From Deseret News archives:
Goshute fight is back at NRC
State asks board to reconsider its approval of tribal N-waste facility
On Wednesday, the state argued its mulligan before the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board, which had earlier ruled 2-1 that a consortium of nuclear power utilities, called Private Fuel Storage, had met the regulatory requirements for a license to store the waste over the objections of the state.
It was a hearing filled with technical jargon and talk of "R" factors and Einstein "principle," and more acronyms were being thrown around than in a box of alphabet cereal. Attorneys for Utah argued they should be given a second chance to prove their case that a potential breach of the waste canisters posed public safety risks had not been fully considered by the board.
The state's argument is a last-ditch effort to prevail upon the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to deny PFS a license to store up to 40,000 tons of high-level nuclear waste in above-ground canisters in Skull Valley southwest of Salt Lake City.
Rep. Rob Bishop, R-Utah, has proposed legislation that would designate federal lands around the site as wilderness, thereby blocking the construction of a rail spur needed to transport the waste. And there are efforts to pressure the Department of the Interior to reject the project.
The latest appeal centers on what would happen if an aircraft, say one of the thousands of F-16 military jets that fly over the site ever year, were to crash into the canisters. Could the canisters which consist of waste wrapped in steel and then an overcoat of concrete be ruptured in such an accident and what would the extent of radiation contamination be?
"The state fought tooth and nail" during years of hearings to deal with the issue of radiation exposure in the events the casks were breached, said Denise Chancellor, an assistant Utah attorney general.
But the record on that is murky, at best, and the board was clearly skeptical, if not intrigued, by the argument, even pointing out opportunities missed by the state to raise this argument during the hearing process. And there was clearly disagreement as to what certain words meant.
And that led to plenty of testy words between board members and C chancellor.
Comments
- Avalanche suffer 1st home loss 10:34 p.m.
- Thunder rout short-handed Magic 10:32 p.m.
- Evans helps Kings top Warriors 10:29 p.m.
- Lakers win 5th straight 10:27 p.m.
- Bystanders framed for child porn 10:27 p.m.
- WAC: Nevada drubs the Spartans 10:25 p.m.
- Yule essay contest seeking entries 10:20 p.m.
- Species on endangered list 10:20 p.m.
- Scientist: Dinos trampled in SE Utah 10:19 p.m.
- NBA roundup: Bryant leads Lakers 10:17 p.m.
- Gay advocates trek to LDS office
216 - House passes health care bill
197 - Lobo suspended
173 - Cougars crush hapless Cowboys
151 - Speed has never been BYU's game
136 - Utah Jazz fall apart against Kings
126 - RSL rallies to advance
103 - Thousands protest health bill
102 - Provo company innovating engines
100 - Utes pound winless Lobos
89
Why do so many people live so close to refineries in Utah and elsewhere?
NASA's Stardust probe continues to bring new knowledge about the nature...
Several schools have turf now...so it is not the Turf. Playing in a...
Two weeks ago BYU quit against TCU. When was the last time Utah quit when...
I for one was impressed to see the coaching staff make better use of JJ. Once...
Funny that Cougar fans don't think that the Heisman Trophy winner wouldn't...
BYU fans take shots at Utah since they cannot talk about their own team....
Silver conservative are in a constant state of fear. There were only two...
I remember that game, it was a Shumway who ran him down. His little brother...
As a Utah fan I am nervous about this one, but I don't think TCU is going to...
I am a devotee of multiple talk radio hosts. They stimulate me to increase...
You might need to know what you are talking about Amy before you write an...



You can be the first to comment on this story.