ML18352A901
| ML18352A901 | |
| Person / Time | |
|---|---|
| Site: | Consolidated Interim Storage Facility |
| Issue date: | 11/18/2018 |
| From: | Public Commenter Public Commenter |
| To: | NRC/NMSS/FCSS |
| NRC/NMSS/FCSS | |
| References | |
| 83FR44922 | |
| Download: ML18352A901 (3) | |
Text
1 WCS_CISFEISCEm Resource From:
Joni Arends <jarends@nuclearactive.org>
Sent:
Sunday, November 18, 2018 7:37 PM To:
WCS_CISFEIS Resource
Subject:
[External_Sender] Docket No. 72-1050; NRC-2016-0231 Waste Control Specialists LLCs
/ ISPs Consolidated Interim Spent Fuel Storage Facility Project Nuclear Regulatory Commission WCS Waste Storage Application RE: Docket No. 72-1050; NRC-2016-0231 Waste Control Specialists LLCs / ISPs Consolidated Interim Spent Fuel Storage Facility Project
Dear Nuclear Regulatory Commission WCS Waste Storage Application,
Dear Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
I urge you to reject and deny the proposal by Waste Control Specialists/Interim Storage Partners (WCS/ISP) to import up to 40,000 tons of high-level radioactive waste from nuclear reactors around the country and store it in Andrews County, Texas, for 40 years or longer. Exposure to this dangerous waste can lead to cancers, genetic damage, birth defects and even death. Homeowners insurance doesnt cover radioactive contamination. Importing high-level radioactive waste would create tremendous risks to public health, safety and financial well-being.
Further, the Permian Basin is the No. 1 oil producing region in the United States.
https://www.mrt.com/business/oil/article/Fasken-executive-High-level-nuclear-storage-13393012.php As Tommy Taylor, director of oil and gas development for Fasken Oil and Ranch, said recently at a meeting of the Society of Independent Professional Earth Scientists (SIPES), "This region is too important to U.S. security to allow this." A release from the proposed consolidated interim storage facilities (Holtec and WCS/ISP) could shut down most of the production.
Stephen Robichaud, a member of SIPES, said, "We're talking about monetary damages in the many trillions of dollars.
The impact could be enormous."
Fasken Oil and Ranch is interested in the proposals because they own 10 percent of the land in Andrews County.
The Midland Reporter-Telegram article referenced above, states:
"Even though county commissioners in Andrews County and in Eddy and Lea counties wrote the government saying they welcomed the sites, Taylor said most residents in Andrews, Hobbs and Carlsbad are unaware of the plans or their potential impact on the health and environment of their towns." As a result, NRC must hold public meetings on the revised application in these communities and along the transportation routes.
The NRC has not held a single public meeting on the revised application. The NRC held only one meeting in Texas on the original application, and that was in Andrews, hundreds of miles from major cities that would be impacted by rail transport of radioactive waste. Resolutions opposing the radioactive waste plans and transport were passed by Dallas, Bexar, Nueces and Midland counties and the cities of San Antonio and Denton, but the public has not been given an opportunity to speak out in NRC public hearings.
2 Please extend public intervention and public comment deadlines by at least 180 days to allow for public input, and host public meetings in Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, El Paso, Midland and Andrews - and other locations that would be impacted by this proposal.
The WCS Environmental Report is inadequate. It should be expanded to clearly identify:
- Transportation routes that would be used across the country; *Risks to groundwater and the nearby Ogallala Aquifer, which lies beneath eight states, providing drinking water and water for agriculture, ranching and wildlife; *The impacts of temperature extremes, wildfires, flooding, earthquakes, tornadoes, lightning and shifting ground (as reported in recent Southern Methodist University studies) on radioactive waste casks and canisters; *The environmental injustice of dumping high-level radioactive waste on the largely Hispanic West Texas region; and *The adequacy of financial assurances, the stability of J.F. Lehman, the new WCS owner, and the ties of partner Orano (which has a 51 percent project share) to the French government.
Improved monitoring, security and worker protections are needed, and the emergency plan should include actions to be taken in the event of an accident, not just a notification structure. It appears there are no viable plans for action should an emergency arise.
Sending radioactive waste to this site would risk public health and security for residents near the site and along transportation routes. An inadequate permanent disposal site could be created since its likely that the waste will never get moved to a permanent repository. This waste will be dangerous for a million years and a threat not only to those living on Planet Earth now, but future generations. Storing the deadly waste for decades above ground in extreme climate conditions is too risky. In the interest of our public health and safety, this license should be denied.
Thank you for your consideration of my concerns.
Sincerely, Sincerely, Joni Arends 87594
Federal Register Notice:
83FR44922 Comment Number:
25020 Mail Envelope Properties (1709766907.14076.1542587834375.JavaMail.tomcat)
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