From Deseret News archives:
Utah N-waste plea wins sympathy . . .
. . . but White House offers little hope of preventing temporary storage in state
But when the meeting was over, the senators received little encouragement that administration officials could or would do much to stop the private project, which recently received a license recommendation from the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board, a judicial arm of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
"We had very, very good discussions," Hatch said. "It is a very difficult set of issues. The ultimate goal is to have a repository at Yucca Mountain, and we will have to work to see that that is where it goes. They know that Yucca Mountain is the ultimate goal here."
Hatch and Bennett took their concerns to the White House Wednesday, meeting with Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove and other top officials to express concerns and enlist administration support. In some regards, they got what they wanted.
"They agreed with us that it is not in the national interest," Bennett said.
And they agreed that spent nuclear fuel should be moved only once, from the nation's 103 nuclear power plants to permanent storage in Nevada.
But the White House and Utah senators apparently agreed that it may be beyond the ability of the federal government to block a private project initiated by a consortium of nuclear power utilities, called Private Fuel Storage, who signed a contract with the Skull Valley Band of Goshutes to store the waste for up to 40 years on tribal lands about 70 miles southwest of Salt Lake City.
The Utah senators outlined for the administration a litany of reasons why temporary storage in above-ground casks is not a good idea from their proximity to Salt Lake City and the military's Utah Test and Training Range, to their potential targeting by terrorists.
Hatch said the White House understands those concerns, but whether the White House will intervene is another story.
"Of course they have the power," he said. "There is no question about it."
But, he added, "what is involved here is to prevent (PFS) from stacking this stuff above ground where two private entities, one of which is a shell corporation (PFS) and the other a small Indian tribe with less than 125 people. That's ridiculous."
The NRC is set to rule on the decision of the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board, something that is considered a mere formality. Bennett said the White House cannot intervene with the NRC.










