***************************************************************** 05/10/01 **** RADIATION BULLETIN(RADBULL) **** VOL 9.114 ***************************************************************** RADBULL IS PRODUCED BY THE ABALONE ALLIANCE CLEARINGHOUSE ***************************************************************** NUCLEAR POWER CONTENTS 1 YUCCA MOUNTAIN: Water questions explored 2 Cheney: Nation needs to push nuke power 3 Board OKs emergency procedures 4 Stock Watch Man Inc. Expands Letter of Intent for Agreement 5 Bruce Power wins Ontario nuclear licences 6 Nuclear chief brings a switch in fortunes 7 Belgium and Russia: Nuclear cooperation? 8 Temelin, closed, is assailed anew 9 Nuclear Waste Transport Goes Smoothly 10 Swedish Order Adds To German Boost For MOX 11 REID QUESTIONS NRC MEMBERS AT NUCLEAR OVERSIGHT HEARING 12 REID AND ENSIGN MEET WITH VICE PRESIDENT CHENEY TO DISCUSS NUCLEAR WEAPONS CONTENTS 1 Groups try to 'clean up' OR image 2 Bell unhappy with possible delay of sick-worker appointment 3 Others join Hansen fight to protect training ranges 4 Report spurs questions about lab's laser project 5 Russia's plutonium 6 Radioactive materials 'stolen by terrorists' 7 DOE vs. Joseph Carson 8 Bush 'Will Restart Nuclear Tests' 9 NGO calls for Korean nuclear-free zone 10 German School Damaged by Rounds 11 Downwinders, miners plan to sue over delayed compensation 12 Native groups to sue Ashcroft over miners' IOUs 13 New Scientist: Nuclear boom 14 Unknown dangers at IAAP 15 Hanford pipefitters appeal termination case 16 State balks at cleanup delay 17 Fluor's Ron Hanson leaves needed stability 18 DOE: SSAB vote does not count **************************************************************** ***************************************************************** NUCLEAR POWER ARTICLES ***************************************************************** 1 YUCCA MOUNTAIN: Water questions explored LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL: NEWS: Thursday, May 10, 2001 Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal UNLV, Geological Survey teams present competing studies By STEVE TETREAULT DONREY WASHINGTON BUREAU WASHINGTON -- The debate on whether hot water once rose within Yucca Mountain and might someday flood a nuclear waste repository received an airing Wednesday before a high-ranking science advisory panel. Jean Cline, a UNLV associate professor who led a two-year mineral study, presented evidence that hot water once existed at Yucca Mountain, but it was probably caused by gradual temperature changes over millions of years. The findings of her government-funded team of federal, state and university scientists were largely matched by work performed by the United States Geological Survey. Geologist Yuri Dublyansky presented an opposing case that the mountain ridge was invaded from below by thermal waters created by a volcanic surge, raising questions about whether a repeat occurrence might flood a repository, corrode nuclear waste canisters and carry off radioactive contaminants into the environment. The competing studies on key questions surrounding water within Yucca Mountain were presented to the 11 members of the Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board, the panel created by Congress to examine the government's science as it studies whether nuclear waste can be safely buried at Yucca Mountain, 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas. Although the science board has no decision-making power, its opinions carry weight in the science and political communities. Review board members were expected to discuss the studies at closed work sessions later in the week, and may choose to make a public comment in the form of a letter to the Department of Energy within four to six weeks, according to Executive Director William Barnard. Board watchers said it is unlikely the panel will take a side. Instead, it could comment on whether the issue had received adequate study and let the Energy Department determine how the information should play into policy. William Boyle, a senior policy adviser on the Yucca Mountain Project, said the Energy Department will embrace the findings of the UNLV study and continue moving ahead with the program. A site recommendation is expected later this year or early next year. In the studies, researchers focused on "fluid inclusions," tiny bubbles of fluid trapped in deposits of calcite and opal found throughout the repository. Federal scientists believed the inclusions formed from water seeping from above. Cline said fluid-carrying calcites were found in the oldest portions of rock samples, dating more than 1.9 million years ago and some as far back as 5.7 million years. She said evidence of hottest temperatures were found in oldest rock, supporting a theory that the mountain cooled over time. "The potential repository block has been at or near present-day temperatures for at least the past 2 million years and likely the past 3 to 4 million years and probably longer," said Joseph Whelan, principal investigator of the Geological Survey team that agreed with the UNLV findings. Whelan also said the placement of mineral deposits doesn't support the idea that the repository level was ever flooded. Dublyansky, a member of the Russian Academy of Sciences whose work was funded by the state of Nevada, argued that the size of the calcite crystals indicates they were formed in a submerged state, and not from thin films that would have resulted from rainwater seepage. He also said that minerals expected to form from rainwater were not observed. The UNLV findings were bolstered by Robert Bodnar, a consultant from Virginia Polytechnic Institute, who also challenged the thermal upwelling theory. webmaster@lvrj.com Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal, 1997 - ***************************************************************** 2 Cheney: Nation needs to push nuke power The San Francisco Examiner WASHINGTON -- The Bush administration's turn to nuclear power as a long-term energy strategy will necessitate a permanent nuclear waste dump, Vice President Dick Cheney said Tuesday. "Now, with the gas prices rising as dramatically as they have, nuclear power looks like a pretty good alternative from an economic standpoint, if the permitting process is manageable and if we find a way to deal with the waste question," said Cheney, who is developing energy policy recommendations for President Bush. In a CNN interview, the vice president said his recommendations would include changes meant to speed federal permits to utilities seeking to build nuclear power plants. The industry has not sought a government permit to build a new plant in more than 20 years, since before the accident at Pennsylvania's Three Mile Island spread fear about nuclear power. Nuclear power provides 20 percent of the nation's electric capacity today. As to the thorny question of nuclear waste, Cheney said: "Right now we've got waste piling up at reactors all over the country. Eventually, there ought to be a permanent repository. The French do this very successfully and very safely in an environmentally sound, sane manner. We need to be able to do the same thing." He did not say where the government might put such a site but Nevada officials fear it would almost certainly be built in their state. In 1987, Congress passed a law designating Nevada's Yucca Mountain as the nation's only high-level nuclear waste repository. Such a site would receive waste from nuclear power plants and from defense uses. Nevadans have been bitterly fighting the proposal for 14 years. Shedding more light on the energy policy that Bush is scheduled to unveil next week, Cheney left open the possibility that Bush will seek the so-called "power of eminent domain" to construct new electrical transmission lines. Such authority allows the government to appropriate private property for public use. The federal government already has such authority with respect to laying gas pipelines. "The issue is whether or not we should have the same authority on electrical transmission lines, that's never been granted previously. That's one of the issues we've looked at. We'll have a recommendation when we release the report next week," Cheney said. He defended his energy-policy work against critics who say he has focused too much on increased production ---- boosting coal burning and drilling for oil and natural gas. "You'll find that most of the financial incentives that we recommend in the report go for conservation or renewables, for increased efficiencies. Now, we don't have a lot of new financial incentives in here to go out and produce more oil and gas, for example, so, we believe in conservation, we believe in renewables, we believe in wind and solar and all of those other technologies," Cheney said. He said renewable forms of energy provide just 2 percent of national electric generating capacity and cannot solve the nation's problem of demand exceeding supply. ***************************************************************** 3 Board OKs emergency procedures *May 09, 2001* By TOM MARSHALL Reformer Staff BRATTLEBORO -- Revised emergency plans for a nuclear accident at Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant were approved Tuesday by the board of selectmen, in the first comprehensive overhaul of those preparations since 1998. "We went page by page through the document," said Dave Hannum, local coordinator for Vermont Emergency Management. "While it's geared for Vermont Yankee, it's actually an all-hazards plan." The 2-inch thick manual details emergency classification levels -- from "unusual event," the lowest, to "alert," "site area emergency," and the highest, "general emergency" -- along with evacuation plans, checklists, and the chain of communications. Public awareness is critical, said Town Manager Jerry Remillard in an interview before the meeting. That means tuning a radio to the designated emergency frequency if the sirens blow -- WTSA radio 1450 AM or 96.7 FM -- and listening for further instructions. "I can't stress too much, it might not be an evacuation," he said. "(The order) might be a shelter-in-place in an emergency." Shelter-in-place is one of the state-approved responses to a radiological emergency, according to the manual. "Sheltering involves remaining inside, closing all doors and windows, turning off all ventilation systems that draw in outside air, extinguishing all unnecessary combustion, and sealing, to the extent possible, all other access to the outdoor air," the plan reads. Basements or spots away from windows provide added protection. "The main reason sheltering is a valuable protective action is that it can be implemented quickly, usually in a matter of minutes," the plan continues. "The dose reduction from which an individual benefits by sheltering is a function of how well the structure is sealed and how long the plume takes to travel over the area." Remillard noted that emergency sirens may signal an impending severe storm or chemical spill -- not just a radiological accident -- in which case mass evacuation could increase the public danger or slow emergency vehicles. "Everyone assumes if those sirens go off, it's a problem with Vermont Yankee," he said. Turning on the radio for more information should therefore be everyone's first response -- "not just jumping in the car and taking off." Following instructions becomes even more critical in the event of an evacuation, Remillard suggested, since wind direction would carry radiation and rule out certain evacuation points. A 1993 evacuation study estimated the time for evacuating Brattleboro at anywhere between 1 hour 50 minutes and 3 hours, depending on the time of day, season, and weather conditions. Bellows Falls Union High School in Westminster is identified as a primary evacuation destination for those in the 10-mile emergency zone from the plant in Vernon, unless another evacuation destination is named by Vermont Emergency Management. "These plans, by their very nature, are very fluid things," Remillard noted. "Things change. The plans certainly are not static plans." In the case of Vermont Yankee, emergency planning is complicated by the involvement of three state governments -- Vermont, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts. Alerts must be coordinated so that residents across each border receive consistent, timely information. "I believe this is the only plant (in the United States) that has three states involved," Hannum said. The board sat quietly through much of Tuesday's presentation, absorbing the weighty information. Though all but one have participated in drills with the plan, a version of which has been in existence since Yankee went on-line in the early 1970s, their emergency role as the top local officials is key. "At Three Mile Island, what level of alert was that?" asked new board member Sarah Edwards, who was elected in November. "How did the plan go? Did it work well?" Without going into depth on that 1979 accident, the worst in American history, Hannum noted that effective communication and public awareness has played a key role in disaster response. In one recent incident at a plant in another state, he said, official statements about a radiation leak were unclear. The state said there had been no leak, and plant officials said there had been. So people panicked. "There's always a little radiation coming out of the stack. There's radiation coming from your chimney," he said. "The correct answer was 'yes.'" Brattleboro officials participate in periodic drills and checks of their equipment, including "fast-breaker" drills that involve testing the pagers and communications links of every person in the chain of command, Remillard said. State and sometimes federal officials monitor the results. At least one drill will be held this spring, with a graded exercise at Vermont Yankee scheduled for Sept. 5, Hannum said. The emergency plan was in use recently with last July's floods and the April 9 derailment of a train in Westminster, which resulted in an oil spill and led Brattleboro officials to activate the emergency operations center in the basement of the municipal center. Using the center provided both good communications and vital practice, Remillard said. "I think one of the things we have that gives us an advantage is that a lot of people (in Brattleboro) are full-time staff," he said. "We really feel that's an active plan. It's not something that gets dusted off once a year". ***************************************************************** 4 Stock Watch Man Inc. Expands Letter of Intent for Agreement Regarding Photodeactivation of Radioactive Waste Wednesday May 9, 11:02 pm Eastern Time Press Release LAS VEGAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 9, 2001--Stock Watch Man Inc. (OTC BB: SWCH- news) Wednesday announced the signing of a letter of intent to acquire the License and Technology Information Agreement for Photodeactivation of Radioactive Waste by Stimulated Radioactive Decay. The technology uses a process of photodisintegration whereby gamma rays are used to induce molecular transformations that change radioisotopes simply by using applied textbook physics. This transmutation develops non-radioactive stable elements in a matter of days. The photodeactivation process involves transferring the target material to a reaction vessel bombarding it with gamma rays from an electron accelerator. The bombardment causes the target material to eject neutrons thereby causing a transmutation that causes the material to become stable and non-radioactive in a matter of days. This granting of a license and technology information agreement requires a capital-intensive collaboration process for licensed countries and Stock Watch Man Inc., who will cooperate with plans to complete the commercial feasibility demonstration of the photodeactivation process and construct an initial test/demonstration facility within the next 30 months. *Contact:* Stock Watch Man Inc., Las Vegas Steve Yeich, 702/737-0963 Copyright © 2001 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy ***************************************************************** 5 Bruce Power wins Ontario nuclear licences Yahoo! Finance - May 10, 07:40 AM OTTAWA, May 9 (Reuters) - Canada's Nuclear Safety Commission said on Wednesday it had approved an application by energy supplier Bruce Power to operate nuclear power stations in southwestern Ontario. Bruce Power, a partnership between British Energy Plc (LSE: BGY.L- news) and Canadian uranium supplier Cameco Corp. , said the licences applied to four Bruce B reactors with a capacity of 3,140 megawatts and four Bruce A reactors which are presently not in operation. They expire in October 2003. "We are delighted that this important milestone has been reached," Robin Jeffrey, Chairman Designate of British Energy plc and Chairman of Bruce Power, said in a statement. "The licence application process provided us with an opportunity to highlight our commitment to safety and commercial success. As a result of today's decision, we are one step nearer to financial close of the Bruce transaction." Bruce Power said last week it would spend C$340 million ($218 million) over the next two years to restart nuclear reactors at its Bruce nuclear power plant, provided the deal to lease the reactors was completed and regulators approved its plans. It said it would spend C$30 million over the next three months in the first phase of the plan. Ontario -- Canada's most populous province and the nation's economic engine -- has already pushed back a November 2000 deadline to deregulate its power sector by one year. Deregulation is now expected to start this fall, although the Ontario government has not confirmed this. + BRITISH ENERGY PLC (London: BGY.L, News, Chart, Profile, Research) ***************************************************************** 6 Nuclear chief brings a switch in fortunes *by The City Interview, Daily Mail* THINKING about power cuts in California gives Norman Askew a warm glow as he leaves his home in the Peak District and heads for his office at nuclear fuel group BNFL. The electricity crisis gripping one of the world's most affluent regions could switch on a new wave of investment in nuclear power. The industry is emerging from under the cloud cast by the Three Mile Island and Chernobyl disasters and is increasingly seen by the Bush administration as key to overcoming America's energy shortage. US vice-president Dick Cheney has made it clear he is ready to go nuclear and that suits Askew fine. As chief executive of state-owned BNFL, which both generates power and reprocesses the fuel, he sees huge opportunities if the US gives the green light to a new generation of atomic stations. 'Energy conservation is important and renewable sources like wind power do have a part to play, but you need large generating stations to run a modern economy,' he says. 'You can live without them, but you've got to accept that the lights might go out half a day a week, or accept a lower standard of living. The most important thing in electricity is not the price, but supply. When you press the switch you want the lights to work.' The industry claims it pumps much less pollution into the atmosphere than fossil fuels. But clearly a big debate lies ahead before the public is persuaded that new-look nuclear is acceptable. Askew believes the US could sanction a new plant within five years, but thinks it will take longer in the UK, where there is excess electricity capacity and the political hurdles are higher. As well as new stations, the hunger for power could prolong the life of existing stations around the world. Askew reckons BNFL is ideally placed to benefit, through reprocessing work at Sellafield in Cumbria and reactor design work for its Westinghouse Electric arm in the US. He is very optimistic about the future. Yet just 12 months ago some questioned his sanity when he accepted the task of rescuing the company after the 1999 scandal over falsification of data on fuel bound for Japan. The Nuclear Installations Inspectorate condemned BNFL for 'a lack of safety culture' and blamed systematic failures in management at Sellafield. Instead of being groomed for privatisation, BNFL looked in danger of a corporate meltdown. Urgent action was needed. Chairman Hugh Collum began a boardroom cull and headhunted Askew - formerly boss of privatised East Midlands Electricity - as £350,000-a-year chief executive to sort out the mess. Some thought his brief was a mission impossible, but after a year at the helm, the cheery Lancastrian believes he has steered the group back on course. Stamps of approval He wielded the axe among managers, promoting talented insiders and bringing in fresh blood from the commercial world, as he set about tackling the inspectorate's 43 recommendations. The result was a largely positive follow-up report from the inspectorate in November. BNFL has now also landed crucial contracts with Germany's E.ON and Sweden's OKG. 'These are two major outside stamps of approval,' he says. 'The NII is as independent as you can get. I'm very pleased for the staff that we have got that endorsement, but the best endorsement is sales.' Some critics thought nobody would want the job. Askew, old enough at 58 to be winding down for retirement, jumped at it. 'My attitude was - I can do this, I've done it before,' he says. After studying geography at Durham University, the former Preston Grammar School boy began his career with engineer TI, where he established a reputation as a transatlantic troubleshooter. He returned to the UK in 1994 to run East Midlands, but moved back to the States following its takeover by Dominion Resources to head sister company Virginia Power, which operates two nuclear plants. Civil service mentality On his arrival at BNFL he set about changing the culture, dragging it away from a civil service mentality in which individuals avoided taking responsibility. One of his biggest criticisms at the start was the slow pace of change and the fact that everything was 'very process orientated' - a rare slip into corporate jargon for the plain- speaking Askew. He explains that he really means there were lots of back-breaking procedures to go through - 'and still are'. There is a huge amount of paperwork and bureaucracy, but he detests meetings that revolve around hefty documents and says his style is to 'talk personally and look into their eyes'. Holding his thumb and forefinger three inches apart he explains: 'If you have to rely on briefing notes this thick, it means you either don't know the subject or have too much on your plate.' He was impressed by the calibre of those left after the reshuffles and believes that management and staff in many other companies would not have survived the criticism and commercial uncertainty heaped on BNFL. 'You need people who understand the industry and its issues, but you also need a few from outside who see things in a different way,' he says. 'Management will come up with ideas, you don't need consultants. It's not rocket science, it's the simple things that are important in business.' He is pleased with progress so far, but is quick to warn: 'My job is to make sure people don't get fat or complacent. A lot is behind us, but there are still a lot of problems to be tackled.' One priority is to continue the culture change he began with Collum, winning back business and restoring profitability, while ensuring that safety is paramount. In its last financial year, BNFL made pretax losses of £337m, after £411m of one-off costs, including £113m relating to the falsification scandal. Previously profits were £218m. Part privatisation in the pipeline BNFL's next major hurdle is to secure approval for its £460m MOX recycling plant at Sellafield, boosted by the contracts it has won recently. The group is being groomed for part-privatisation through a public private partnership and the sale of 49% of the Government's stake, but it needs to show it has a long-term future if it is to attract private investment. After the data crisis, the PPP was put back until late 2002, though industry experts think Askew will have a tough job meeting that deadline. He is reluctant to criticise Railtrack, but says its experience shows how crucial it is to get a business into the right shape before a float is even considered. 'People forget what British Rail was like,' he comments. 'It isn't as if there were never any crashes, the trains always ran on time and the porters always had a smile.' Askew's Derbyshire home is an hour's drive from BNFL's headquarters at Risley in Cheshire. Off-duty he likes nothing better than walking in the Dales with his wife, Dorothy. 'We live in a part of the country that is a walker's paradise,' he says contentedly. The signs are growing that after its trauma, people are taking BNFL seriously again. Askew chuckles that even Dorothy, who thought he was 'nuts' to take the job, has at last begun to come round to the idea. • Interview by Peter Cunliffe © Associated Newspapers Ltd., 10 May 2001 Terms and Conditions ***************************************************************** 7 Belgium and Russia: Nuclear cooperation? UPI News Article: 9 May 2001 19:21 (ET) By CAROL TIEGAN BRUSSELS, Belgium, May 9 (UPI) -- Inside and outside government, debate has focused on a declaration of cooperation signed April 10 between Belgium and Russia -- which would help Russia recycle its plutonium into electricity and strengthen its nuclear infrastructure. The five-page "memorandum on cooperation in use of nuclear energy in pacific purpose" signed in Moscow authorizes scientific and industrial exchanges in the civil nuclear sector between Moscow and Brussels. The agreement is part of the framework to dismantle atomic armaments, which has raised issues concerning the disposition of tons of plutonium contained in bombs and missiles. Russia has opted to use its radioactive elements as nuclear reactor combustibles to create electricity. Russia, greatly in need of energy, is counting on Western technology and know-how. The Belgian help has raised eyebrows since the Belgian government recently decided to abandon the use of nuclear energy between 2015 and 2025, when its seven nuclear stations near retirement age. "Belgium is still the third most important country to produce nuclear energy. Between 55 and 65 percent of our electricity is derived from this source of energy," said Jean-Paul Samain, general director of the Belgian Federal Nuclear Control Agency, which was created in 1994, and only just nearly fully operational. The government is divided on the issue. Louis Michel, foreign affairs minister, and Antoine Duquesne, the interior minister in charge of nuclear security, are both in favor of the memorandum of cooperation. The ecologists in the government, on the other hand, are not too pleased about the idea, and have called for alternative and renewable sources of energy. As for Greenpeace, it strongly believes plutonium is not a combustible, but nuclear waste, and therefore strongly opposes Western help in promoting the use of nuclear energy in Russia. Belgium is one of the few European countries able to condition plutonium to re-use for energy. This process involves producing Mixed Oxyde (Mox), a new experimental and costly nuclear fuel that can be used in any standard nuclear station. Mox, a mix of uranium and slightly more than 5 percent plutonium, is produced in France (140 tons a year), Belgium (35 tons/year) and Great Britain (4 to 8 tons/year), and is used in Europe. Had the Tokaimura accident not taken place, Japan would have begun using it in 2000. The Belgian company, Belgonucléaire, in Dessel, produces Mox, using plutonium coming from Le Hague (France), Tihange and Doel (Belgium), Switzerland and Japan. "Belgium has the necessary know-how to produce Mox. Until two years ago, we were the world leaders in this area," said Samain. "I'm all for the use of renewable energy, but our waterfalls aren't all that impressive," added Samain. "I'm waiting for ideas. It's not up to me to judge an idea good or not." The issue is expected to continue in the public eye. Even if the text has already been signed bilaterally, it still has to be approved by the European commission and then adopted by the Belgian Parliament, which will take at least a year. -- Copyright 2001 by United Press International. -- ***************************************************************** 8 Temelin, closed, is assailed anew News: The Prague Post Online May 9, 2001 *Rotor fault shuts nuclear plant for 60 days; Austria is angered* By James Pitkin The Austrian government has seized on a 60-day shutdown of the Temelin nuclear reactor to renew demands that the Czech Republic review the future of the contested facility. According to the state energy utility, CEZ, problems with a turbine rotor forced a complete shutdown of the reactor May 3. Officials said it would not be restarted until July at the earliest. The rotor problem was the latest in a series of glitches that have haunted the plant -- built under communism but modernized in recent years -- since it went into operation last October. Anti-nuclear activists in Austria, which is 60 kilometers (37 miles) from the south Bohemia facility, have staged repeated border protests in an effort to force the closing of the plant, which critics claim is unsafe. While CEZ minimized the turbine incident, noting that it had intended to shut down the plant in June for routine maintenance, Austrian officials swiftly went on the offensive. "Current events confirm our assumptions that the turbine problems are far more serious than were previously made public," said Austrian Environment Minister Wilhelm Molterer. Radko Pavlovec, the Upper Austrian commissioner for nuclear power plants, said Prague should "end this experiment" and "shut Temelin down for good." After months of bickering, Austrian and Czech officials hammered out an agreement last December intended to mend bilateral ties. Part of the pact called for an independent environmental impact study to be carried out under the auspices of the European Commission. The Czech-led study, finished last month, concluded that Temelin posed no safety hazard. Before the agreement, Vienna had threatened to use its veto power to keep the Czech Republic out of the European Union. Austria does not use nuclear power. But in the wake of the latest reversal, the EU's enlargement commissioner, Gunter Verheugen, a German, insisted Prague was behaving responsibly. He called for "more composure" in the aftermath of the shutdown. "[The Czech side] has been acting exceptionally constructively up to now," he said. "I know of no case where neighboring countries have been granted full access into sensitive technical areas." The entire situation was especially embarrassing to CEZ, which announced May 4 that it would reschedule a 600 million Kc ($15.8 million) penalty payment owed by general contractor Skoda Praha for construction delays. CEZ estimates it is losing 20 million Kc a day in unsold electricity. James Pitkin's e-mail address is jpitkin@praguepost.cz ***************************************************************** 9 Nuclear Waste Transport Goes Smoothly F.A.Z. - English Version [Frankfurter Allgemeine] *By Frank Pergande *RHEINSBERG. The first and also the last transport of spent fuel rods to pass through eastern Germany went according to schedule and without incident, observers said on Wednesday. The four reinforced nuclear waste containers, built specially to hold Russian fuel elements, carried more than 200 spent fuel rods from the shut-down nuclear power station at Rheinsberg in Brandenburg on their way to the interim storage depot in Lubmin near Greifswald in Western Pomerania. The load required a train some 500 meters (550 yards) in length hauled by four engines, and an escort of several hundred border guards. The day started at 3 a.m. when the engine was coupled to freight wagons at the former nuclear power station. The gates opened at 6.30 a.m. By 7 a.m., the train had reached Rheinsberg station, where the works line ends, and was shunted on to the German national railway network. Contrary to the original plans, the stop there lasted only a few minutes, and the rest of the several hundred kilometer journey went according to plan. The train arrived in Lubmin at 1 p.m. with no significant disruption. The Rheinsberg nuclear power station, located by the lake Stechlin, went into operation on May 9, exactly 35 years ago. The experimental nuclear power station, modeled on Soviet nuclear power plants, was the first such station anywhere in Germany. The plant had only one reactor with an output of 70 megawatts. Plans to build a second reactor were dropped because output was too low. Instead, another nuclear power station was built in Lubmin, but after the collapse of communist East Germany, this too was taken out of commission because it had serious safety faults. On Wednesday, Rheinsberg, one of the most attractive towns in the Mark Brandenburg region, resembled an army camp. Opposite the thousands of police officers, who had advanced with water cannons and armored bulldozers, was a small, peaceful look-out post on the station. The roads were largely cleared of traffic, the railroad line's vulnerable spots secured with barbed wire, while helicopters circled overhead. Two attempts were made to block the track, but police and border guards quickly foiled the protesters. Altogether less than 100 nuclear power opponents faced the major contingent of 6,500 police officers in Brandenburg alone, and a further 1,500 police in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. No fewer than 12,000 police officers and border guards were involved in the operation. Unlike the recent Castor transport to Gorleben in Lower Saxony, Wednesday's transport proceeded without disruption. In Rheinsberg, journalists were given the opportunity to film the transport at close quarters and camera crews even shot some sequences for a feature film here. Brandenburg Interior Minister Jörg Schönbohm, a Christian Democrat, said ahead of the transport that any attempt to disrupt it would be handled without compromise. Demonstrations were banned on stations and along the tracks. Even after the transport of the Castor containers, Mr. Schönbohm defended the massive police presence. Until the day of the transport, it had not been possible to say how many troublemakers were likely to join the protest beside the track, he said, adding that, when planning the operation, the authorities had taken into account experience gained from the demonstrations in the Wendland region at the end of March. The power station in Rheinsberg, which was shut down in June 1990, is due to be completely demolished by the end of the decade. May 9, 2001 © Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 2000 All ***************************************************************** 10 Swedish Order Adds To German Boost For MOX The Whitehaven News Thursday, May 10, 2001 By Alan Irving Another boost has come the way of the Sellafield Mox plant which awaits a government licence before it can operate. BNFL has now taken on board a Swedish order on top of the major German contracts announced last week. In Sweden, Framatome ANP has signed up with BNFL to have Mox fuel manufactured from plutonium at Sellafield and sent to the Oskarshamm site for re-use in the nuclear reactor there. It follows hard on the heels of the huge German deal which gives the Mox plant its biggest single contract so far and which BNFL hopes will encourage the government to grant an operating licence. The plant was built four years ago and costs have spiralled to more than £400 million. BNFL hope to get the go ahead to put the plant into production following the latest round of public consultations into the plant's economic viability. The company says the German and Swedish deals "strengthens an already robust case for the operation of the plant." It also discloses that the plant "now has contracted\reserved business close to the break even sales level." Chief executive Norman Askew said: "This is yet another contract showing that our customers want Mox fuel. These new orders signal strong support for the plant. What we look forward to now is the plant opening so we can start to fulfil these orders." The fourth round of public consultations started on March 28 and will be completed by May 23. BNFL is anxious to get the go ahead by the end of July - the cut off point for at least one of the existing Mox contracts. Meanwhile, there is renewed confidence that Japan will place vital new orders after having its confidence shaken by the Mox fuel data falsifications scandal which occurred in the Sellafield plant used to demonstrate BNFL's ability to recycle the plutonium material. n Public representations should be made to Claire Herdman, Radioactive Substances Division, DETR, 4\F6 Ashdown House, 123 Victoria St., London SW1 E 6DE. ***************************************************************** 11 REID QUESTIONS NRC MEMBERS AT NUCLEAR OVERSIGHT HEARING [Sen. Reid Press Release] May 9, 2001 Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senator Harry Reid, Ranking Democrat on the Environment and Public Works Committee, today questioned members of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission(NRC) about the future of nuclear power, waste disposal, and its role in undermining the issuance of a groundwater standard at Yucca Mountain. "We cannot discuss the future of nuclearpower in this country without addressing the issue of nuclear waste disposal and how that will impact residents in my home state of Nevada," said Reid, the Assistant Democratic Leader. "As the agency that regulates nuclear power and waste disposal, the NRC will play a role in determining whether or not to relicense existing plants or to allow construction of new reactors. The Commission also will make key decisions in moving forward with Yucca Mountain, so it is critical to Nevadans that we fully understand their position to date on this highly controversial proposal." During Tuesday's hearing of the Subcommittee on Clean Air, Wetlands, Private Property and Nuclear Safety, Reid accused the NRC of lobbying the Environmental Protection Agency(EPA) and White Houseofficials to abandon proposed radiation exposure standards for Yucca Mountain. "The EPA clearly has the authority under the law to establish radiation exposure standards for the proposed Yucca Mountain repository. While a final rule was sent to the Office of Management and Budget in January, the Bush Administration has put this proposal on hold. In the meantime, NRC has been pressuring EPA and the White House to abandon its proposed radiation standards. I do not believe that is proper behavior by the Commission or its members," said Reid. "The law gives the NRC no say in this issue and they should not spend taxpayer resources to try to convince EPA that tough radiation standards, including groundwater protections, are not necessary." On January 18, 2001, then EPA Administrator Carol Browner issued a proposed overall radiation exposure standard for Yucca Mountain as well as a separate groundwater protection. The rule was then sent to the Office of Management and Budget(OMB) where it remains to this day. "OMB should not be allowed to sit on this important rule while there are lobbying efforts now underway to undue the EPA's proposal. Both Vice-President Cheney and EPA Administrator Christine Todd Whitman have declared EPA should take the lead on this issue. I hope the Administration will live up to that commitment and stop the foot dragging now taking place,"said Reid. During a speech in Reno, Nevada in October of 2000, Cheney indicated that a Bush Administration would support EPA's authority to establish health and safety rules for the proposed Yucca Mountain repository. The pledge was repeated by Administrator Whitman following her confirmation hearing before the EPW Committee earlier this year. ***************************************************************** 12 REID AND ENSIGN MEET WITH VICE PRESIDENT CHENEY TO DISCUSS NUCLEAR POWER ISSUES [Sen. Reid Press Release] May 9, 2001 Washington, D.C. – NevadaSenators Harry Reidand John Ensigntoday met with Vice President Dick Cheneyto discuss nuclear policy as it relates to Nevada. "After this meeting, I am pleased Vice President Cheney recognizes the importance of this issue to Nevadans, and I am optimistic the president and vice president intend to follow through on the commitments they made during the campaign," Senator Reid said. "At this point, I am relieved that the Administration is living up to its promise not to pursue interim waste storage at Yucca Mountainand appears committed to allowing the EPAto set the ground water standards. I look forward to continued discussions with the White Houseto ensure the concerns of Nevadans are heard in Washington." "Our meeting with Vice President Cheney was very positive. He recognizes our strong opposition to storing high-level nuclear waste in Yucca Mountain," Senator Ensign said. "We are going to continue the dialogue in the future about alternatives to bringing nuclear waste to Yucca Mountain." ***************************************************************** ***************************************************************** NUCLEAR WEAPONS ARTICLES ***************************************************************** 1 Groups try to 'clean up' OR image Oak Ridger Online --> Story last updated at 1:20 p.m. on Thursday, May 10, 2001 by Paul Parson Oak Ridger staff The Oak Ridge Site-Specific Advisory Board discussed Wednesday night its involvement in a paper to help "clean up" the community's image. The purpose of the document is to improve public awareness of the environmental situation within the city of Oak Ridge, said SSAB member Bill Pardue. "Oak Ridge needs all the help it can get to have a positive image," said Pat Rush, SSAB member and Oak Ridge City Council member. Several groups, according to Pardue, are interested in participating in the document. Those include the Citizens' Advisory Panel of the Oak Ridge Reservation Local Oversight Committee, the Advocates for the Oak Ridge Reservation, New Century Alliance and the Community Reuse Organization of East Tennessee, among others. All writing for the document is expected to be on a volunteer basis and the content would come from existing, published information. "Our real desire is not to use DOE money," Pardue said. Several of the groups participating in the paper will meet to discuss the issue at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in the UT-Battelle Information Center, 40 New York Ave. All Contents ©Copyright* The Oak Ridger * ***************************************************************** 2 Bell unhappy with possible delay of sick-worker appointment Oak Ridger Online --> Story last updated at 1:21 p.m. on Thursday, May 10, 2001 by Paul Parson Oak Ridger staff A possible delay in appointing a sick worker to the Oak Ridge Reservation Health Effects Subcommittee isn't a good sign, says a local community member who may be vying for the position. During a phone interview Wednesday evening, Glenn Bell told The Oak Ridger that a nomination for him to be appointed to the subcommittee was sent to the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, which selects subcommittee members. A spokeswoman for the agency confirmed that three nominations were received for the position, but she declined to release their names. Whether or not he's chosen, Bell, who was diagnosed with chronic beryllium disease in 1993, says he's not happy that the sick worker appointment may be postponed due to a federal hiring freeze. He said it's a blow to the credibility of the program and it has generated more distrust about the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. Bell provided The Oak Ridger with a copy of the letter he is sending to the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry about the matter. "The hiring freeze did not preclude the hiring of staff to implement the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program, now under way," his letter states. "If precedent was set with this program, could the same not be done for the [subcommittee]?" Bell's letter also addresses a number of problems he sees with the agency and the subcommittee. Bell points out that some of the best resources for the subcommittee and the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry are ill former workers, many of whom are on disability because of ailments that could be work-related. Because of that, these people can't accept payment for services rendered, but Bell says "it would be grossly unfair to deprive them of the opportunity to contribute and to collect." His letter asks the agency to see if an exemption be made for these individuals. "There are problems, even at best, with both present and former workers attending the panel," Bell's letter states. "In my own case, if I were accepted, there could be a conflict between wages and compensation from the meetings. Also, an already damaged attendance record could suffer from the absence from work. Vacation or a request for personal time off would be an option, but this could involve 'double dipping,' or being paid from two sources for the same service, which I do not feel would be ethical." Bell says these issues need to be addressed, and communication developed to better gain public trust, especially from the ill workers. "Trust is a valuable resource, and, I believe, an attainable one," Bell's letter states. "I pray that this input will be received constructively, and help in gaining that trust." The Oak Ridge Reservation Health Effects Subcommittee consists of citizens primarily from the Oak Ridge area, including Knoxville and Roane County residents, who will work with community members and advocacy groups to offer advice and recommendations to several federal agencies regarding health concerns in Oak Ridge. All Contents ©Copyright* The Oak Ridger * ***************************************************************** 3 Others join Hansen fight to protect training ranges [deseretnews.com] May 10, 2001 By Lee Davidson Deseret News Washington correspondent WASHINGTON — Rep. Jim Hansen once was a lone voice warning that military training ranges are being elbowed out of existence by encroaching development and environmental lawsuits. But on Wednesday, the Utah Republican was joined by a booming chorus of Pentagon officials and virtually the entire House Government Reform Committee who expressed similar, growing worries. "The availability of realistic training is eroding," said Committee Chairman Dan Burton, R-Ind. "Training ranges here and overseas are under siege from the land, the water, the air and the airwaves. . . . "It's being hemmed in by commercial development, environmental regulations, airspace restrictions and conflicts over use of the radio frequency spectrum," he said. Similar worries were echoed by representatives of the Army, Air Force, Navy and Marines. For example, Air Force Gen. John P. Jumper, head of Air Combat Command, said if trends continue, "America will soon lose its only edge in combat proficiency," namely realistic training. Burton invited Hansen — who is not a member of his committee — to join in a hearing on the problem, saying it was "largely a result of his efforts that the Pentagon began to focus on encroachment issues." Hansen said during the hearing that the vast Utah Test and Training Range has faced less encroachment than most ranges — but even it faces challenges. He complained of "huge encroachment from the environmental community because they found the slimy slug or the ringtailed rufus or something out there" and said lawsuits have been filed to limit activities and overflights there. Hansen complained of efforts by the Goshute Indians seeking to establish a nuclear waste repository in Skull Valley. He said that according to UTTR officials, avoiding flying over such a nearby repository could "cut back the range 30 or 40 percent all by itself." Hansen, a senior member of the Armed Services Committee, said encroachment elsewhere is more serious, such as on Vieques Island near Puerto Rico. Protests by residents have often stopped testing there — even though it is the only live-fire range on the East Coast where air and water maneuvers may be combined. "I'm somewhat amazed we are now going through this exercise on whether we will train there," Hansen said. "I'd be curious where you Navy people think you are going to go. I've heard Jordan . . . to Scotland, to Italy and other areas. I seriously doubt any of those are going to work." Hansen said, "National defense that benefits all Americans is not a luxury. . . . It requires access to realistic training. Therefore our military ranges must be treated as the national assets they are and must be preserved for the security of the nation." Burton said he plans a series of hearings on how military readiness may be affected by encroachment on test and training ranges and how it should be addressed. © 2001 Deseret News Publishing Company ***************************************************************** 4 Report spurs questions about lab's laser project Editor's note: Due to press problems, a shortened version of this story appeared in Tuesday's Times. BY PETER FELSENFELD TIMES STAFF WRITER LIVERMORE -- A report drafted by a local environmental group concludes the Lawrence Livermore lab's giant laser project is unlikely to accomplish its mission, even though operating costs could top $32.4 billion over 30 years. The review also states the U.S. Department of Energy's most recent cost estimate for construction of the National Ignition Facility is more than $1 billion short. Tri-Valley Citizens Against a Radioactive Environment, a longtime NIF critic, sponsored the report and plans to release it today. Dr. Robert Civiak, a physicist who authored the study, said he compiled the report largely from internal DOE documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act. Civiak studied NIF while working in the White House Office of Management and Budget from 1988 to 1999. "The DOE's operating budget had no basis in reality," Civiak said. "And we didn't even take a worst-case scenario approach; we used figures very generous to the DOE." However, laboratory spokeswoman Susan Houghton said a draft version of the report presents an inaccurate picture of NIF and its operating costs. "For example, NIF is a small part of a National Nuclear Security Administration's High Energy Density Physics Program," Houghton said. "The entire ... program's 30-year cost is approximately half of the $32.4 billion attributed to NIF alone by Tri-Valley CAREs." The National Ignition Facility is designed to simulate nuclear reactions by converging 192 laser beams onto a BB-sized target. Proponents say data from NIF will help researchers maintain and monitor the nation's aging nuclear stockpile. According to a draft of the Tri-Valley CAREs report, DOE cost projections failed to include $525 million identified by the General Accounting Office as needed to design and build the target. In addition, replacing damaged optics caused by the high-intensity laser near the target could cost more than $100 million per year above and beyond NIF's projected budget. Overlooked staffing costs could add $98 million to NIF's price tag, the report states. The report urges the federal government to stop funding NIF and, as a preliminary step, encourages Congress to "commission a fully independent technical and cost review of the NIF." Houghton said NIF has been reviewed extensively over the past two years, and new studies would be a waste of time and money. "These reviews have continued to validate NIF, the costs and schedule, and the project's ability to perform ... "she said. Houghton disagreed with Civiak's figures regarding the target costs and said the lab resolved issues involving stress on the optics. Overhead costs, including staffing, were studied and approved by the DOE, she said. A recent lawsuit mounted by Tri-Valley CAREs and the Natural Resources Defense Council partially blocked the DOE from citing two NIF reviews when seeking Congressional funding. Reach Peter Felsenfeld at 925-847-2184 or pfelsenfeld@cctimes.com. ContraCostaTimes.com ***************************************************************** 5 Russia's plutonium Guardian Unlimited | The Guardian | Thursday May 10, 2001 The Guardian Your report that Bush may cut funding for nuclear safety projects in Russia is worrying, but an end to the current plans for dealing with surplus weapons-grade plutonium by converting it into a fuel for nuclear reactors known as MOX, will be welcomed by environmentalists (Bush threatens to slash spending on nuclear safety aid to Russia, May 7). The US rejected the plutonium fuel cycle in the 70s as being too proliferation prone, yet is now proposing to fund such a cycle in Russia. This will put plutonium on Russian roads, increasing the risk of theft. The use of MOX also compromises reactor safety and the consequences of an accident are likely to be considerably greater than one involving conventional uranium fuel. The Clinton-Putin agreement involves converting 34 tonnes of weapons-grade plutonium into MOX. Russia would also be allowed to re-extract plutonium once the MOX had been used in reactors. The agreement does not address Russia's 30 tonnes of weapons-useable civil plutonium. Russia would be allowed to continue extracting plutonium from its civil spent nuclear waste fuel and use the infrastructure, set up with western finance, to convert this to MOX. An alternative is plutonium immobilisation. This means converting the plutonium directly into a waste form, which is resistant to proliferation. This is the kind of technology British Nuclear Fuels should be developing rather than seeking to take the UK along the MOX route. It would then be well-placed to gain work in Russia once the west realises that immobilisation meets its goals of ensuring safety, non-proliferation and sustainable development far better than the use of MOX. Pete Roche Greenpeace UK Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2001 ***************************************************************** 6 Radioactive materials 'stolen by terrorists' UK: Independent News © 2001 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd. 14 May 2001 04:12 GMT+1 Home > News > UK > Science By Charles Arthur Technology Editor 10 May 2001 International terrorist groups are making renewed efforts to smuggle radioactive materials to make nuclear bombs, new figures released this week indicate. The number of attempts to steal potentially fissile materials has doubled in the past five years, said the International Atomic Energy Authority, the nuclear industry watchdog. In the first three months of 2001 there were 20 confirmed cases of illegal trafficking of radioactive materials, with thefts in Germany, Romania, South Africa and Mexico, it said. Morten Bremer Maerli, of the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs in Oslo, told *New Scientist* magazine that the risk of nuclear terrorism was "the worst of all nightmares". He also noted that two of the most notorious terrorist groups ­ Osama bin Laden's Al-Qaida in Afghanistan, and the Aum Shrinrikyo cult in Japan ­ had for some years been trying to obtain nuclear materials. The United Nations' Terrorism Prevention Branch suggests that up to 130 terrorist groups worldwide could pose a nuclear threat. Mr Maerli noted that the end of the Cold War had left the world with three million kilograms of fissile material, which would be enough to make 250,000 bombs. Also from the Science section If you can't stand the heat... Lewis Wolpert: Science improved by design Radioactive materials 'stolen by terrorists' Michael Frayn: The writer and the appliance of science MPs condemn GM baby doctors ***************************************************************** 7 DOE vs. Joseph Carson April 2001 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION BOARD JOSEPH CARSON, Appellant versus DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY, Agency DOCKET NUMBERS AT-1221-96-0948-X- 1 AT-1221-98-0250-X-1 AT-1221-98-0623-X-1 DATE: April 26, 2001 Joseph Carson, Knoxville, Tennessee, pro se. Gus Goldberger, Washington, D.C., for the agency. BEFORE Beth S. Slavet, Chairman Barbara J. Sapin, Vice Chairman Susanne T. Marshall, Member OPINION AND ORDER This case is before the Board on the appellant's petition for enforcement of the Board's final order in *Carson v. Department of Energy*, 85 M.S.P.R. 171 (2000). For the reasons set forth below, we find the agency in compliance. BACKGROUND The Board's final order directed the agency to cancel the letter of admonishment, cancel the directed reassignment from Oak Ridge, Tennessee to Germantown, Maryland, and return the appellant to the full range of duties and work assignments consistent with his position description and past assignments. 85 M.S.P.R. at 175. On March 2, 2000, the appellant filed a petition for enforcement of the Board's February 3, 2000 order.* See Carson v. Department of Energy*, MSPB Docket No. AT-1221-96-0250-C-2.(1) Compliance File 2 (CF2), Tab 1. The petition was dismissed without prejudice. CF2, Tab 6. Upon refiling, the appellant alleged that the agency was not in compliance because, after it abolished his former position by a reduction-in-force action, it again directed his reassignment to Germantown, Maryland.* Carson v. Department of Energy*, MSPB Docket No. AT-1221-98-0250-C-3,(2) Compliance File 3 (CF3), Tab 5 at 3. The administrative judge rejected the agency's argument that it had treated the appellant no differently than the other employees whose positions with the agency's Office of Environment, Safety and Health (EH) Site Resident Program were abolished.(3) CF3, Tab 14, Recommendation at 7. The administrative judge noted that nine of the 17 employees affected by the abolishment of the EH Site Resident Program were provided jobs within their commuting area and that the agency even acknowledged that there were positions at Oak Ridge to which the appellant might have been reassigned.* Id.* Further, the administrative judge found unacceptable the agency's offer to allow the appellant to telecommute to Germantown, Maryland, from his home in Knoxville, Tennessee. Accordingly, the administrative judge concluded that the agency had not made a good faith effort to place the appellant in a position within his commuting area. *Id*. at 8. The administrative judge directed the agency to identify all GS-14 positions in the Oak Ridge, Tennessee, commuting area which are currently vacant or which were vacant and filled on or after the date that the EH Site Resident program was abolished. *Id.* The administrative judge also directed the agency to assign the appellant to the position that most closely complies with the Board's February 3, 2000 Final Order, notwithstanding that the position so identified is currently filled by another employee. *Id*. at 8-9. The agency notified the Board that it would comply with the administrative judge's recommendation but requested a 15-day extension of time to allow for full implementation. Compliance Referral File (CRF) Tab 1. The agency attached a list of the positions in the Oak Ridge, Tennessee commuting area and stated that additional time was necessary to examine the positions to determine whether they were commensurate with the appellant's position description and past assignments. The Board granted the request.(4) CRF, Tab 2. The agency subsequently submitted evidence of its assignment of the appellant to the position of GS-14 Technical Facility Representative (FR) in the Oak Ridge Operations Office (ORO). CRF, Tab 6, Exs. 4, 6 and 8. The appellant responded that the agency had not complied with the Board's order because the position to which he was assigned is a newly created position, not a vacant or existing position, and he must complete a training period. CRF, Tab 7. He also alleged that the agency improperly rejected his applications for GS-15 positions. The agency responded to the appellant's objections and the appellant moved to strike the agency's allegedly improper response. CRF, Tabs 8 and 9. ANALYSIS It is the agency's burden to establish compliance with a final Board order. *Spates v. U.S. Postal Service*, 70 M.S.P.R. 438, 441 (1996). The Board will excuse precise compliance with the terms of its order, if the agency can establish that overriding circumstances precluded compliance.* See, e.g., Currier v. U.S. Postal Service*, 72 M.S.P.R. 191, 199 (1996) (abolishment of a position is a compelling reason for not reinstating an appellant to his former position). The Board's order here directed the agency to place the appellant in a position with the full range of duties and work assignments consistent with his position description and past assignments.* Carson*, 85 M.S.P.R. at 175. While the order does not specifically require the appellant's placement in his former position, it does contemplate placement in a position with the same duties and assignments as those of his former position of EH Site Resident.(5) At the time of the order, however, the appellant had not been affected by the RIF. See CF3, Tab 13, Subtab T;. We find that the agency has demonstrated that overriding circumstances precluded it from placing the appellant in the same type of position that he had previously occupied because the entire EH Site Resident Program was abolished. Under these circumstances, we also find that the agency's assignment of the appellant to the position of GS-14 Technical Facility Representative in ORO constitutes compliance with the Board's order. The appellant is a professional engineer specializing in occupational and nuclear safety. *See Carson v. Department of Energy*, MSPB Docket No. AT-1221-98-0623-W-1, Tab 1, Second Declaration of Joseph Carson at 4. The position description of his now abolished former position, safety engineer in the EH Site Resident Program in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, states that the purpose of the position was to serve as the EH oversight presence and authority in the technical areas of general engineering, conduct of operations, maintenance, construction safety, environmental protection, and quality assurance. CRF, Tab 6, Ex. 5. One of the primary duties of that position was to conduct surveillance at Department of Energy's (DOE) nuclear and non-nuclear facilities and laboratories to evaluate DOE line management's implementation of safety programs. In addition, the incumbent was expected to generate reports to EH management concerning line management's performance in safety-related activities. *Id. * The new position to which the appellant has been assigned, Technical Facility Representative (FR), is also located in Oak Ridge, Tennessee and is part of the Environmental Management Program of the Oak Ridge Operations Office. CRF, Tab 6, Ex. 4. One of the purposes of the new position is to serve as line management's on-site technical representative with responsibility for identifying and evaluating environmental, safety and health issues, diagnosing root causes and recommending short-term compensatory measures and ultimate solutions. *Id.* As was true of the appellant's former position, the appellant will be required to conduct evaluations of facilities and operations from the standpoint of public/worker health and safety, industrial and nuclear safety, and environmental protection. *Id.* at Subtab 6. The new position, however, may require more responsibility for high hazard facilities. *Id.* Thus, it appears that the range of duties and work assignments that the appellant can expect in his new position are similar, though not precisely the same, as his former responsibilities and assignments. The appellant has argued, however, that the agency is not in compliance with the instructions in the Recommendation because it has created a new position for him rather than placing him in an existing or vacant position. In the appellant's view the position is in reality a GS-13 because it requires a qualification period. CRF, Tab 7. The appellant argues further that the Board should reverse the agency's rejection of his application for a GS-15 position in order to restore him to the status quo ante. *Id.* Despite the appellant's claim that the agency has placed him in a position inconsistent with the Recommendation, he has not suggested that any of the positions listed as existing or vacant at the time of the abolishment of his former position would be more suitable. Additionally, to the extent that the appellant suggests that the agency created an unnecessary position to subvert the Board's compliance order, the agency's evidence shows the need for an additional FR on a decontamination project at the East Tennessee Technology Park.(6) CRF, Tab.6, Ex.4, Tab 8, Ex.3. Further, the requirement of additional training for the FR position does not, without more, require a finding that the appellant's assignment to this position is improper. Certainly if the assignment were to change the appellant's tenure sp that he would be viewed as a probationer, the assignment would not establish compliance with the Board's February 3, 2000 order. We do not, however, view the training period described by the agency here as equivalent to a probationary period. We expect the agency to make every effort to assist the appellant in completing the training and reject, as speculative, the appellant's assertion that the training program will provide the agency with a pretext for reprisal.(7) *See LaChance v. White*, 174 F.3d 1378, 1381 (Fed. Cir. 1999) (there is a presumption that public officials perform their duties in good faith). The appellant's additional claim that the agency is in noncompliance because it rejected his applications for GS-15 positions is not appropriately before the Board in this compliance proceeding. The appellant himself stated that he filed an Individual Right of Action appeal with regard to three rejected applications for GS-15 positions.(8) Accordingly, we will not consider the matter here. ORDER For the reasons set forth herein, we find the agency in COMPLIANCE and DISMISS the petition for enforcement as moot. This is the final decision of the Merit Systems Protection Board in this enforcement proceeding. Title 5 of the Code of Federal Regulations, section 1201.183(b)(3) (5 C.F.R. 1201.183(b)(3)). NOTICE TO THE APPELLANT REGARDING YOUR FURTHER REVIEW RIGHTS You have the right to request the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit to review this final decision. You must submit your request to the court at the following address: United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit 717 Madison Place, N.W. Washington, DC 20439 The court must receive your request for review no later than 60 calendar days afer your receipt of this order. If you have a representative in this case and your representative receives this order before you do, then you must file with the court no later than 60 calendar days after receipt by your representative. If you choose to file, be very careful to file on time. The court has held that normally it does not have the authority to waive this statutory deadline and that filings that do not comply with the deadline must be dismissed. *See Pinat v. Office of Personnel Management*, 931 F.2d 1544 (Fed. Cir. 1991). If you need further information about your right to appeal this decision to court, you should refer to the federal law that gives you this right. It is found in Title 5 of the United States Code, section 7703 (5 U.S.C. 7703). You may read this law as well as review other related material at our web site, http://www.mspb.gov FOR THE BOARD: Robert E. Taylor Clerk of the Board Washington, D.C. ENDNOTES 1. This appeal was consolidated with two other appeals,* Carson v. Department of Energy,* MSPB Docket Nos. AT-1221-98-0623-C-2 and AT-1221-98-0948-C-2. 2. This appeal was consolidated with two other appeals, *Carson v. Department of Energy*, MSPB Docket Nos. AT-1221-98-0623-C-3 and AT-1221-98-0948-C-3 . 3. The appellant filed a separate complaint with the Office of Special Counsel alleging that the agency's decision to abolish the EH Site Resident Function and direct his reassignment to Germantown was in retaliation for his whistleblowing. CF3, Tab 13, Subtab B. The administrative judge expressly declined to address the agency's motivation in abolishing the appellant's function and directing his reassignment. Recommendation at 6 n.5. 4. The appellant objected to the agency's request for an extension of time. CRF, Tabs 4 and 5. It appears, however, that the appellant's objection to the request was not received prior to the Board's grant of the extension. Moreover, assuming that the Board had received the appellant's objection prior to granting the extension, we find that the objections lack merit. The appellant's suggestion that he would be prejudiced by an extension of` time because it would limit his 20-day time period in which to respond to the agency's submission on compliance is based on a misinterpretation of 5 C.F.R. 1201.183(a)(7). See CRF, Tab 4. In any event, the appellant's objection is moot because he has responded to all of the agency's submissions on compliance. While the appellant is correct that 5 C.F.R. 1201.183(a)(2) requires the agency to submit the name of the agency official charged with complying with the Board's order, the agency's failure to supply the name does not in and of itself require that the Board deny an extension of time request. 5. The administrative judge noted that the Board's final order of February 3, 2000 did not specifically order the appellant be returned to the status quo ante. CF3, Tab 14, Rec. at n.4. Nevertheless, he discussed the agency's obligation to comply with a status quo ante order or show that overriding circumstances precluded reinstatement according to the terms of Board's order. 6. The appellant requested that the Board reject the agency's response to his arguments of noncompliance on the basis that the Board did not specifically request the response and the regulations do not provide for such a response. CRF, Tab 9. The Board has held, however, that it is permissible for an agency to offer a supplemental explanation of its compliance efforts. *McDonough v. U.S.. Postal Service*, 60 M.S.P.R. 122, 125 (1993). 7. Given the cost of the training it is in the agency's interest to ensure that the appellant successfully completes it. CRF, Tab 8, Subtab 3. Additionally, the leader of the FR Group states that to his knowledge all of the individuals who have entered the FR training program have successfully completed it. *Id.* The appellant is well aware of his appeal rights in any event. 8. *Carson v. Department of Energy*, AT-1221-01-0025-W-1 Questions or comments? Contact Joseph P. Carson, P.E. ***************************************************************** 8 Bush 'Will Restart Nuclear Tests' May 9, 02:00 PM Must resume testing Teams of high-level US officials are in Europe and Asia this week trying to sell Bush's new approach to the nuclear weapons issue, in particular his Son of Star Wars programme. The president has said the national missile umbrella will allow him to make cuts in America's huge stockpile of nuclear weapons, even if Russia or other countries are not willing to reciprocate. But Gaffney, a former defence official and prominent conservative analyst, said the US needed to make sure its nuclear forces were "modern, safe and reliable... Toward that end, we're going to have to resume on a limited basis underground testing of our nuclear arms". Covert tests The United States has not tested nuclear weapons since 1992, and China, Britain, France and Russia are publicly committed to a moratorium. But Gaffney said he believed Russia and China had "covertly tested." The US has blocked efforts to draw up a formal agreement based on the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. In 1999 the Senate voted against ratifying the pact. Bush opposes the treaty, but has said he will not test, and says he will cut the nuclear arsenal to the "lowest possible number consistent with our national security". But Gaffney said: "I think you're going to find that (Bush's) nuclear posture review is going to conclude that this (testing) has to be part of a revised approach." He added that missile cuts would be no more extensive than those promised by Bill Clinton. Copyright © 2001 BSkyB. All rights reserved. Republication or redissemination Copyright © 2001 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved. ***************************************************************** 9 NGO calls for Korean nuclear-free zone [The Japan Times Online] May 11, 2001 Japanese delegation hopes to establish sister cities in North Korea By ERIKO ARITA Staff writer A group of people trying to increase the number of "nuclear-free municipalities" in Japan is planning to visit North Korea in August to promote exchanges at a grassroots level and discuss the possibility of establishing a nuclear-free zone on the Korean Peninsula. They hope their effort will rev up the effort to normalize ties between Japan and North Korea and bring the two countries closer together on a more personal level. "The normalization talks seem stalled at the central government level," said Masaru Nishida, chairman of the Nuclear-Free Zone Citizens Network Japan. "If people directly talk with each other, they would know that everybody loves peace," he said. Nishida believes that local governments should have their own diplomacy and that the delegation can help break the political deadlock. The delegation being arranged by the Tokyo-based nongovernmental organization includes people from nuclear-free municipalities across Japan -- 30 prefectures and 2,525 cities, towns and villages have made declarations aimed at abolishing nuclear weapons. During the six-day trip scheduled to start in early August, the group plans to visit Pyongyang, Kesong and Panmunjom and meet with a group called Cultural Relations with Foreign Countries of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, which meets with private citizens from other countries. Nishida, a 72-year-old literary critic and former professor at Hosei University in Tokyo, took a similar delegation to North Korea in 1987 and has been active in expanding and networking nuclear-free municipalities in Japan and abroad since the 1980s. He hopes the second visit will lead to a sister-city arrangement between the two countries, which he believes will help pave the way to normalized bilateral relations and eventually eliminate the threat of a nuclear war in Northeast Asia. However, some question whether local autonomy exists in North Korea, which is known for its centralized administrative framework and inscrutable power structure. In addition, there is some doubt about whether a sister-city tie can be formed with a city in North Korea if there are no official diplomatic ties between the countries. Nishida also thought it might be difficult to discuss the issue with North Koreans, but he said that he has been encouraged by an official of the city of Kesong whom he met on his first visit and who was enthusiastic about the sister-city program. In a separate diplomatic move, the city of Sakaiminato, Tottori Prefecture, linked up with the city of Wonsan in what is the sole sister-city relation between the two countries, according to the Council of Local Authorities for International Relations, an organization jointly run by local governments in Japan. The ties are growing stronger thanks to marine trade, the city said. "Now is a time of 'global localism.' " Nishida said. "I am talking with chiefs of Japanese municipalities who believe that municipalities should be involved in peace-building, and asking them to form sister-city relations with cities in North Korea." Nishida emphasized that personal exchanges could prove to be a powerful bilateral security measure. In discussing the building of a nuclear-free zone covering the Korean Peninsula and Japan, the delegation is planning to hold a forum with the Korean Anti-nuke Peace Committee, an organization that communicates with foreign antinuclear groups. "In the forum, I want to confirm a joint declaration of North and South Korea (made in 1992). Then I want to ask them what they think of the idea of building a nuclear-free zone and how to establish it," Nishida said, acknowledging that some Western countries suspect North Korea has developed a nuclear bomb. In 1992, North and South Korea announced the Joint Declaration on the Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. A decade before, the late Kim Il Sung, the North's founding father, made a joint declaration with the then Social Democratic Party of Japan in 1981 on establishing a nuclear-free zone in northeast Asia. Currently, every country in the Southern Hemisphere is covered by at least one of several nuclear-free treaties. Although these treaties would not be fully effective unless states possessing nuclear weapons sign relevant protocols, there are growing voices in the international community to expand the zones to cover the Northern Hemisphere. "By expanding nuclear-free zones, where countries neither own nor produce nuclear weapons, I believe we can take firm steps forward toward eliminating nuclear weapons from our planet," Nishida said. Following a rapid decrease in tension on the Korean Peninsula after the historic meeting in June between South Korean President Kim Dae Jung and North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, Nishida hopes building a nuclear-free zone in the area will contribute to eliminating the remnants of the Cold War in Northeast Asia. During the visit, the delegation is also planning to meet with North Korean survivors of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Japanese government researchers said in March that more than 900 Koreans who were exposed to radiation in the bombings in August 1945 now live in the North. "We should urge the Japanese government to pay compensation to the victims. But to do this, we need to form diplomatic relations," Nishida said. *Interested people can join the delegation. For more information, call Katsuaki Kimura (Japanese only), the secretariat of the delegation, at (03) 3338-3718. Peace Boat cruise A Japanese nongovernmental organization promoting peace, human rights and environmental issues will launch a cruise in August to both North and South Korea, according to tour organizers. Officials of Peace Boat, which has sponsored global cruises on chartered passenger ships since 1983, said this joint visit to both North and South Korea will be the first ever. Organizers said the ship in this voyage, with a capacity of 600, will leave Kobe port on Aug. 27 and call at Nampo in North Korea and then South Korea's Inchon before sailing back to Tokyo on Sept. 8. Participants in the cruise plan to visit and observe the 38th parallel from both the North and South Korean sides. The parallel is the demarcation line between North and South Korea, which are still technically at war. Organizers said they plan to conduct exchanges with students at Pyongyang University of Foreign Studies. They also plan to hold an international conference on board about producing history textbooks common to Asia, and invite educators from countries that include the Philippines, China and Vietnam. "Such citizen-level exchanges are crucial, precisely at a time when big issues such as history textbooks are being taken up," said staff member Daini Nakahara. The Japan Times: May 11, 2001 ***************************************************************** 10 German School Damaged by Rounds May 09, 2001 BERLIN- The U.S. Army admitted Wednesday that it had misfired two training rounds, which hit and slightly damaged the roof of a southern German elementary school where children were playing in the yard. Classes were over for the day Tuesday when the rounds hit in the town of Kirchenthumbach, said Mayor Johann Kleber, and no one was injured. The town is a half-mile from the edge of the Army's largest European training range at Grafenwoehr. The Army apologized for the incident and launched an investigation. "This is really a rare incident, and it's bad," said Capt. Jeff Settle, public affairs officer for the 7th Army Training Command. "That it hit a school, of all things, is terrible." The incident occurred during live-fire training. The rounds involved were 25 mm aluminum training rounds. "They were not high explosive, they were not depleted uranium," Settle said. It remained unclear Wednesday how the accident occurred, Settle said. But the rounds, fired about two miles from the school, "went in the wrong direction." "It's the first time I know of that there's been a misfire by the U.S. Army," Kleber said. "It's in the interests of both sides to clear this up" and discuss ways to prevent future accidents. Although relations between the Army and town residents remain predominantly good, there is growing concern about military safety standards. It was revealed last year that depleted uranium rounds - which is alleged to have caused illness among several former soldiers serving as peacekeepers in the Balkans - had been fired at the training grounds. All contents copyright 2001 Las Vegas SUN, Inc. ***************************************************************** 11 Downwinders, miners plan to sue over delayed compensation *Wednesday, May 9, 2001* By ROBERT GEHRKE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON -- Sick uranium miners and residents exposed to fallout from the Cold War nuclear weapons tests plan to ask a federal judge to order the Justice Department to make good on promised compensation. Congress passed the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act in 1990 to make lump-sum payments to the miners and "downwinders" suffering from a variety of ailments as a result of radiation exposure. The program was expanded in 2000 to cover more workers and more illnesses, but Congress didn't appropriate enough money to cover the additional claimants. Last summer, the Justice Department, which administers the RECA program, began issuing IOUs to those qualifying for payments. Many have died while awaiting payment. Now, Dine Citizens Against Ruining the Environment and several groups representing Navajo uranium miners are preparing a lawsuit asking a judge to force the Justice Department to speed payment of approved claims and to put together rules to implement the broadened program. "Dine" is the Navajo word for "the people," the term the Navajo use to refer to themselves. "Unfortunately, the DOJ has dragged its feet ... so there is a large number of individuals who would now be eligible for a payment who are not able to pursue that payment," said Steve Sugarman, the attorney preparing the case. The suit may be filed in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., as early as Thursday, Sugarman said. Justice Department spokesman Charles Miller said he could not comment until the lawsuit is filed. "If and when it is filed we'll have to take a look at it," he said. The budget proposed by President Bush includes $710 million over the next 11 years to cover the claims, but that money wouldn't be available until October, when the new fiscal year begins. Several members of Congress are pushing for $84 million in supplemental funding for this year. To qualify for RECA, miners must have worked for at least four years in uranium mines between World War II and 1971 and have lung cancer or one of several other ailments linked to radiation exposure. Many of the mines were in the Four Corners area where Utah, Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona meet, and many of the miners were Navajo Indians from the area. The act also covers "Downwinders" -- those who lived in areas of Nevada, Utah and Arizona where radioactive fallout from nuclear weapons tests in southern Nevada settled. Those who do qualify can receive payments of $100,000. Under a defense bill passed last year, ill miners can receive an additional $50,000. Through mid-March, the Justice Department had approved 3,637 claims, most of them former miners, and awarded more than $270 million. "As far as I know we have expended almost every dime we were given for 2001," Miller said. Justice Department's Radiation Exposure Compensation Program: www.usdoj.gov/civil/torts/const/reca/index.htm DINE Care: dinecare.indigenousnative.org/ ©1999-2001 Seattle Post-Intelligencer ***************************************************************** 12 Native groups to sue Ashcroft over miners' IOUs KnoxNews.com - News - Latest Washington News *By M.E. SPRENGELMEYER* *Scripps Howard News Service* *May 08, 2001* WASHINGTON - Native American groups plan to sue Attorney General John Ashcroft to end what they call "coordinated neglect" of former uranium miners and others who are dying with unpaid government IOUs. A coalition of groups from Western states plans to file a lawsuit in U.S. District Court this week accusing the Justice Department of violating the law by delaying payments under the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act. The program's trust fund ran out of money last year and the Justice Department began sending IOU letters. Although President Bush has proposed full funding starting next fiscal year and several members of Congress have proposed $84 million in emergency funding, it could take until the fall before 179 current IOU holders and hundreds more with pending claims can be paid. "We see deliberate stalling here, and meanwhile people are dying," said Lori Goodman of Durango, Colo., spokeswoman for Dine C.A.R.E. (Citizens Against Ruining the Environment), a Navajo rights group that is joining the lawsuit. "We've lost hope, just as the victims themselves have lost hope. We feel nothing is going to happen and they need to be pushed harder." "Dine" (pronounced DEE-nuh) is a term that Navajo use to describe themselves. A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment on the expected lawsuit. Goodman said it would be filed later this week by Dine C.A.R.E., Utah Navajo Downwinders, Northern Arizona Navajo Downwinders, Eastern Navajo Agency Uranium Workers and individual plaintiffs from New Mexico and Arizona. Plaintiffs want a judge to declare the Justice Department in violation of the law for not paying the already approved claims, and for delaying implementation of amendments to the law that Congress approved last year. Those changes expanded the number of people who could apply for benefits, letting uranium millers and transporters apply for the first time, and including areas of Utah and Arizona where people downwind of nuclear tests contracted illnesses. The Justice Department was supposed to publish regulations by Jan. 6, but even with a change in presidential administrations would-be applicants are still waiting. Plaintiffs want a judge to set firm deadlines for paying the IOU holders and getting the new regulations in place so others can apply, said plaintiffs attorney Bruce Baizel. "The longer they delay, the more people die off," Baizel said. "In the world of Washington, delay is the normal course of events." (Distributed by Scripps-McClatchy Western Service.) [E.W. Scripps] Copyright © 2000 Scripps Howard News Service Copyright © 1999-2000, The Knoxville News-Sentinel Co. All Rights ***************************************************************** 13 New Scientist: Nuclear boom Attempts to smuggle radioactive materials have doubled over the past five years, boosting fears of nuclear terrorism Exclusive from New Scientist magazine Attempts to smuggle radioactive materials have doubled over the past five years, according to figures released this week by the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency. The revelations bolster fears that the threat of nuclear terrorism is increasing. The IAEA's database on trafficking in nuclear materials has logged more than 550 incidents since 1993, it revealed at a conference in Stockholm. The rate of incidents in 1999 and 2000 was twice that in 1996. In the first three months of 2001, there were 20 confirmed cases, including thefts in Germany, Romania, South Africa and Mexico. The majority of cases involved the movement of materials which could not be made into bombs, such as contaminated scrap metal or radioactive sources. But 15 instances since 1993 involved plutonium or enriched uranium, which could be used in bombs. No single consignment has so far contained enough for a bomb, but the most worrying to the IAEA was the seizure of nearly a kilogram of enriched uranium in April last year in the former Soviet republic of Georgia. Staggering legacy The risk of nuclear terrorism is "the worst of all nightmares", says Morten Bremer Maerli of the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs in Oslo. The cold war has left the world with "a staggering legacy" of 3 million kilograms of fissile material, he says - enough for a quarter of a million bombs. Maerli says two of the most notorious terrorist groups - Osama bin Laden's Al-Qaida in Afghanistan and the Aum Shrinrikyo cult in Japan - -have been trying to acquire a nuclear capability. Alex Schmid of the UN's Terrorism Prevention Branch suggests that there could be as many as 130 terrorist groups that pose a nuclear threat. "Vigorous efforts need to be made to keep the nuclear genie in the bottle and out of the hands of terrorists," he says. 1900 GMT, 9 May 2001 Rob Edwards, Stockholm ***************************************************************** 14 Unknown dangers at IAAP The Hawk Eye Special: IAAP May 10, 2001 Grassley joins call for Army plant flyover By Dennis J. Carroll The Hawk Eye nÊDetection equipment in a low-flying aircraft could identify radiation that might be present. Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, added his voice Wednesday to the call for a low-level flyover of the Middletown munitions plant to determine whether there are any hidden dangers from radiation. "If it's as simple as having a flyover and the equipment is available, it would be idiotic not to do it, in other words a no-brainer," Grassley said. The senator's remarks come in the wake of a March report by the federal Department of Health and Human Services that was unable to determine whether Atomic Energy Commission operations at Iowa Army Ammunition Plant pose a current risk to public health at the plant or in areas around it. From the late 1940s to the mid-1970s, the AEC assembled, tested and later disassembled components of nuclear weapons. The report, conducted by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, reaffirmed that the AEC released radioactive materials into the environment in the late '60s and early '70s. The report noted that workers handled such radioactive materials as plutonium, enriched uranium, radium and tritium. Poring over documents supplied by the Army, the health investigators said there were too many gaps and inadequate information to determine the impact on public health. Grassley, speaking by phone with Iowa reporters, said he supported calls by Iowa Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin and Donald Flater of the Iowa Department of Public Health for a flyover of the plant's entire 19,000 acres. Harkin has demanded that Army officials "find and clean up" all contamination. Flater said the Army and Department of Energy have been approaching the problem backwards by trying to determine what dangers may exist by attempting to reconstruct the history of AEC operations rather then using available technology to determine possible dangers. "We don't know what's out there," Flater has said, citing several surprise findings by Army Corps of Engineers cleanup crews -- including tons of highly toxic barium at a waste disposal site and depleted uranium at a weapons testing location. Flater has said special radiation-detection equipment in a low-flying aircraft would be able to isolate different forms of radiation that might be present. The cost of the flyover has been estimated at between $500,000 and $1 million. Said Grassley: "We ought to be finding out if it's a safe place to work. I think we ought to take extraordinary action. "I think (the flyover) is a perfectly legitimate thing to request, a perfectly legitimate thing to do, and I don't see any reason why it isn't done already." He also said the private contractor that operates the plant, American Orndance, "might have some responsibility to make sure it's a safe place." Grassley said if there is a question of safety "then workers themselves are going to have to make up their minds (whether) they want to work there or not." 800 S. Main St., Burlington Iowa 52601 319-754-8461 Front Desk ' ' '| ' ' '319-754-6824 FAX ' ' '| ' ' ' 1-800-397-1708 Outside ***************************************************************** 15 Hanford pipefitters appeal termination case This story was published Wed, May 9, 2001 By John Stang Herald staff writer Eleven former Hanford pipefitters are appealing a judge's decision to move their case from a jury trial to an arbitrator. They filed their appeal Tuesday in the state Court of Appeals in Spokane to try to overturn Judge Carolyn Brown's ruling Thursday in Benton County Superior Court. A trial was scheduled to begin this week on whether Fluor Federal Services wrongfully fired the pipefitters in retaliation for raising safety concerns in 1997. Fluor Federal Services, which was Fluor Daniel Northwest in 1997, denies the allegations. If the pipefitters, represented by the Government Accountability Project, lose the appeal, their case will go to an arbitrator selected from a federally sponsored panel. This is the latest development in a see-saw legal battle between the pipefitters and Fluor Federal in which both sides have won and lost rounds in the federal administrative law arena. The clash originated in May 1997 at Hanford's 200 Area when a pipefitting crew balked at participating in a hydraulic pressure test with a pipe valve they feared was unsafe. The crew members also raised concerns about possible overexposure to X-rays from tests on pipe welds. And they questioned a trench's safety classification being based on a phone conversation, instead of an on-site inspection. The pipefitters and some supporters were later laid off, and they contend it was in retaliation for raising their concerns. Fluor Federal says the layoffs were part of job fluctuations of construction work at Hanford. Fluor denies any retaliation was involved, said company spokesman Jerry Holloway. The pipefitters filed a lawsuit in Benton County Superior Court in August 1999, seeking lost pay and unspecified damages. The case originally was scheduled to go to trial in September 2000, but a lack of courtroom space postponed it. Meanwhile, Fluor Federal's attorneys have long argued this case should go to arbitration because the collective bargaining agreement between Fluor and the pipefitters' union. Last week, Brown ruled that a March 21 U.S. Supreme Court decision on an unrelated California case backed Fluor's contention to send the case to arbitration. That is what GAP wants to appear, arguing Hanford's union employees should not be banned from taking their legal grievances and complaints to court, said Tom Carpenter, a GAP attorney. Randi Walli, one of the former pipefitters, said: "Without a trial, we're left swinging in the wind, and workers will be afraid to report safety problems that could turn into nuclear disasters." Copyright 2001 Tri-City Herald. All rights reserved. ***************************************************************** 16 State balks at cleanup delay This story was published Wed, May 9, 2001 By John Stang Herald staff writer The state recently told Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham it won't accept any delays in Tri-Party Agreement deadlines when the Department of Energy overhauls its cleanup programs and timetables. Tom Fitzsimmons, director of Washington's Department of Ecology, sent an April 24 letter to Abraham repeating that long-held state stance after DOE hinted it might want to modify its cleanup agreements with Washington and other states. The state's letter came after Abraham sent an April 4 letter to Gov. Gary Locke that said DOE wants to join the states in finding "ways to improve the compliance framework that governs much of our (cleanup) work." Abraham wants to do a "top-to-bottom" review of DOE's nationwide cleanup programs to trim the 70-year, $300 billion estimate to take care of all of DOE's contaminated old Cold War production sites. So far, DOE has released no details or timetables on how it wants to tackle such a review. In the past, Abraham also has mentioned meeting with the governors of states with DOE sites on how to coordinate and overhaul the states' and federal government's approaches to nationwide nuclear cleanup. Many of these states and the Environmental Protection Agency have legal cleanup agreements that are similar to the Tri-Party Agreement among Washington state, the EPA and DOE for Hanford's cleanup. On April 4, Abraham wrote that he directed Carolyn Huntoon, DOE's acting cleanup czar, who is scheduled to be replaced soon, to lead a study on how national cleanup projects can be done safely, on schedule and within budget. However, Abraham's first DOE budget request to Congress proposes trimming Hanford's 2002 budget by $56 million to $1.4 billion, which would be at least $469 million less than what the site needs to meet its legal obligations. That proposed budget includes $500 million for Hanford's key tank waste glassification project, which is $190 million short of what is needed to meet its Tri-Party Agreement deadlines. Meanwhile, Fitzsimmons wrote on April 24 that the state already has cut DOE a lot of slack on meeting its legal obligations. He said the Tri-Party Agreement and similar pacts in other states already give DOE extra time to meet federal and state laws "that everyone else has had to comply with for many years. Compliance is not discretionary." The state's letter blames much of the current cleanup delays on DOE underfunding projects and routinely changing the directions of its efforts. Copyright 2001 Tri-City Herald. All rights ***************************************************************** 17 Fluor's Ron Hanson leaves needed stability Published May 9, 2001 In mid-1998, Fluor Hanford had been Hanford's primary contractor for about 18 months, a period racked with operational problems, talk of Fluor moving out of the government business and unsettling turnover in the company's CEO spot. That's when Ron Hanson arrived. After Fluor Hanford's first president moved on after 17 months and the second left after six weeks, Hanson moved up from his position as deputy president to take over the helm. Now, Hanson is leaving his post to take over the Fluor Corp. Washington, D.C., office. This month, he's handing off the Hanford job to E. Keith Thomson, a senior vice president with Fluor Corp. When Hanson took over the Hanford job, he knew he would have something to prove. And he has. Quickly, he rededicated himself and Fluor Hanford to the job, making promises of stability to employees and the community, and shook up the company's approach to meeting its contract obligations for new job creation. Although Fluor has encountered some problems with its massive responsibilities of spearheading cleanup on Hanford's central plateau, including the troublesome K Basins, overall the company has found its foothold. Eschewing rumors it wanted out of the government business, Fluor Corp. recommitted itself to government work and expanded its business. And Fluor Hanford's performance was good enough for the Department of Energy to extend its contract, set to expire Sept. 30, through 2006. Its 2000 performance, which included the first shipment of spent nuclear fuel out of the K Basins, received overall good marks, earning the company about 58 percent of its award fee - or about $19.9 million. Meanwhile, Hanson redirected the company's approach to its economic development promises, which were key to the Fluor-led group's successful bid for the Hanford contract in 1996. While some in the community quibble with Fluor and the Energy Department over which jobs to count, Fluor claims that as of last September, it had helped to create about 2,600 of the 3,000 jobs it had promised under its original contract. Although the contract extension contains no specific targets for new job creation, Hanson had pledged to continue to work toward that goal. It's a commitment Thomson also should embrace. If Hanson stepped into turmoil in mid-1998, Thomson is stepping into relative calm, but not an easy job. Fluor Hanford's challenge is great, and Thomson will have to continue - and expand on - the company's success. We wish him the best of luck. As for Hanson, we commend his record at Hanford and wish him success in his new job. What's your opinon? Copyright 2001 Tri-City Herald. All rights reserved. This ***************************************************************** 18 DOE: SSAB vote does not count Oak Ridger Online --> Story last updated at 1:19 p.m. on Thursday, May 10, 2001 by Paul Parson Oak Ridger staff It appeared to those attending Wednesday night's Oak Ridge Site-Specific Advisory Board that the group's vote to endorse a series of recommendations dealing with workforce restructuring issues passed. But Department of Energy officials have determined the vote did not count. The Site-Specific Advisory Board is a federally appointed citizens' panel that provides advice and recommendations to DOE on its Oak Ridge environmental management program. The group was formed in 1995 and chartered under the Federal Advisory Committee Act. During its meeting at the Garden Plaza hotel, the advisory group voted 5-4 to endorse the recommendations, while six people abstained due to various reasons. The breakdown of votes is as follows: * Voting to support the recommendations -- Jake Alexander, John Kennerly, David Mosby, Scott Vowell and Charles Washington. * Voting not to support the recommendations -- Steve Lewis, John Million, Lorene Sigal and Kerry Trammell. * Abstaining -- Luther Gibson, Steve Kopp, Bill Pardue, Pat Rush, Peery Shaffer and Corkie Staley. Several of those voting "no" said the recommendations were out of the realm of the SSAB's mission. However, Pat Halsey, federal coordinator for the SSAB, said this morning that the vote did not count due to the SSAB's decision-making policy. The policy states SSAB recommendations to DOE "shall require a majority vote of the entire board membership or a two-thirds vote of those present and voting, whichever is larger. The majority rule (10 members voting) would have applied to Wednesday night's vote, but only nine people actually voted. The workforce restructuring recommendations, for the most part, are similar to those endorsed in March by the Oak Ridge Reservation Local Oversight Committee. The SSAB's recommendations call for DOE and its contractors to assist laid-off workers in locating new jobs internally consistent with their experience, to set standards for "consistent" treatment of laid-off workers, including a proper notification period, and to enforce the Cold War Worker 3161 hiring preference. The 3161 hiring preference is a federal law that gives laid-off workers preference for job openings. Also, the recommendations state DOE should provide detailed data relating to layoffs, including an analysis of trends relating to age, company service and eligibility for retirement. The recommendations were drafted by Susan Kaplan, a member of the Citizens' Advisory Panel of the Oak Ridge Reservation Local Oversight Committee, and several laid-off workers, who have formed the Organization for Retired and Displaced Employee Relief committee. The committee serves as an advisory panel to Kaplan's nonprofit agency, the Institute for Technology, Social and Policy Awareness Inc. Kaplan said this morning she was disappointed that Wednesday night's vote did not count. She said ORDER is working out the details of a planned Freedom of Information Act request for layoff data. "It really is a very complex subject and I've had to do a lot of research to understand the issues enough to know what to ask for and to tell DOE exactly how I want the data presented," she said. "In addition, I am in the process of writing letters requesting certain specific high-priority actions that need to be taken for those forced out of their jobs, such as bridging the health insurance benefit for those who are bridged for their pension benefit." For more information about the SSAB, visit its Web site at All Contents ©Copyright* The Oak Ridger * ***************************************************************** 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: *****************************************************************