short- and mid-range missile systems. While our two countries are bound by the provisions of the INF treaty there will be a certain imbalance in the region," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told the Guardian. The treaty only applies to the US, Russia and the ex-Soviet republics of Ukraine and Belarus. It was widely seen as disadvantageous for the USSR as it did not include the US's naval nuclear cruise missiles or the nuclear arsenals of Britain or France. "Russia's nuclear arsenal is still mainly a legacy of the Soviet Union. Its platforms are ageing. Russia feels more and more vulnerable not only from the nuclear forces of the US but from other threats as well," said Yevgeny Miasnikov, a senior research scientist at the Centre for Arms Control, Energy and Environment Studies in Moscow. "This move fits into Russia's policy towards arms treaties these days." Since denouncing the US in Munich this year, Mr Putin has withdrawn from the conventional armed forces in Europe treaty and resumed long-range patrols by Russia's strategic nuclear bombers. Yesterday Mr Putin kept his visitors waiting for 30 minutes. He then launched into a monologue warning Washington not to rush ahead with its plans to locate elements of its missile defence shield in Poland and the Czech Republic. "We hope that in the process of such complex and multifaceted talks you will not be forcing forward your relations with the eastern European countries," he said. After the talks Mr Gates said the US had some "new ideas" to assuage Russia's fears over the shield, including allowing Russian inspectors to visit the sites. "I would like to emphasise that the missile defence shield being proposed in central Europe is not directed at Russia," he soothed. But Mr Lavrov said Russia was unconvinced that the system was needed to counter a possible nuclear attack by rogue states such as Iran or North Korea. Mr Serdyukov, Russia's defence minister, was even blunter. The defence shield was "anti-Russian", he said. Kremlin sources confirmed that if the US carried on regardless of Russia's objections Moscow would take military counter-measures. Mr Putin has proposed using a Russian-operated early warning radar in Azerbaijan in exchange for Washington abandoning the Polish and Czech sites. The radar might complement the US's plans but wouldn't be much good at shooting down enemy missiles, Mr Gates noted yesterday. Ms Rice and Mr Gates also touched on disagreements over Iran. Mr Putin, who does not support western calls for a new round of UN sanctions on Iran, will meet the Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in Tehran next week. Backstory The intermediate range nuclear forces treaty (INF) was one of the most important arms-reduction agreements of the cold war era. The US and USSR agreed to scrap all intermediate and conventional ground-launched missiles, both ballistic and cruise. Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and US president Ronald Reagan signed the deal in 1987. By 1991 the USSR had scrapped 1,846 missiles and the US 846. Russia now believes the arsenals of neighbouring countries mean the treaty should be rethought. Useful links Campaign Against Arms Trade Control Arms campaign site Stockholm International Peace Research Institute Federation of American Scientists Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Transparency International saferworld.org.uk Wisconsin Project Foreign Policy magazine Guardian Unlimited © Guardian News and Media Limited 2007 ***************************************************************** 52 Tri-City Herald: Jet encounter over Hanford a test exercise Published Friday, October 12th, 2007 BY THE HERALD STAFF Two military fighter jets escorted two small planes from an area over Hanford on Thursday morning during a drill, startling Hanford workers. Vivian Wilson, a community manager from the North American Aerospace Defense Command Western Air Defense Sector, said two planes were intercepted at 11:30 a.m. by two F-15 fighter jets scrambled from the Portland Air National Guard Base. Some Hanford workers spotted only one plane being intercepted, though two Cessna 182s were involved in the drill, Wilson said. One witness, who asked not to be identified, described seeing one of the Cessnas. "The small plane was circling over Hanford for quite a while, then all of a sudden these two (jets) show up and start circling the small plane," they said. "At one point, it looked like one of the fighters came real close to the plane, like it was trying to get its attention." Eventually the jets herded the plane out of the no-fly zone heading north, then returned a short time later and continued to circle the Hanford reservation, the witness said. Wilson said the drill was part of a two-pronged exercise "of a 9/11 nature," testing forces' ability to respond to simultaneous threats. While the F-15s were responding to Hanford, a pair of F-16s were scrambled from Ellington Field in Texas to respond to another simulated threat involving an unknown aircraft making a border crossing into the U.S. from Mexico. Wilson said the exercises are planned to avoid any local disruption. The last such exercise over Hanford was July 17. "Hanford is a natural selection for an exercise because it is high priority infrastructure," Wilson said. The Department of Energy was not notified of the drill. Pilots generally are aware they will be tested by such drills but are not made aware when they will occur. "The overall purpose is to test our readiness," Wilson said. The drills are conducted regularly within the agency's western region, which extends from the Pacific Coast to the Mississippi River, covering 73 percent of the continental United States. The sector headquarters is at McChord Air Force Base near Tacoma. "Our commander is very aggressive in exercise scenarios," Wilson said. "The exercises are not at all rare." © 2007 Tri-City Herald, Associated Press & Other Wire Services ***************************************************************** 53 DOE: Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement for a Geologic Repository for the Disposal of Spent Nuclear Fuel and High-Level Radioactive Waste at Yucca Mountain, Nye County, NV and Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement for a Geologic Repository for the Disposal of Spent Nuclear Fuel and High-Level Radioactive Waste at Yucca Mountain, Nye County, Nevada--Nevada Rail Transportation Corridor and Draft Environmental Impact Statement for a Rail Alignment for the Construction and Operation of a Railroad in Nevada to a Geologic Repository at Yucca Mountain, Nye County, NV FR Doc E7-20135 [Federal Register: October 12, 2007 (Volume 72, Number 197)] [Notices] [Page 58071-58074] From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov] [DOCID:fr12oc07-41] DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY AGENCY: U.S. Department of Energy. ACTION: Notice of availability. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- SUMMARY: The Department of Energy (DOE or the Department) announces the availability of two draft National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) documents related to its Yucca Mountain Project: Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement for a Geologic Repository for the Disposal of Spent Nuclear Fuel and High-Level Radioactive Waste at Yucca Mountain, Nye County, Nevada (DOE/EIS-0250F-S1D) (Draft Repository SEIS), and the Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement for a Geologic Repository for the Disposal of Spent Nuclear Fuel and High-Level Radioactive Waste at Yucca Mountain, Nye County, Nevada--Nevada Rail Transportation Corridor (Draft Nevada Rail Corridor SEIS) (DOE/EIS-0250F-S2D) and Draft Environmental Impact Statement for a Rail Alignment for the Construction and Operation of a Railroad in Nevada to a Geologic Repository at Yucca Mountain, Nye County, Nevada (DOE/EIS-0369D) (Draft Rail Alignment EIS). The Department has prepared these documents consistent with NEPA, the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) regulations that implement the procedural provisions of NEPA (40 CFR parts 1500-1508), and DOE procedures implementing NEPA (10 CFR part 1021). Nye County, Nevada, the location of the proposed Yucca Mountain repository, participated as a cooperating agency in the preparation of the Draft Repository SEIS. The U.S. Air Force, U.S. Bureau of Land Management, and the Surface Transportation Board participated as cooperating agencies in the preparation of the Draft Nevada Rail Corridor SEIS and Draft Rail Alignment EIS. [[Page 58072]] DOE invites interested parties to comment on the two documents during a 90-day public comment period. During the public comment period, DOE will hold eight public hearings at six locations in Nevada, one location in California, and one location in Washington, DC, the locations and times of which are described below. DATES: The Department invites comments on the Draft Repository SEIS, and the Draft Nevada Rail Corridor SEIS and Draft Rail Alignment EIS during the 90-day public comment period, which ends January 10, 2008. Comments received after this date will be considered to the extent practicable. Public hearings are described below in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section. ADDRESSES: Requests for additional information on the Draft Repository SEIS, or the Draft Nevada Rail Corridor SEIS and Draft Rail Alignment EIS should be directed to either: Dr. Jane Summerson or Mr. Lee Bishop, EIS Office, Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste Management, U.S. Department of Energy, 1551 Hillshire Drive, Las Vegas, NV 89134, or by calling 1-800-967-3477 or faxing a request to 1-800-967-0739. Written comments on the Draft Repository SEIS, and/or the Draft Nevada Rail Corridor SEIS and Draft Rail Alignment EIS may be submitted to the EIS Office at the above address, by facsimile to 1-800-967-0739, or via the Internet at http://www.ocrwm.doe.gov. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For general information regarding the DOE NEPA process contact: Ms. Carol M. Borgstrom, Director, Office of NEPA Policy and Compliance, U.S. Department of Energy, 1000 Independence Ave., SW., Washington, DC 20585, Telephone 202-586-4600, or leave a message at 1-800-472-2756. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Background Section 111(a)(4) of the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, as amended (NWPA), 42 U.S.C. 10131, states that the Federal Government has the: * * * responsibility to provide for the permanent disposal of high-level radioactive waste and such spent nuclear fuel as may be disposed of in order to protect the public health and safety and the environment. The NWPA directs the Secretary of Energy, if the Secretary decides to recommend approval of the Yucca Mountain site for development of a repository, to submit a final environmental impact statement with any recommendation to the President. The Department prepared the Final Environmental Impact Statement for a Geologic Repository for the Disposal of Spent Nuclear Fuel and High-Level Radioactive Waste at Yucca Mountain, Nye County, Nevada (DOE/EIS-0250F) (Yucca Mountain Final EIS) to fulfill that requirement. On February 14, 2002, the Secretary transmitted his recommendation (including the Yucca Mountain Final EIS) to the President for approval of the Yucca Mountain site for development of the Nation's first permanent geologic repository for the disposal of spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste. The President considered the site qualified for application to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) for construction authorization and recommended the site to the U.S. Congress. Subsequently, on July 23, 2002, the President signed into law (Pub. L. 107-200) a joint resolution of the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate designating the Yucca Mountain site for development as a geologic repository for the disposal of spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste. The Department is preparing an application for submittal to the NRC seeking authorization to construct the repository, as required by the NWPA (Section 114(b)). In the Yucca Mountain Final EIS, DOE considered the potential environmental impacts of a repository design for surface and subsurface facilities; a range of canister packaging scenarios and repository thermal operating modes; and plans for the construction, operation, monitoring, and eventual closure of the repository. The Yucca Mountain Final EIS also described and evaluated the transportation of spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste from commercial and DOE sites to the repository by two principal modes--mostly truck and mostly rail. DOE recognized at that time that these repository design concepts and operational plans would continue to develop during the design and engineering process. Since completion of the Yucca Mountain Final EIS in 2002, DOE has continued to develop the repository design and associated construction and operational plans. For example, as now proposed, the newly designed surface and subsurface facilities would allow DOE to operate the repository following a primarily canistered approach in which most commercial spent nuclear fuel would be packaged at the reactor sites in transportation, aging, and disposal (TAD) canisters. Any commercial spent nuclear fuel arriving at the repository in packages other than TAD canisters would be repackaged by DOE into TAD canisters in these surface facilities at the repository. DOE would construct these facilities over a period of several years (referred to as phased construction) to accommodate the increase in spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste receipt rates as repository operational capability reaches its design capacity. On October 13, 2006 (71 FR 60490), the Department issued a Notice of Intent to prepare a supplement to the Yucca Mountain Final EIS, to inform the public of the proposed scope of the Repository SEIS, to solicit public input regarding the document's scope, and to announce the schedule of scoping meetings that would be held. During the public scoping period, which closed on December 12, 2006, DOE held four public scoping meetings. The Draft Repository SEIS evaluates a Proposed Action and a No Action Alternative. Under the Proposed Action, DOE would construct, operate, monitor, and eventually close a geologic repository at Yucca Mountain for the disposal of up to 70,000 metric tons of heavy metal (MTHM) of commercial and DOE-owned spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste. Under the Proposed Action, most spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste would be shipped from 72 commercial and 4 DOE sites to the repository in NRC-certified transportation casks placed on trains dedicated only to these shipments. Some shipments would arrive at the repository by truck. Under the No Action Alternative, DOE would terminate activities at Yucca Mountain and undertake site reclamation to mitigate any significant adverse environmental impacts. Commercial nuclear power utilities and DOE would continue to manage spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste at sites throughout the United States. Since issuance of the Yucca Mountain Final EIS, DOE issued a Record of Decision on April 8, 2004 (69 FR 18557) announcing its selection, both nationally and in the State of Nevada, of the mostly rail scenario analyzed in the Yucca Mountain Final EIS as the mode of transportation for shipments of spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste to the repository. Implementation of the mostly rail scenario ultimately will require construction of a rail line to connect the repository site at Yucca Mountain to an existing rail line in the State of Nevada. To that end, in the same Record of Decision, the Department also selected the Caliente rail corridor to study possible alignments for this proposed rail line within Nevada. [[Page 58073]] Also on April 8, 2004 (69 FR 18565), DOE published a Notice of Intent to prepare an EIS under NEPA for the alignment, construction, and operation of a rail line for shipments of spent nuclear fuel, high- level radioactive waste, and other materials related to the construction and operation of a repository from a site near Caliente, Nevada, to a geologic repository at Yucca Mountain, Nevada (Rail Alignment EIS; DOE/EIS-0369). The subsequent public scoping period closed on June 1, 2004, during which time the Department held five public scoping meetings. During this public scoping period, DOE received comments suggesting that other rail corridors should be considered, in particular, the Mina route, which crosses the Walker River Paiute Tribe Reservation. In the Yucca Mountain Final EIS, DOE had considered but eliminated the Mina route from detailed study. The Department did not study the Mina route in detail in the Yucca Mountain Final EIS because a rail line within the Mina route could only connect to an existing rail line by crossing the Walker River Paiute Reservation, and the Tribe had informed DOE that it objected to the transportation of nuclear waste across its Reservation. However, following review of the scoping comments, DOE held discussions with the Tribe regarding the availability of the Mina route for evaluation. In May 2006, the Tribal Council for the Walker River Paiute Tribe informed DOE that it withdrew its objection to the completion of an EIS for the transportation of nuclear waste across the Walker River Paiute Reservation. On October 13, 2006 (71 FR 60484), after a preliminary evaluation of the feasibility of the Mina rail corridor, DOE amended its 2004 Notice of Intent and announced the Department's intent to expand the scope of the Rail Alignment EIS to consider the potential environmental impacts of constructing and operating a rail line within the Mina corridor (corridor-level analysis) and, if warranted, to consider in detail alignments for the construction and operation of a railroad within the Mina corridor (in addition to alignments within the Caliente corridor). The subsequent public scoping period closed on December 12, 2006, during which time the Department held eight public scoping meetings. The expanded EIS (now the Draft Nevada Rail Corridor SEIS and Draft Rail Alignment EIS) is comprised of two parts. The Draft Nevada Rail Corridor SEIS (DOE/EIS-0250F-S2D) supplements the Nevada rail corridor analysis in the Yucca Mountain Final EIS by analyzing the potential environmental impacts associated with constructing and operating a railroad to connect the Yucca Mountain repository to an existing rail line near Wabuska, Nevada (the Mina corridor). In it, DOE analyzes the Mina corridor at a level of detail commensurate with that of the rail corridor analysis in the Yucca Mountain Final EIS. DOE also analyzes a No Action Alternative under which DOE would not construct and operate a railroad within the Mina corridor. The Draft Nevada Rail Corridor SEIS also updates, as appropriate, the rail corridor analysis of the Yucca Mountain Final EIS to identify any significant new circumstances or information relevant to environmental concerns associated with rail corridors analyzed previously (Carlin, Valley Modified, and Jean rail corridors). The Draft Rail Alignment EIS (DOE/EIS-0369D) analyzes the potential environmental impacts associated with potential rail alignments within the Caliente and Mina corridors, and analyzes constructing and operating a railroad in Nevada to transport spent nuclear fuel, high- level radioactive waste, and other Yucca Mountain project materials to a repository at Yucca Mountain. As such, it tiers from the broader corridor analysis in both the Yucca Mountain Final EIS and the Draft Nevada Rail Corridor SEIS, consistent with CEQ regulations (see 40 CFR 1508.28). The Draft Rail Alignment EIS also analyzes a No Action Alternative under which DOE would not determine an alignment nor construct and operate a railroad within either the Caliente or Mina corridors. On April 17, 2007, the Tribal Council for the Walker River Paiute Tribe passed a resolution withdrawing support for the Tribe's participation in the preparation of the Draft Rail Corridor SEIS and Draft Rail Alignment EIS. The Tribal Council's decision was based on a review of information gathered to date and input from tribal members. The Tribal Council's resolution also renewed the Tribe's past objection to the transportation of nuclear waste through their Reservation. Accordingly, DOE has identified the Mina Implementing Alternative as ``nonpreferred'' in the Draft Rail Alignment EIS. In the Draft Rail Alignment EIS, the Department identifies the Caliente Implementing Alternative as its preferred alternative, and identifies its preferred rail alignment as comprising the following segments (starting in Caliente and ending at Yucca Mountain): Caliente Alternative Segment, Common Segment 1, Garden Valley 1, Common Segment 2, South Reveille 3, Common Segment 3, Goldfield 3, Common Segment 4, Bonnie Claire 3, Common Segment 5, Oasis Valley 1, and Common Segment 6. The location of these segments and the basis for DOE's preferences are provided in the document. The Department also indicates in the Draft Rail Alignment EIS that it prefers the Shared Use option, that is, DOE would make its rail line available to commercial shippers for shipments of general freight. The Department invites comments on its preferred implementing alternative and associated preferred rail alignment and on its preference to enable use of the rail line by commercial shippers. DOE, in the Draft Rail Alignment EIS, also evaluates three potential locations along the Caliente Implementing Alternative for a Staging Yard: Two along the Caliente alternative segment (referred to as Indian Cove and Upland) and one along the Eccles alternative segment (referred to as Eccles-North). The Staging Yard would be used to hold railcars with spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste, and to hold and sort railcars with construction and other materials. The Department has not identified a preferred location for the Staging Yard and invites comments that would help DOE identify a preferred location. Other Agency Involvement Nye County, Nevada, the location of the proposed Yucca Mountain repository, participated as a cooperating agency in the preparation of the Draft Repository SEIS. The U.S. Air Force, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, and the Surface Transportation Board are cooperating agencies in the preparation of the Draft Nevada Rail Corridor SEIS and Rail Alignment EIS. Public Hearings and Invitation To Comment The public is invited to provide oral and written comments on the Draft Repository SEIS, and/or Draft Nevada Rail Corridor SEIS and Draft Rail Alignment EIS during a 90-day public comment period. The comment period begins with publication of this Notice of Availability in the Federal Register and closes on January 10, 2008. Comments received after this date will be considered to the extent practicable in the preparation of both final NEPA documents. DOE will hold eight public hearings on the Draft Repository SEIS, and Draft Nevada Rail Corridor SEIS and Draft Rail Alignment EIS. The hearings will be held at the following locations and times: [[Page 58074]] Hawthorne, Nevada. Hawthorne Convention Center, 932 E. Street, November 13, 2007, from 4 to 7 p.m. Caliente, Nevada. Caliente Youth Center, U.S. Highway 93, November 15, 2007, from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Reno/Sparks, Nevada. Reno-Sparks Convention Center, 4590 S. Virginia Street, November 19, 2007, from 4 to 7 p.m. Town of Amargosa Valley, Nevada. Longstreet Inn & Casino, Highway 373, November 26, 2007, from 4 to 7 p.m. Goldfield, Nevada. Goldfield School Gymnasium, Hall & Euclid, November 27, 2007, from 4 to 7 p.m. Lone Pine, California. Statham Hall, 138 N. Jackson Street, November 29, 2007, from 4 to 7 p.m. Las Vegas, Nevada. Cashman Center, 850 Las Vegas Blvd., December 3, 2007, from 4 to 7 p.m. Washington, DC Marriott at Metro Center, 775 12th Street, NW., December 5, 2007, from 2 to 5 p.m. The public hearings will provide members of the public the opportunity to provide oral comments on the record. Members of the public who plan to present oral comments are asked to register in advance by calling 1-800-225-6972; speakers also may register upon arrival at the hearing location. The Department intends to allot five minutes to each individual wishing to provide oral comments so as to ensure that each registered individual has the opportunity to speak. If time permits, more than five minutes will be allotted by the hearing officer. Prior to, and coincident with, the public hearings, members of the public are invited to engage DOE representatives in one-on-one discussions in an open-house format. Members of the public also may offer comments in writing or in person (orally) to a DOE representative in the presence of a court reporter during these discussions. Comments on the Draft Repository SEIS, and/or Draft Nevada Rail Corridor SEIS and Draft Rail Alignment EIS may be provided in writing, by facsimile, or via the Internet to the EIS Office (see ADDRESSES above). Public Reading Rooms Documents referenced in this Notice of Availability and related information are available at the following locations: Esmeralda County Yucca Mountain Oversight Office, 274 E. Crook Avenue, Goldfield, NV 89013, (775) 485-3419; Lincoln County Nuclear Waste Project Office, 100 Depot Avenue, Caliente, NV 89008, (775) 726-3511; Nye County Nuclear Waste Repository Project Office, 1210 E. Basin Road, Suite 6, Pahrump, NV 89060 (775) 727-7727; Pahrump Yucca Mountain Information Center, 2341 Postal Drive, Pahrump, NV 89048, (775) 751-7480; University of Nevada, Reno, The University of Nevada Libraries, Business and Government Information Center, M/S 322, 1664 N. Virginia Street, Reno, NV 89557, (775) 813-6496; and the U.S. Department of Energy Headquarters Office Public Reading Room, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW., Room 1E-190 (ME-74) FORS, Washington, DC 20585, 202-586- 3142. Issued in Washington, DC, on October 9, 2007. Edward F. Sproat, III, Director, Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste Management. [FR Doc. E7-20135 Filed 10-11-07; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 6450-01-P ***************************************************************** 54 Ventura County Star: State to take over former Rocketdyne site Updated 03:54 p.m., October 12, 2007 The Santa Susana Field Laboratory, a former rocket engine and nuclear test site in the hills south of Simi Valley, will be transferred to the state and off-limits to development if a tentative agreement between its owner, The Boeing Co., and the state becomes binding. The potential transfer is part of a complicated deal that was part of an announcement Friday by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger¹s office that the governor would sign a bill that mandates Boeing to clean the 2,849-acre site to U.S. Environmental Protection Agency¹s highest standards before it is released for development. The bill, SB 990 was proposed by Senator Sheila Kuehl, D-Santa Monica, and its passage in the Assembly last month, capped a six-year legislative battle to ensure strict cleanup standards are used at the field laboratory, which has both chemical and radioactive contamination. The tentative agreement released Friday was signed by Boeing, the California Environmental Protection Agency and Resources Agency. It requires Boeing to enter into a binding agreement with the state that calls for the land to be cleaned to ³levels acceptable for residential use and that protect individuals living in the vicinity of the property.² The agreement would also mandate Boeing release the land to the state and it would be used for park, recreational or open-space uses. Once the binding agreement is reached, Kuehl will carry a bill next legislative season that would void the portions of SB 990, that call for the Santa Susana Field Laboratory to be cleaned to Superfund standards before it is released by Boeing. Scripps Newspaper Group — Online © 2007 The E.W. Scripps Co. ***************************************************************** NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 this material is distributed without profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for non-profit research and educational purposes only. For more information go to: *****************************************************************