RACHEL’s Hazardous Waste News #19

=======================Electronic Edition========================

RACHEL’S HAZARDOUS WASTE NEWS #19
—April 6, 1987—
News and resources for environmental justice.
——
Environmental Research Foundation
P.O. Box 5036, Annapolis, MD 21403
Fax (410) 263-8944; Internet: erf@igc.apc.org
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RADIOACTIVE WASTE SITES SOUGHT IN EASTERN STATES ONCE AGAIN; GRASSROOTS
OPPOSITION BUILDING.

The federal government has flip-flopped again and will soon be looking for places to begin drilling in eastern
states, looking for a permanent home for the nation’s enormous backlog of high-level radioactive wastes.
The wastes are temporarily stored in pools of water at operating nuclear power plants, but the pools are
filling up. The search for deep-earth repositories in eastern states had been announced several years ago
but was canceled for what seemed to be political reasons. Now the east will once again be examined for a
possible “second repository;” the “first repository” will still be built in Nevada or Washington state or
Texas, if federal officials have their way.

However, federal radioactive waste disposal programs are “on the verge of technical, legal, and political
collapse,” according to a coalition of grass roots citizen groups who have been monitoring federal programs
carefully. Called the National Nuclear Waste Task Force, the coalition has active citizen groups in Nevada,
Washington state, Texas, Mississippi, Utah, Oregon, Tennessee, Georgia, Maine, Minnesota, New
Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Virginia, and Wisconsin. Their immediate goal is to alert Congress
to the failure of nuclear waste programs that the federal Department of Energy (DOE) manages under
authority of the 1982 Nuclear Waste Policy Act. They want federal funding cut and DOE’s present programs
halted.

The Task Force says DOE has mismanaged the program, has allowed political considerations to cloud its
science, has selected both first and second repository candidate sites that appear to be technically
unsuitable, and has proposed an expensive, unnecessary, and dangerous “Monitored Retrievable Storage
(MRS)” facility to be built in Tennessee to make up for the program’s other failures.

The Task Force is calling for establishment of an independent commission to review DOE’s repository and
MRS programs. To get involved in the Task Force’s efforts, contact Caroline Petti, 2001 O Street, NW,
Washington, DC 20036; phone (202) 457-0545.
–Peter Montague, Ph.D.

Descriptor terms: department of energy; waste disposal; repositories; radioactive waste; federal; waste;
storage; national nuclear waste task force; nuclear waste policy act; wa; tx; nv; tn; mrs; monitored
retrievable storage; high level waste; hlw; citizen groups; wi; va; nc; ga; me; mi; nh; nm; ut; or; doe;

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