ML20056G104

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Transcript of 930823 Meeting in San Luis Obispo,Ca Re Facility.Pp 1,925-2,024
ML20056G104
Person / Time
Site: Diablo Canyon  Pacific Gas & Electric icon.png
Issue date: 08/23/1993
From:
Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel
To:
References
CON-#393-14290 OLA, OLA-2, NUDOCS 9309020059
Download: ML20056G104 (100)


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1925 '!

f 1 UNITED STATES  !

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2 NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION  !

3 f 4 - - - - - -- - - - - - -

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i 5 In the Matter of:  : l

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6 PACIFIC GAS & ELECTRIC CO.  : Docket Nos. I i

i 7 (DIABLO CANYON, UNITS 1 & 2) : 50-275-OLA l

. 8 (LIMITED APPEARANCES)  : 50-323-OLA  !

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13 San Luis Obispo City-County l 1

14 Library l l 1 15 Community Room -l l

! 16 995 Palm Street  !

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! 17 San Luis Obispo, California l

l 18 Monday, August 23, 1993 19 i-l 20 The meeting commenced, pursuant to notice, before 21 Charles Bechhoefer, Chairman of the Board, at 7:00 p.m.

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23 24 l-l- 25 l

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. 1 ' BOARD MEMBERS PRESENT-2 1 4

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Frederick Shon, Judge 3  ;

$ 4 Jerry Kline, Environmental Engineer .

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1927 1 CONTENTS fs/ 2 SPEAKER PAGE 3 NANCY CULVER 1930 4 CAMINA TRIPODI 1933 5 JESSE ARNOLD 1934 6 KATHY DiPERI 1936 7 LIZ APPLEBERG 1940 8 GEORGE LEWIS 1944 9 CHARMAINE GALLAGHER 1947 10 CARL KEMPTON 1949 11 KELLY LEWIS 1953 1

12 LEE WEBB 1954 13 LAURA TREMEER 1956 14 SUSAN FOSTER 1961 15 CHRISTINE MARCHANT 1965 16 BILL SEAVERS 1968 17 DCNALD DANNA 1970 18 EVA YURAN 1971 19 DANIEL WESTCOTT 1972

  • 20 CRAIG STEPHANS 1975 21 ROBERT MASON 1977 22 LIZ APPLEBERG 1979 23 SUSAN FOSTER 1981 24 STEVE REBOK 1983 25 LEI LYNN ODOM 1985

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. 1928 i.

, 1 CONTENTS

. 2 SPEAKER PAGE j l l 3 SHEILA DAVIS 1986 l l

4 ANN STEELE 1987 I 1 5 CAMINA TRIPODI 1990 i 6 i 7

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1929 l

1 PROCEEDINGS i i

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3 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: This Licensing Board is here to j 4 resume the limited appearance statements that we started l i

5 last Wednesday. We didn't get through quite a few of the l 6 people who had signed up. So for those who may not have  ;

7 been here, let me introduce, again, the members of the 8 Board.

9 On my left is Dr. Jerry Kline, an environmental 10 scientist. On my right Frederick Shon, a nuclear engineer. i i

11 My name is Charles Bechhoefer. I'm an attorney and Chairman i

12 of the Board.  ;

i 13 As we mentioned before, the statements should be i 14 approximately five minutes; no longer, if possible, because l 15 this is the last occasion we'll have to take statements like ,

16 this. I don't know how many people will end up showing up, i

17 but we would like to get through as many as we can.  !

18 Everybody, if possible.

19 The statements are not evidence, as such, but we l 20 can ask the parties to look into various things or the j i

21 parties can do that voluntarily, if they wish, for matters l 22 that are not now within the scope of the contentions before l 1

23 us.  ;

24 I guess we'll begin just continuing the list, j l

25 Bradley Ostrov. j i

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1930. l 1- FROM THE FLOOR: He's not here yet.

i 2 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Okay. If he shows up later, ,

1 3 that's okay. Nancy Culver. I assume you will be speaking 4 individually.

5 MS. CULVER: Yes. l 6 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Because your organization has ,

7 had quite a bit to say thus far. I 8 MS. CULVER: And I feel well represented in these ,

9 proceedings, but I am a member of Mothers for Peace. I'm .!;

10 Nancy Culver. And I just couldn't let you leave town  !

11 without taking an opportunity to say something myself as an

{

12 individual. This is not within the scope of the 13 contentions, which I think are far too narrow and threw out j 14 too many things, anyway.

' O 15 First of all, last week, a couple of Diablo Canyon i 16 employees said a couple of things that really got my back up l 17 ant I thought I cannot let those go unrefuted, because.they j 1

18 are in the written record of this hearing. So I thought I'd j 19 start there.

20 We were told that all kinds of dreadful things

21 will happen if Diablo Canyon is not to operate. Global 22 warming will increase and we will have to replace the power 23 produced by Diablo with fossil fuel plants.

24 In a word, these things are absurd. The 25 California Energy Commission, the Public Utilities 1

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1931 1 Commission of this state know that California and all of the 2 western United States has a significant oversupply of 3 electric generating capacity right now and that is expected 4 to continue well into the next century.

5 In addition, the potential contribution in energy 6 supply that can be made by greater efficiency and 7 conservation is only beginning now to be realized. Its 8 potential is almost endless and PG&E, they're slow learners, 9 but they are seeing handwriting on the wall and they are 10 pushing their conservation programs very hard.

11 We don't have to choose between the ills of fossil 12 fuels and nuclear energy. It's a false choice.

13 Second, to suggest that nuclear power will help 14 slow global warming because it produces no greenhouse gases 15 is a joke. Consider the embedded energy in a nuclear plant,  ;

16 particularly concrete and steel, of which much of the plant f l

17 is built and two of the most energy-intensive materials that I 18 we've ever developed.

19 Because of this, nuclear plants probably cause, if 20 not directly produce more greenhouse gases than any 21 conventional power plant.

22 But what I really wanted to talk about tonight --

23 there are so many things to talk about, so I selected one.

R24 A funny thing happened on the way to this hearing, which 25 began for us.nearly a year ago. We learned about the ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

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1932 1 existence of a private business called the Institute for 2 Nuclear Power Operations or INPO.

3 It seems that this business does comprehensive 4 assessments of nuclear plants when hired by the plant's 1

[ 5 owners. Since some of the assessments done at Diablo Canyon 6 by this organization involve plant maintenance, we requested j 7 copies. This seemed like pertinent information.

I

! 8 PG&E refused, saying these INPO reports were very 9 frank, this is their words, honest and self-critical. So 10 they didn't want them to be made public. Now, I find this

( 11 confusing because I' thought the job of the NRC was also to i

l 12 do frank and honest assessments of Diablo Canyon and all 13 nuclear plants, and its reports, of course, are public 14 record. We can all see them l-15 The more vigorously PG&E fought to keep these 16 reports secret, the more it began to look to me like INPO l

l l 17 reports constitute a second set of books, the set you keep 18 under the counter and don't show the auditor. If both the

! -19 NRC and INPO assess nuclear plants, but INPO's reports are 20 too frank to be made public, what is the function of NRC b

l 21 assessments?

l 22 Are they mere window dressing, while the real 23 assessments are kept behind closed doors by a private 24 company that has no power to regulate, no accountability to 25 the public? This is one more way in which the public, which ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

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1933  ;

I was never asked if we wanted this nuclear plant, is kept out )

l 2 of the loop, out of the information loop, and I can't 3 . understand the rationale for INPO documents being secret or ,

l 4 any other assessment of a nuclear plant being kept from the l i

5 public that has to live with the consequences.  !

6 Thank you.

7 [ Applause.]

8 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Just to note for the record, 9 the particular document in question was turned over to the

. 10 Mothers for Peace under a protective order, but they at 11 least have seen it.

12 MS. CULVER: But it will never be public because -

13 -

14 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: It will not be public, but it i

15 ~ may well play a part in the proceeding. We don't know that i

16 yet. We tried to do our best on that one. Scott Torrey.  !

17 FROM THE FLOOR: He won't be here till later.

1 18 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Camina Tripodi.

19 MS. TRIPODI: I'm Camina Tripodi. Dr. Faye 20 participated in a lawsuit filed by Earth Island Institute 21 against Southern California Edison, which operated the San 22 Onofre Nuclear Power Plant in northern San Diego County. It 23 was based on a California Coastal Commission study that 24 found marine life is being harmed by effluent discharges 25 from the plant in violation of the Clean Water Act.

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i 1934 l l

. . 1 All forms of plankton, fish eggs, and adult fishes 2 and kelp are being affected by the San onofre operations. l l

3 Dr. Faye reported that the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant

[

4 releases a similar volume of effluent, measuring one mile 5 square and 15 feet deep daily into the ocean. This  !

6 effluent, which is radioactive, impacts marine life, by l 7 PG&E's own admission.

8 At this time, I'd like to present the Board with I i

9 this book called " Wildlife Watcher's Guide to San Luis  !

10 Obispo County," as an introduction, but by no means a 11 complete description of the life forms for which there is no l 12 plan of evacuation in case of emergency at Diablo Canyon 13 Nuclear Power Plant. l 14 Because there is no plan to evacuate any other }

15 life form but human in the event of an emergency at Diablo 16 Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, the evacuation plan, in my view, 17 is inadequate.

18 Thank you.

19 [ Applause.]

20 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Jesse Arnold.

21 MR. ARNOLD: Good evening, gentlemen of the 22 Licensing Board and members of the public. I'm here to 23 support the Mothers for Peace action in this and to speak 24 against the continued operation of Diablo Canyon.

25 You gentlemen have been very patient in listening ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

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I 1935 i i

1 to everything we've said, even though it hasn't come  !

l 2 strictly under these two items that it's been narrowed down-f 3 to.  ;

i 4 But I think the issue of plant maintenance does  !

5 bear on what I see as a major problem, which has been spoken '!

6 of before, and that's the nuclear waste. In the early '60s 7 when this plant was being proposed, of course, we were told l 8 that it wouldn't take long to build the plant and it 9 wouldn't cost very much and the power would be cheap. ,

10 We have seen all of these things turn out not to  !

11 be true. Also, I think we either didn't think about where i i

12 we were going to put the waste or we were assured that the.  !

I 13 Federal Government would find a place to put the waste. l

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14 But, of course, so far, they haven't. Everyone is saying O

15 not in my back yard and the waste continues to pile up here  !

1 16 at the plant, f

17 Well, the waste storage pool will have to be 18 maintained. So I contend that that comes under the 19 maintenance heading. So the longer the plant operates, the 20 greater this problem becomes.

21 So on that basis, I think we should certainly 22 consider not relicensing or extending the license of this 23 plant and I would feel that you gentlemen could do us all, 24 in this county and in this country and in this world, by 25 deciding to close Diablo now.

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l 1936 I 1- Thank you.

1 - '2 [ Applause.]

3 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Suebob Davis.

4 [No response.]

5 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Patricia Frank.

6 [No responde.]

7 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Kathy DiPeri.

I 8 MS. DiPERI: I've got a couple concerns that I've I l

9 had for a number of years over the power plant. Sometimes I  :

l 10 don't think much of hearings because I feel like public l

11 agencies listen and they make the rules and they accept what  ;

)

12 they want and they don't accept what they don't want.

l 13 I don't know if you're here to listen to people

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14 and really take their concerns. I'd-like to believe that )

O 15 you were. Knowing how the NRC, in the past,'has operated in i

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16 the country, I don't really believe that our real concerns  ;

i 17 are taken into consideration, especially when things like _

I 18 INPO documents and stuff are not open to the public, but-19 they're only open to certain parts and certain people.

20

But I have something that I'd like to talk about 21 that is a concern of mine. I'd like to pass you a copy of f

22 something that I made. It's a picture out of the employee [

23 manual of the pressurized water reactor system. The reason 1

24 I -- you guys probably know what it's all about, most of you 25 PG&E employees should know what it's all about since you're ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

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1937  :

1 1 familiar with all these kind of things and, being on the l 2 NRC, you probably know as much about the system as anybody I i

3 that works at PG&E.

4 There's two types of pressurized water systems, ,

5 reactors, the one made by Westinghouse and the one made'by j t

6 Babcock and Wilcox. One is a once-through system and one is  !

7 a twice-through system. Back during the Three Mi3e Island j i

8 incident, there was a valve, called a manually operated I i

4 9 valve, that was on the pressurized system, that the hydrogen i

10 bubbles in the system ended up at the high point of the i

11 system. l 12 In the reactor, in the once-through system, what '!

i 13 happened when there was a melt -- when it started to melt l 14 down, the zirconium alloy started to melt and it started to l t

15 draw the oxygen out of the water; therefore, leaving behind j i

16 hydrogen bubbles. Those hydrogen bubbles had no place to go l

} l 17 but to the high point of the system, which was of major  !

i 18 concern because it stopped the flow of the water through the j 3

19 system, which was a very serious problem and that was one of

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20 their major concerns at TMI.

I 21 And I think people acted like they didn't know i i

l 22 where the hydrogen bubbles came from, but I think a lot of l i

23 people did know where they came from. Anyway, the concern {

1 1 24 that I have is that the Kimney report was done and it f 25 referred to this exact valve and when the Kimney report was l

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1938 1 finished, because they didn't want to change that valve in 2 all the pressurized water reactors across the country 3 because it would cost too much money, they, instead, deleted l 4 the sentence from the Kimney report so that they didn't have.

l 5 to change this valve all across the country in every single 6 reactor. l t

7 And to this day, Diablo Canyon -- unfortunately, i 8 Diablo Canyon has a different system, but instead of one i

9 manually operated valve and one tube for the water to go i

10 through and instead of one high point for a hydrogen bubble 11 to stop and block the flow, there's 3,386 valves in the j i

12 steam generator, in which there is no valves to release in ]

13 case there's a hydrogen bubble that stops the flow.

i 14 And I think that's a very serious concern and I. )

I 15 think it was brought to the attention of the NRC and  ;

16 probably a lot of other people, but it was kind of shuffled- l 17 under the carpet. Even 60 Minutes wouldn't put it on the j i 18 air because it was such a serious concern. j 19 I don't know '.iow much you guys know about, being 20 part of the NRC, but I think that there's a lot of people in 21 the public who know about it and I think that there's some 22 reel serious concerns about our safety in this community. I

, 23 think it's taken a little bit too lightly by people who get 24 paid well by PG&E, as well as the Safety Committee that 25 comes and let's people speak to the safety issues.

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1939 l t

1 I would like to say that I would hope that.you j

.(~.

2 guys would take this a little bit more serious, and there's

)

3 a number of different issues, as well. It was in the paper i 4 a couple months ago and I know there's litigation going on }

5 right now, where there's belief that the evacuation plan, 6 the safety plan at Diablo was passed as part of a kickback 7 to Willie Brown for a gas contract, and there's litigation l 8 going on that.

l 9 I think that those are some'real serious concerns.

1 10 I think that people ought to think twice about -- if any of l l

11 you guys have a conscience, I think you're going to have a i 12 little bit more to handle than just -- well, let me say 13 this. I can tell you that it might look like people are 14 apathetic now, but I guarantee you're going to have an 15 upward sterno of the license extension is given for this 16 power plant.

17 Thank you.

18 { Applause.)

19 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: I assume that the staff has 20 looked at something like this before they would do this. I 21 don't know anything about it, but the staff may know whether -I 22 it's been part of their looking into the TMI problems.  !

23 Orval Osborne.

24 [:No response.]

l 25 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Peggy Koteen.  ;

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1940 l

1 {No response.]

2 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: At some point, I will come back 3 to these names for people who arrive late. Liz Appleberg.

4 MS. APPLEBERG: Almost 20 years ago, in 1973, I, 5 along with Sandy Silver, filed to intervene in the licensing 6 procedures for the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant.

7 At that point, we listed, and this is in November i

8 of 1973, five concerns with the licensing of the plant.

I 9 They were effects of long-term low level radiation releases, 10 effects of accidents at Diablo, the Price-Anderson Act, and 11 the effects of not having insurance liability, disposal of 12 radioactive waste, and the existence of a possibility of 13 sabotage at the plant.

14 At that point, and it wasn't for several more 15 months that we filed an amended intervention form, that we 16 added in the seismic issues, and that was very early in 17 1974. At that point, we were very., very naive. We felt 18 that if we just were able to bring out the information about j 4

19 the problems with nuclear power in general and Diablo Canyon 20 specifically that that would be it, they would cease 21 construction of the plant and our county would be safe 3 22 again.

23 However, PG&E, in their response to us, quickly 24 addressed some of our issues. They said some of our issues 25 were not for an individual licensing hearing because t*.ey ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

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1941 1 dealt with nuclear power plants in general. And when you 2 are talking about a specific plant, you can only detail how 3 it's that plant specifically. They also said some issues 4 involved challenges to AEC. The AEC was the Atomic Energy  ;

i 5 Commission, the forerunner of the Nuclear Regulatory 6 Commission. I i

7 Some subjects were under review at AEC rulemaking l; 8 hearings and some were not relevant to the operating i 9 licensing hearing, the Price-Anderson Act or the insurance, 10 if we had problems with that, we should take it up with our l l

11 Congressmen. ]

o  !

l 12 Well, we moved onward without any attorneys. We J l

13 were given some of the contentions to go forward with. Some i I

14 of the contentions which we were not given are still i u

l C:) 15 problems that all of us in the community are concerned with; j l 16 the effects of.long-term low level radiation, the effects of l' l

17 an accident at the plant, not just safe evacuation, which we 18 were given as a contention, but the other effects, what 19 happens to our farmlands, what happens to our homes, what 20 happens to the people who cannot be evacuated.

21 As far as wastes go, I would just like to say that 22 PG&E, in July of 1974, in dealing with waste problems at 23 Diablo, stated "No permanent storage is contemplated on-24 site. The Board" -- the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board -

25 - " believes that the long-term storage of the order of one l

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1942 1 year is properly a consideration in the spent fuel cycle." ]

2 In other words, there was no long-term storage contemplated i

3 at all.

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i 4 We were often blocked in our efforts to gain

{

5 specific information, not only from PG&E attorneys. This we  !

6 expected. PG&E attorneys are hired; they're part of i

7 corporate, they're hired by corporate to get the plant on-l 8 line so that their company can make its money. But we were 9 also hampered by attorneys from the Nuclear Regulatory i 10 Commission, who are supposed to be on the side of public j 11 health and safety.

f 12 And correct me if I'm wrong, but the NRC is 13 charged with public health and safety, not to protect the [

14 interests of PG&E. As a matter of fact, on Saturday, I sort  !

15 of had a deja vu flashback when the attorney for PG&E i 16 objected.to one of the documents of the Mothers being put j 17 into the record. In my mind, I said the NRC staff, they  !

18 should want to have the most complete record as possible so 19 that we can be protected.  !

l 20 But here they were objecting, not PG&E, but the l

21. NRC attorneys objecting to a document being put into the f 22 record. Thank you for putting it in anyway. And that 23 reminded me of something that happened a few years into our 24 intervention. We, for the first few years, had no  !

25 attorneys, acted as our own attorneys and the Atomic Safety l 4

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l 1943 l 1 and Licensing Eoard was very helpful. l lO 2 When we got attorneys, PG&E did the following.

i 3 They took us off their mailing list, me and Sandra Silver, l 4 who had' intervened as individuals and as members of the 5 Mothers for Peace. They took us off of the mailing list for  ;

i 6 all of the documents and then they said that, and this is 7 from the attorney from PG&E, "I felt it proper to delete r

8 her," being me, "from the distribution list, along with the  !

i 9 other members," the other intervenors. "In any event, with  !

i 10 all due respect to Mrs. Appleberg, I doubt that she can make ,

1 11 meaningful use on her own of the materials we are filing. {

12 In addition, they have all of these attorneys."

l 13 Well, I questioned whether the expense of serving  ;

14 all of these peop? tould show up in the rate case. We here )

.O 15 at PG&E are constantly admonished to prune our distribution 16 list consistent with the dictates of due process and fair 17 play.

18 We had to petition the Atomic Safety and Licensing.

19 Board to get put back on the mailing list without any word 20 at all from the NRC staff as to whether this was fair to the 21 people of the County of San Luis Obispo.

22 So for 20 years, we've been raising the problems 23 and issues surrounding Diablo Canyon and nuclear power in 24 general. Nothing that PG&E has ever said has answered our 25 concerns. There still.is radiation being released. There l'

ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.  ;

Court Reporters j 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 l Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950 l 1

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1944 1 still will be even more radiation released from an old plant 2 if they get the extension.

3 There still are problems with the emergency core 4 cooling system, which has never been tested in full-scale l

l 5 plants. It was never tested in smaller plants and Diablo '

6 Canyon is one of the generation of larger plants.

7 Twenty years ago, some of us were younger. We had 8 little children that played on the floor during the 9 hearings. Some of us are older. There are now intervenors 10 here who have little children. And I think that as long as 11 Diablo Canyon -- PG&E persists with Diablo Canyon, the 12 members of this community and the Mothers for Peace will be 13 here to hopefully stop it, but, if not, to make sure that it 14 runs a whole lot safer.

15 [ Applause.]

16 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: George Lewis.

17 MR. LEWIS: My name is George Lewis. I've been a 18 professor of mathematics at Cal Poly for 26 years. I have 19 two concerns. One is that with all of the interesting 20 surprises that nuclear power has presented to the world 21 during its brief existence,- it seems to me that to extend 22 the license of a plant like this some 15 years before the l 23 present license expires is simply preposterous and 24 irresponsible, considering that during that time one would 25 learn a great deal about, among other things, maintenance. l O ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

1945 1 Secondly, m extremely upset that during the last 2 20 years, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has refused to-3 face up to the problems of nuclear waste. One of the things 1

4 that you're taught if you're a mathematician, and I'm not a l l

5 good mathematician, I relic, but one of the things that you l 6 are taught is to recognize when there is a problem and when  ;

7 that problem has not been solved.  ;

8 [ Applause.] '

i 9 MR. LEWIS: But I don't need my Ph.D. in

10 mathematics to recognize that in this case. I simply needed f

.11 what my mother gave me during my upbringing. It's obvious.  ;

12 And as a citizen, I'm outraged that the nuclear industry l

13 would be allowed _to proliferate, when you have highly i 14 hazardous materials with catastrophic potential, potential 15 that I don't even think you, sir, as a nuclear engineer, q 16 would say that we begin to appreciate.  !

17 And to relicense the plant in the light of just 18 elementary common sense at this time is simply, to me, 19 unthinkable. Thank you very much.

20 [ Applause.]

21 JUDGE BECF'OEFER: Robert Allen, j t

22 [No response.] l 23 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Jackie Marcus.

i 24 [:N o r e s p o n s e . ]

l 25 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Franklin Wakefield.

i O ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N . W .. , Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

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i 4 1946 1 1 [No response.]

i

)..

1 2 . JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Katie Wheeler.

j. 3 [No response.]

4 Anne Cruikshanks.

JUDGE BECHHOEFER:

l j 5' [No response.]

i l 6 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Keith Denny.

7 [:No response.]

l 8 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Charmaine Gallagher.

[ 9 [No response.]

I

! 10 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Lei Lynn Odom. l l- I 11 [:No response.] -{

l  !

L 12 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Richard Smith.  !

d' i

[:No response.]

13 I 14 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Daniel Westcott.

15 [No response.]

j' 16 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Elizabeth Burke.

{ 17 [No response.]

! 18 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Linda Owen.

19 [No response.]

20 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Darryl Phillips.

l f 21 [No response.]

j 22 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Pat Veesart, a

23 [No response.]

l 24 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Jeff Buechler.

l 25 [No response.]

Y i

ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

j' . Court Reporters

. 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006~

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d i

1947 i 1 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Ralph Blinkwolt. j O: 2 [No response.]

t

'3 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Polly Cooper. i l' l l 4 [:No response.] i 5 MS. GALLAGHER: Charmaine Gallagher is here. l 6 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: I think I just called your  ;

7 name, so come on up here. i i 8 MS. GALLAGHER: Good evening. Charmaine  !

l \

9 Gallagher. I'm interested in ensuring our continued I i

10 renewable resources use and our long-term protection of our 11 oceans and our coaste, and that's my first and foremost ,

12 basis. I 13 Therefore, I find it's imperative that we l

14 seriously look at the past environmental baseline studies at O 15 Diablo Canyon and that will also include some of'the Shomosh q

16 and their rights to access. After all, I found that'they' l 17 have been very good maintainers of their environment for up' 18 to 9,000 years and I think that's pretty important.

19 But I'd like to continue to monitor some of these

'20 contaminants that do come through and I'd like us to l

21 continue to have some of these studies, comparative studies j 22 available to us. l l

23 I want to be sure that the marine life, including 24 the fish, the nectin, the plankton, the micro-surface layers 25 on top of the water are looked at in a serious way. I-ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K. Street,.N.W., Suite 300 Washington,-D.C. 20006

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1948 j -

j 1 understand there is a mussel watch program and I understand

- i

[l' 2 that it is actually contracted out by PG&E and that l 3 information goes through PG&E upon their request.

l i j 4 That's fine, but I want to be sure that our water  ;

{ 5 quality control people take a good look at that. Therefore, ,

6 we know how the maintenance comes out and how our power l

1 4 7 plant is being maintained based on the bicassay from 8 monitoring. i i

9 I want to be sure that we know what it will take j 10 to convince the public that the NRC has our environment as ,

t j 11 their primary concern. If you do promise us that you are l 12 continuing these studies and making comparisons of the +

i ,

j 13 baseline studiec that were done in the past, then we will i f ,

! 14 have faith in you and we will have faith that there is 15 .perhaps some future.

i t

l 16 We continue to seek an ocean sanctuary and if we I

i 27 are not pleased with the way the monitoring appears to go, 1

l 18 we'll find other options. Some of that is to try to.look 19 forward to having the Clean Water Act restrengthened when l 20 they reenact it. We'll try to use that as part of our area.

i 21 So we just want to be sure that you're with us.

j 22 Thank you.

23 [ Applause.]

l 24 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: I guess we'll take a quick 25 break. But let me ask, Ms. Gallagher, you were talking 1-1

[

i ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

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1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 l Washington, D.C. 20006 l (202) 293-3950 l4

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l 1949 1'

L 1 about "we," who is we?

2 MS. GALLAGHER.: All of us, the ocean sanctuary, l

3 all of us who have --

4 JUDGE.BECHHOEFER: I see. She is not a particular l

5 group. I wondered who "we" referred to rather than you.

6 MS. GALLAGHER: I'm sorry. Multiple 7 personalities. Really, it is the Ocean Sanctuary Coalition 8 of San Luis Obispo. It's a very, very strong group and it l

9 really works to extend the National Marine Sanctuary from i 10 Monterey down through San Luis Obispo County. On top of

]

l 11 that, we are trying to be in concert with all the other i 12 ocean activities. So it is a strong group of close to 200 l

13 members.

14 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Thank you. 1

(:) 15 [ Applause.)

i l

16 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: That's another subject that we  ;

i 17 trust the staff with constantly monitoring, the studies that ]

18 go on. Let's take about a five-minute break.

19 [ Recess.)

20 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: We'll come to order again. The 21 next speaker will be Gerry Gant.

22 [No response.)

23 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: No Gerry Gant. That's from 24 tonight's sign-up. Carl Kempton.

25 MR. KEMPTON: Thank you. I would like to relate ANU RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300-Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950 1

i l

i 1950 ,

l 1

'l to you a conversation I had with the emergency services j 2 people here in the county.

3 JUDGE BECRHOEFER: Make sure you identify yourself 4 for the reporter.

5 MR. KEMPTON: My name is Carl Kempton. I am a 6 former energy planner for the County of San Luis Obispo. I 7 was employed on a contract basis from June of 1990 to June 8 of 1991. Part of my employment responsibilities had to do 9 with the overseeing of petroleum storage sites, petroleum 10 transportation corridors, etcetera.

11 Within that information, I came across the fs :t 12 and did subsequent investigations and found out that there 13 is a significant problem with the evacuation plan of the 14 county. Neither the proponents nor the opponents of Diablo 15 brought into their considerations the existence of two tank 16 farms along evacuation lines.

l 17 Both of these tank farms will fail in a major 18 earthquake of the kind that people are fearing that would ,

1 i

19 breach Diablo. There are millions and millions of gallons 20 of petroleum products stored at both of these facilities.

e 21 One is in Morro Bay over Highway 1, the other is at Avila 22 Beach.

23 The one at Avila Beach contains in storage not  ;

i 24 only oil, but gasoline and diesel. In the event of a major 25 earthquake, there is a high potential of fire associated O ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W ,' Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 F (202) 293-3950

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i 1951 l I with this. Should the fire occur, you will have Avila Beach 2 totally isolated and impossible to evacuate. There will be-3 a river fire potentially going down San Luis Creek, under  !

4 the bridge, through which there is supposedly a northern 5 escape across through a dirt road. It will be impossible. i 6 Now, in taking this information to the emergency  ;

i 7 services of this county, the response in this paper, and )

8 this response I also had on the phone, is that the county 9 does not have a plan to deal with an emergency just with 10 this tank farm should it collapse. They've never considered  ;

i 11 it.

l 12 Just in an isolated context. We're not talking 13 about Diablo or anything. The response will be -- right i 14 now, if there was a major accident out at that tank farm, j l

15 they would look at the accident and then respond j 16 accordingly. That's a quote in the newspaper. That's a i

17' quote I've gotten over the phone. I I

18 This is a major flaw in the evacuation plan. To '

19 further illustrate the significance of this problem is that 20 there was a development to the south of this tank farm 21 wherein land was annexed by the City of Pismo Beach. There 22 was a line drawn by the Energy Division in this county as to

- 23 the northernmost extent that this land can be annexed 24 because of the flash point of explosion from the tank farm.

25 The radius of this potential explosion _is I

s,>

ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950 i

1952 1 approximately at least 400 yards, which means it goes over 2 Avila itself, which is highly populated.

3 There are no government regulations in the state 4 that have anything to do with these tank farms, because 5 they're " grandfathered" in. The 1989 earthquake that 6 occurred in the Bay Area, Santa Cruz, Watsonville, sparked 7 legislation in this state for retrofitting of buildings.

8 The lobby of industry in this state was powerful enough to 9 exclude industry from retrofitting, which means these tank 10 farms are still not regulated for earthquake safety. -

11 Chevron Oil, in response to a reporter's 12 investigation of this in Morro Bay, Chevron admitted that 13 there has been no seismic tests of their tank farm. They

. - 14 have no idea what their tank farm can withstand.

l 15 UNOCAL has yet to prove that they have done any l

16 sufficient studies. This is a major flaw and if this has l 17 been staring at us in our face, both the opponents and the 1

18 proponents have totally missed this and this is the first ,

1 19 time this is coming to you in public testimony. You threw f 20 this out as a contention from the Mothers.

21 This is serious, serious stuff on top of l 22 everything else which has come before you. The emergency 23 service plan cannot deal with a two-dimensional or three-24 dimensional problem.

25 Thank you.

O- ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.  ;

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1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950 l

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i 4

1953 l 1 [ Applause.] l 2 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Kelly Lewis. i 3 MR. LEWIS: I'm here on behalf of my one-week-old l 4 daughter. As we were taking our first walk on the beach  !

4 5 Saturday in Montana De Oro, Spooner's Cove, which is right  ;

6 over the hill from the power plant, the siren test went off. f!

7 There's a siren right above us at the ranger station. As 8 that siren howled, so did my daughter. She screamed in 9 terror.

10 I realized at that point what could actually be i i

11 happening if it were not a test, if it were a true accident. ,

12 There would be no reasonable escape. The campground was j i

13 full. The parking lots were full with tourists knowing not l 14 what to do, in a state of panic, trying to escape down four  !

, 15 miles of crooked road, running into Los Osos, a population-l 16 of 13,000 people trying to rush out South Bay Boulevard, 17 which is also a windy road that goes along the bay. l l

l 18 The escape is unconscionable. It just could not l l

19 happen. I could not see reasonable evacuation from Los Osos 20 nor Montana De Oro, which is right next door to the plant.

21 I can only pray that you would consider the lives of our 22 children. That in no way relates to our lives here. We

! 23 live in fear. We have to because we know that this could 24 happen at any time.

25 I know that you say that the plant is safe, but I ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 I Washington, D.C. 20006 2 (202) 293-3950 L _ - .

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-m 1954 f

1 just can't believe that and I can't believe that there is j

-O. 2 any way of escaping the impending doom that stands at our  ;

3 doorsteps.

l 4 [ Applause.]

5 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Lee Webb.  !

6 MR. WEBB: Mr. Chairman and members of the Board,-

7 I am here -- my name is Lee Webb and I'm here to speak on l l

8 behalf of all those in the 20-mile radius of this nuclear 9 power plant, who live in quiet desperation, 1 .ieving there ,

i 10 is nothing they can do about it.  !

11 I speak to them and I say to you that when PG&E 12 came to you to request permits for this power plant some 20 13 years ago, that they came offering inexpensive electricity.

14 And I want to tell you that the rates have tripled since l

l 15 then. So I call into credibility PG&E as purveyors of the 16 truth, because there's nothing that they're going to have to 17 tell us after that that we're going to accept as truth. ,

j 18 I'm wondering if anybody is not aware of why that 19 PG&E requests at this time, 15 years prior to the time their 20 license term runs out, that their license be renewed. Can 21 anybody doubt that they expect that it will be more 22 difficult to have that license extension approved each day 23 and each year from now on up until the end of that 15 years?

24 Of course, that's the reason they're asking it at i

25 this time.

l r

ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K. Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

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1 1955  ?

6 1 [ Applause.] l 2 MR. WEBB:

L PG&E will exploit the people and their  ;

3 rights, including their property rights, to the fullest l 4 extent of their financial clout, and that's considerable. i 5 Let me say to you that if this power plant were safe, I j 6 doubt that everyone within a 20-mile radius of that power l i

7 plant would have to sign a caveat before they buy property l I

8 in this area.

9 Are you aware that we have to sign a caveat

, 10 stating that we are aware that this plant is apt to leak and l

)

11 have an accident and that we will have to be evacuated from }

12 the area, to leave our homes at any time of the day or  ;

13 night? Does that sound like something that should be l i

14 imposed upon a populous? People in here live.in terror of i i

15 this place.  !

i 16 If you don't live in terror of this nuclear power j i

17 plant, you're either on the payroll of PG&E or uninformed. j 3

18 [ Applause.) I 19 MR. WEBB: They don't let us forget the terrible  :

20 thing that can happen over there because they've scattered 21 these sirens all around the county as grim reminders that 1  ;

22 this must happen at some time.  !

23 For one, I protest this. I think that it is a i 24 regrettable thing whenever the leaders of our nation, the  !

25 leaders of our local communities allow this type of a l l

1 ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

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1956 l'

1 horrible thing to be imposed upon a community. There were 2 over 100,000 people within that 100-mile radius -- within l 3 that 20-mile radius when these people brought that power 4 plant in here. Probably 30,000 homes. i l 5 I'm wondering how many people are aware that if )

l l 6 there's one leak over there and you're evacuated from your

)

7 home, the value of your home goes straight to almost nothing I 8 immediately. You couldn't sell a piece of property within a 9 20-mile radius of that place if there's a leak over there.

10 These are not the kind of contingencies that I  ;

I 11 think we should have to live with in this country that we 12 call a country of freedom. We don't have to import terror.

13 PG&E has brought it to us.

14 [ Applause.]

.O 15 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Laura Tremeer.

16 MS. TREMEER: Hello. I'm Laura Tremeer. I'd just 17 like to reiterate what others have been saying tonight, that 18 everybody in this community is t errified of Diablo. It's a

.19 constant reminder in your mind that you're having a great 20 time at the beach or at school or at work or whatever it is 21 you're doing and it's right there at the back of your mind.

22 That scares everybody and.it's not right.

23 It's not fair to the people of this community.

24 It's not fair to our future generations. There's a point in 25 people's lives when they have to look and say is what we are (1

ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006  ;

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1957 -

1 doing safe and effective for future generations, and this :bs  !

2 not. This is something that in 20 years our children and 3 their children are going to have to deal with wastes that we 1

4 are using for our energy source, that we are using to supply j i

5 our own existence, and we're letting somebody else take the j 6 bill. We're not taking it ourselves.  !

i 7 This is not something that we, as Americans, we, l i

8 as Californians, should do to other people in the future  !

i I

9 And it's not like we don't have another choice. There are 10 other ways out there that we can use.. There are other a 4 11 resources that we can use that are effective, that are safe,  !

l 12 that are endless, that are effective, and that is the use of 13 solar energy.

14 This is something that could cost a lot of money 15 for the community and for the state, but this is something 16 that has to be done. We can't have a situation where in 20 1

17 years we have Diablo Canyon sitting out there, the Devil's .i 18 Canyon, that the Shomosh, the Spanish explorers all called

- 19 the Devil's Canyon, three miles off the coast of Hosgri 20 fault line, which is right there where, if there's a major 21 disaster, we'll all be wiped out.

22 It won't matter if we're workers in the community.

23 It won't matter if we're citizens that are -- it doesn't

]J 24 matter who it is, it's going to hit San Luis Obispo. We've 25 had faults in Santa Cruz, the earthquakes up there and in i

ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

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i J' 1958

1 San Francisco. It's clear that there are natural disasters e
- 2 everywhere in the world and maybe other nuclear power plants I,

l 3 are also in danger.

4 But we're concerned about this one. This is the

5 one that we have to face everyday, the one that we have to J

l 6 listen to the sirens and know that it's out there and know i

! 7 that just a tra-la-la day in the park could just be all of a l-l 8 sudden wiped out and gone. Then we have to dump everything i

l 9 in Nevada, dump it on somebody else, and that's not fair to E

j 10 the people there. It's not fair to have an energy resource s

l 11 that we know nothing about and the long-term effects of what i

j 12 it will do to the country, what it will do to the world or 13 what it will do just to our little community.

l I 14 The sun is a natural resource that, for our i

15 lifetime and certainly for lifetimes to come, is going to be-16 there and it's going to be a usable resource that should be i

i 17 looked at seriously as an alternative. People in this l 18 community, I think, would jump on the opportunity to have a i

j. 19 nuclear power plant rather than to have Diablo Canyon and 20 the only people I know out there that are for Diablo Canyon 21 are the people that work there. Everybody else is against 22 it.

23 So, basically, that's my personal opinion and I 24 hope that the people in the community share that with me. I 25 don't believe that nuclear power should be used. I don't O ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

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I 1959' j l ,

I 1 believe that we should give Diablo this opportunity to have f

.O 2 their contract reassigned because of the fact that we don't i

j i

3 know much about it. People of the community do know that it j 4 was built ineffectively and was reenforced and stabilized to i

5 the point that their researchers say is effective, to what  !

i 6 geologists, who are studying professors at universities, l

l t

l 7 tell the kids it's not safe.

l 8 Certainly, as a student myself, it scares me to 9 death to hear a teacher of geology, that's had past history 10 and studied his entire life, to hear him say that it's not -

11 - that if he was in charge of it, it would have been -- it  !

12 never would have been started, and certainly that's one 13 teacher's opinion. l 14 But I think that these kind of things is )

15 important. This is the most important thing that one day 16 all of us may have to face a situation where it's either -- j i

17 it's going to be the people that can't get out well and the l l

18 people that can't -- there's someone that's going to have to l 19 feel really bad about that. If it came down to that, 20 there's someone and there's a group of people that are going 21 to be responsible and that's going to feel real bad for them 22 if that's what it comes down, because of the fact that we

.23 know the case history of California as being a faulty area 24 where there is areas that have natural fault lines where the 25 situations like this can occur.

ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 l

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1960 1 It seems like with the amount of time and energy

\

2 and community money and maybe the money that we pay to pay 3 our bills and to pay PG&E, maybe it's gone up and maybe it 4 will go up even further if there was ever an opportunity to 5 use solar energy instead of nuclear energy.

6 I think that people in this community, especially 7 people that aren't working, people that, at this point, 8 don't have jobs, would be a lot more interested in putting 9 time and effort and energy into creating an alternate energy 10 source than having Diablo Canyon still functioning.

11 And the people that work out there certainly would 12 be included in this. It's a type of situation where 13 obviously if Diablo Canyon gets turned off, we're going to 14 need energy from somewhere, right? There's going to have to 15 be something that gives us energy.

16 It seems like even basic fundamental -- just 17 reasoning would be there as an alternate resource, and I 18 think that people are overlooking it and it needs to be 19 noticed and needs to be worked on as an alternate resource.

20 I think that everybody needs to also evaluate is 21 it worth it to put all of us in this danger. Is it worth it 22 to you? Can people sleep at night knowing that there are 23 millions of people or thousands of pecple whose lives are in 24 danger because of this? This is something that actually 25 puts people's lives in danger.

O' ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950 I

F I

f 1961 l l

1 It's something that -- it's not right. It's not  !

l 2 right to do that to a community. It's not right to do it to l 3 their children. It's not right to leave them with that  !

i 4 responsibility, because there's no way that in 20 years i 5 we'll be able to go in and say, okay, here, now let's take l

6 care of this byproduct that we've created or whatever we've l t

7 done with it. I don't know if they're dumping it in the  !

I t

8 ocean or where they're putting it, but certainly we're  !

i 9 hoping that someone is going to take responsibility for it, 10 because it's not the right of us to leave it to other 11 generations of people to deal with something. l 12 In this lifetime, we have to have an energy source  !

13 that we can be responsible for. It's byproduct. It's what l 14 happens millions of years from now for future people, 15 because they can live, they can continue, humans can go on j 16 as a species, but not if we stop it ourselves, not if we

{

l 17 walk in and say our eyes are open, we see'what we're doing,

l j 18 but we're going to do it anyway. It's not fair to the 19 people.

20 Thank you.

i- 21 [ Applause.]

4 22 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Susan Foster.

23 MS. FOSTER: Hello. I want to thank everybody 24 here because everything that's been said is the truth so 25 far, from what I have heard, and there's so-much to bring up ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD. j Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 i (202) 293-3950

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1962 -

1 right now, I really don't know what to start with.

2 For the thing I say, I want to thank Kathy DiPeri 3 for bringing up the issues about the plant and the reactors  !

4 and the valves that were never changed. I don't understand l 5 how anybody could allow something like this. It's a silent 6 bomb and it's already leaking everywhere. This is just one l

?

7 plant and there are thousands of them.  ;

- i 3

8 There's problems all over the world right now with 9 these plants and everyone is aware of them and everyone is i

10 becoming conscious of the environment. So as we're seeing 11 that we're all family and we all have children and we all 12 love this earth that we live on and respect it, it's time to

?

13 stop. It's time to start over. It's time to realize how 14 dangerous this is to life and existence here. j O 15 There's just so many things. This is just --

i t

16 there are so many things brought up here. The one thing i

17 that's the most important is that the plant is unsafe and 18 there are valves that should have been changed. And because  :

19 they weren't changed at this plant, all the other plants 20 didn't change them either.

21 It's like we've got a mother plant here and people 22 are seeing that all over. Hanford is just -- there is so j 23- much waste there, I can't even -- I wake up thinking, oh, 24 God, I am still alive, I've got to do something. That's i

25 what I'm here for. This is our home and we have -- we

"- O ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

i 1963 i

1 definitely have -- we owe it to all the generations, we owe 3 i

2 it to our children and their children's children to live up 3 to respectful, intelligent beings and not -- there's  ;

- 4 ignorance going on. l 5 I don't see how you can even look at these people j 6 and say, well, I trust that they know what they're doing. I l

7 mean, how can you trust anything like that? It's a silent l

8 disease that's already been leaked out. Why didn't we get  !

9 it from Chernobyl? Do we have to have it happen here in our l t

10 own backyard?

11 Before Chernobyl, there were 25 accidents in this  !

I 12 country that we were not told about. What's going on here? l 13 I mean, don't you -- doesn't anybody get it? The people who j l

14 are working, the PG&E people, I don't understand you. When l

..O 15 are you going to see that we want you to be a part of this j

16 planet, too, and a part of the natural energy resources?

s 17 And there is. And as you've heard, it was stopped by Reagan j 18 and Bush, basically. The solar power was stopped and it's 19 just time to start that all up-again.

20 I don't care how much money it costs. You know 21 you can make money when you need it. This is what's 22 happening and nobody cares about that anymore. This :Us a

23 planet that's suffering and you can see that it's reacting

, 24 all over the world. There's earthquakes and hurricanes and 25 everything, let alone what we do to ourselves.

. ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950 l

i 1964 1 It's just time to stop and look and think about 2 your own families and think about the family on this planet j 3 as a whole. If you think you can leave kere without a l l

4 guilty conscience and keep doing this and keep neglecting  ;

5 and ignoring the people who -- this is leaked out to 6 everyone. This isn't something that no one -- there's l l

7 hardly anybody that doesn't know about this and here we are  ;

i 8

~

in our own place, in our own town, and there's a plant there i

9 on two major fault lines and it's already leaking into the  !

10 ocean and it's like saying, well, you know, the FDA can  !

t 11 allow so many rat hairs in ketchup. l l

12 You can't allow so much radiation into the ocean.  !

i 13 You just can't. You can't allow this to go on. And I know 14 it sounds funny, but, you know, they do. They allow so many O 15 rat hairs in ketchup and I don't want the FDA running my 16 life and my planet and I certainly don't want PG&E to run my 17 life and this earth. I want us to all work together and see 18 that this is our life and this is generations of existence.

19 This is people being born and people leaving every day 20 If we have no place to come, if you think there is 21 somewhere else and you can just leave this plant in this 22 universe like a garbage dump, you're crazy, because it's 23 going to be here and we're all going to have to face it. So 24 we all have to work together.

25 I really -- I'm just upset that I hear stuff-that l

l l

O- IJRJ RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters j 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 )

Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

.1965 8 l

1 sounds ridiculous to me. I hope you all think about this j l

2 and hear everybody. It's not going to stop if you allow l 3 this to go on. I'll tell you, there are people all over the l i

4 world that are protesting and they aren't just protesting in j 5 one place. ,

6 They're coming from all over the world because

.l 7 they've seen it in their country and they know where their  !

8 lives belong and they know that this is a major thing now.

9 I want you to hear your inner voices and your heart and the l l

10 child in you to listen and to look back to when you were a j 11 kid playing on the beach. Did you have to worry about this l

[

12 kind of crap? No. We didn't know anything like this. The l 13 children now, they do. And how do you think this effects  ;

14 them? j 15 They learn, they hear their teachers, they're j 16 fighting. And if we can't protest and we can't tell you how f j' 17 we feel and what we know and what we've learned and you }

18 don't listen to that, I don't know what else is worth here. l 19 I hope you listen to everybody. j 20 Thank you, j 21 [ Applause.]

22 JUDGE BECRHOEFER: Christine Marchant. l 23 MS. MARCHANT: My name is Christine Marchant.

24 Beyond the morass of facts, figures and technical l 25 information difficult for the layperson.to grasp, two very. .

1 i

I ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

j Court Reporters i 1632 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

t 1966 l

1 simple questions come to mind. I'm sure they've been  !

2 mentioned over and over again, but I'll say it one more .!

i 3 time. j 4 Is it common sense to run a nuclear power plant j 5 near an earthquake fault, regardless of all the so-called i 6 safety measures that have been worked out? Is it common I

7 sense to keep this plant functioning when we don't know how 8 to store the waste it's producing?

I l

9 One doesn't have to be a nuclear physicist to know  !

10 that it is not common sense to do either of these things, {

11 and, yet, it is being done. Why? Could it be that like the 12 defense industry, Diablo Canyon, among other plants, 13 functions essentially, not as some would pretend, to serve  !

i 14 the people of this county or, for that matter, of other O 15 places around the country and the world, but to make vast 16 profits for those who run them.

l 17 And as long as profit is the motive and not j 1

18 people, no power plant can be safe and especially not this '

19 one.

20 To appeal to your common sense would be an 21 illusion on my part. To appeal to your conscience would be 22 an illusion on my part, also, because it is not in your 23 interest to use either. But it certainly is ours. People 24 have more power than we suppose and with the tenacity --

25 when we think that for the'last 20 years, these women, the ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 l Washington, D.C. 20006 I (202) 293-3950 l

1 l

. ~ . - _ _ . - . _ - . - _. . . - . . . . - . . . - - - . - . _ _ . . - - . . - - . - - - -

l 1967 l

1 Mothers for Peace, have put their lives and their families l

l 2 on the line.

i 3 They have spent millions of hours, voluntear l

l 4 hours. They're not being paid fancy wages to make these i

l 5 decisions. They've put their lives on the line. They 6 shouldn't have to do this. We should be able to live 7 without wasting our lives getting up and talking like this l

! 8 for hours and hours year after year after year after year, 9 but that's not the case.

10 But, thankfully, we have groups like Mothers for 11 Peace who keep our consciences alive, at least some of us.

12 I can't speak for all of us. But, no doubt, one day, one-k 13 day we can slay the giant together. Now, also -- let me 14 finish.

1 15 [ Applause.]

16 MS. MARCHANT: Also, in addition, I'd like to add l 17 this, hearing some of the information today. If we know, if  !

18 we know in this room that one document, one very important l 19 document is being concealed, we can be sure that even more ,

i  !

20 revealing and condemning information is being concealed, i I

21 also. We shouldn't trust anybody with our lives, especially 22 those whose interests are financial rather than moral and j 23 ethical.

l l 24 Thank you.

i 25 [ Applause . ]

b I ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

! Court Reporters l 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 _j

. Washington, D.C. 20006 l (202) 293-3950  !

l

t 1968

4. 1 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Bill Seavers. l i

2 MR. SEAVERS: Good evening. My name is Bill j 3 Seavers and living for a sustainable future is my game.

4 I've spent probably, I don't know, quite a few hours since  ;

5 last Wednesday's public comments writing and writing and j 6 writing all kinds of things and I probably have at least a j i

7 dozen pages of all the reasons why we shouldn't extend the 8 license and we should live a better future.

1 9 But I've sort of boiled it down to a simple thing 10 that I wrote just an hour before coming here. So I'll read 11 it, since I'm incredibly nervous.  ;

12 I've been-an SLO resident for over 20 years and

]

I l 13 have witnessed the Diablo power facility being built and 14 operating. I've studied and graduated in areas that would O 15 allow my services valuable designing and construction such a .i 1

16 facility. I have many years of welding and construction 17 experience that could be of great asset to the power i

I 18 facility.

19 I even considered working at Diablo. I didn't 20 because I didn't want to be a part of something so

[ 21 potentially dangerous to the future of us all and other life 22 on earth.

23 Regarding the people that come to these things,.

24 the people that come forward to speak out at the comments at 25 this time, as I see it, are the people who have some vested l

ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 i Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950 y

l 1 _<

.. .- _ - -. . .. . . = -.

a l

1969 ,

1 interest in the plant, such as PG&E employees, relatives or 2 some other financially related tie to the nuclear industry.

i 3 Secondly, people that have nothing to gain except  !

l 4 the future they would like to have others to live in and a  !

l 5 future worth living in, hopefully free of toxic substances  !

L 6 and a sustainable future that isn't primarily motivated by l r

7 power and money politics. Then, sadly, the remaining people 8 who don't speak out are the majority of the ones who are 9 misinformed, who don't know, don't care or don't have time l

10 to come forward.

11 This is the largest unrepresented group of people  ;

i i 12 who are so busy with their lives and everyday living, they 13 just go along with whatever is given them. If they had j i

14 choices of where and what type of energy, I'm confident they O 15 would prefer a more benign source. {

16 Getting into the energy related things, the other  !

17 choices have been incorrectly named or labeled as i i

18 alternative energy sources. Reality is they are the primary j l

19 sources'that are given false names to make the public  !

I 20 believe fossil fuels, nuclear fuel and other such types are

{

21 the major and primary sources.  !

22 Fossil fuels, nuclear fuels and the like steal 23 from the earth without replacement compensation and rob the  !

24 future of those who inhabit the earth. Any choice that does 25 not come from a renewable source, such as solar energy, is i

ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.  !

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 1 (202) 293-3950

i

, 1970  ;

t i

1 robbing from the future and is in violation of inherent O 2 natural law.

f 3 The choice is very clear to me. Do not extend f 4 PG&E's license extension. Do not plan to or build any other 5 nuclear power facilities. Do not proliferate more nuclear f r

6 development. How much longer do you think it will take 7 before nuclear weapons will be small enough and readily i 8 available to very unstable minds who will not hesitate to i

9 use them? i 10 What would it have been like if a 1,500-pound 11 nuclear bomb was detonated instead of the conventional l

12 explosives at the World Trade Center? Stop the insanity.. i i 13 It is your job at the NRC to shape a better future. We, the l i

14 people, can do very little unless united.

O 15 Just because AEC was labeled NRC, you do not have )

16 to continue making the wrong choices. Nuclear power is 17 getting more expensive and can only get costlier as time 18 goes on. Who is going to pay for the cost of burying waste 19 for the next million generations?

20 Thank you for your careful consideration for.the 21 future. Thank you.

22 [ Applause.]

23 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Donald Danna.

24 MR. DANNA:

~

Good evening. 'My name is Donald 25 Danna. I just want to let you guys know that myself and my O. ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

[

l 1971  ;

i 1 family, we don't want your power plant her4 . It's a bad l 2 investment . It's not cheap energy. I don't think you've 3 factored in the price of dealing with all the waste, unless j 4 you have and that's the reason why you guys have the highest l

5 rates, j t

6 A good alternative would be some biomass fiber in 7 a pyrolytic converter. Also, I'd like to comment on this_

8 whole procedure here. I think it's a lot of B.S. It's l 9 pretty much a foregone conclusion what you guys are going to i

10 do and you're trying to limit the points of contention ,

l 11 instead of letting people speak.

12 [ Applause.]

l 13 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Eva Yuran l t

(~g 14 MS. YURAN: My name is Eva Yuran. I've lived here j

\_/  ;

15 since 1982. This plant has always been a dark shadow in my i 16 life. If this plant is so safe, why are they exempt from 17 liability insurance? Who is going to recompense health and l 1

18 property damage in case of an accident? PG&E collects all i 19 the benefits, but shirks at the responsibility when it comes I

't 20 to liabilities. How unfai" '

21 It's unfair to shove this nuclear power plant down f 22 our throats when we didn't want it. I don't dare to buy a l 23 house. I don't dare to get married and bear children in  !

i 24 this area, all because of this dangerous nuclear power 25 plant. I have to choose between risking my life to stay [

i l

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Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950 i

1972 1 here or leaving all my friends behind and going somewhere

-O 2 else. Like I said, this nuclear power plant is a giant dark  ;

3 shadow in our lives.

4 You people don't have to live here, de do. Do  !

i 5 you care about us at all? Where is justice. You want to i i

6 extend PG&E's license and there's no way. Let's have solar 7 power instead.

8 [ Applause.] I i

I 9 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Is Gerry Gant here yet? Gary 10 or Gerry Gant?  !

I i

11 [No response. ) .

12 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: How about Joe Shumate?  !

13 [No response.]  :

14 JUDGE'BECHHOEFER: How about Bradley Ostrov? I O 15 called him before and he apparently was late. Is he around?

f I

16 [:No response.)  ;

17 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Everybody on the list we've i

18 either -- has either spoken or when I called their name they 19 didn't answer. People who wish to speak, you're welcome to 20 do so now. Indicate your name. Identify yourself so we can 21 tell who is speaking.

22 MR. WESTCOTT: My name is Daniel Westcott. First 23 of all, I don't think these guys are such bad guys. 'I think 24 that they're here to do a job and I don't know how they got 25 their jobs. I'm.sure that for whatever government process,-

O ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

.,a 2 .. - - - +- -- a , ~ ,

1973 t

1 you guys probably had to jump through a lot of hoops to get 2 here and I really appreciate you being here.

3 I don't work at Diablo Canyon and my sister does 4 work at Diablo Canyon. I don't envy your job of listening l i

5 to all these people and hearing all of the things that you 6 have to hear to come up with a decision. I think what's  !

7 really important is that we get together with these people, 8 wti h the people at PG&E and get like we're all human beings 9 in this earth and we're -- most of us are in this community.

10 And instead of, like, fighting against each other, we kind 11 of need to work together and find a viable solution to )

12 what's going on.

13 I don't know. Sometimes I think that perhaps the  ;

14 Mothers for Peace should be up there and the rest of us O 15 should be talking to them, since I guess we're looking for l

16 expert witnesses about management. It seems like the 17 important question is managing the lives of human beings and 18 if anybody knows how to manage the lives of human beings, I 19 think it would be the Mothers for Peace and I think it would 20 be --

l l 21 [ Applause.]

22 MR. WESTCOTT: I think it would be mothers, in 23 general. So I would ask you gentlemen, like, while you're 24 listening to the testimony, if you would really consider 25 that they themselves are the experts and that they may not' i

ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

1974 1 have the technical words and knowledge to speak in the p)

(- 2 engineering terms or the legal terms that you well educated 1

3 men obviously are very versed in, but that they themselves, 4 just bringing up children into this world, have something 5 very important to say.

6 That type of management needs to be included in I 7 your consideration of management and managing a nuclear 8 power plant. I say before you sign on any lines, I ask you 9 and I urge you to consider -- would you recommend your 10 sister for a job there and would you recommend your children 11 to work there and your children's children to watch the 12 waste and make sure it isn't leaking for the next 200,000 e

13 years?

g~ 14 [ Applause.]

s 15 MR. WESTCOTT: I think that these are all very 16 important questions. I don't think that we need to be 17 afraid. I think we need to trust these gentlemen to make 18 the proper decision and I just urge you to do so. I thank 19 you again for being here.

20 [ Applause.)

21 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Anyone else wish to make a i

22 statement?

23 FROM THE FLOCR: Can we speak again?

24 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: If there's anyone who hasn't 25 spoken at least once, we'd like to hear those people.

/~N l

\_

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Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

l 1975 l

, 1 MR. STEPHANS: My name is Craig Stephans. I was 2 at some of the hearings last Wednesday and I notice there 1

3 doesn't seem to be a lot of the PG&E employees here this 4 time. But afterwards, a neighbor of mine played a song for  ;

i 5 me and I wanted to read the lyrics. They seem quite {

6 appropriate.

7 I want to do this with all respect to the people 8 on the Board here and the people who work for the power -

. 9 plant, people who -- all the organizations who are opposed

' t 10 to it, with due respect to the police officers that are here ,

i 11 in their armor and their bullet-proof vests.  ;

i 12 When I heard this song, it just seemed quite ,

13 appropriate and I just made a couple of small changes in it. 3 i

14 Nuclear hearings are planned distractions to divert the  ;

O- 15 attention from the action behind the scenes. Like a game of 16 chess, when the house is in a mess, or a petty money j 17 scrabble when the marriage is in trouble, or a football I i

18 game, when there is hungry veterans in the street. It's  ;

19 just another movie, just another song and dance, another 20 poor sucker who never had a chance. I i

21 It's just anc~her captain going down with the j i

22 ship, just another jerk taking pride in his work. I was a 23 poor musician. I could never understand you can't make 24~ tears disappear through the slight of hand. From the bottom 25 of my heart, off the top of my head, words were pulled like O ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950 l

.u

l 1976 l 1 rabbits from a hat, but nothing was said.

2 It's just another movie, just another song and 3 dance, another poor sucker who never had a chance. It was  !

4 just another captain going down with the ship, just another l 5 jerk taking pride in his work. Now my freedom's bought and 6 paid for. It lights up my living room. I've got nothing i 7 more to prove. I've got no reason to move. And when I'm 8 tired of the program, when it's taken its toll, I could i 9 press the button and change the channel by remote control.

i 10 But it's just another movie, just another song and l i

11 dance, another poor sucker who never had a chance. Another '

l 12 captain going down with the ship, another jerk taking pride 13 in his work. ,

14 It doesn't take anybody with much experience, much O 15 education, much sophistication to realize that if something i

I 16 does happen, there's no way out of here. There's no way out 17 of here. I've driven all over this county. I've flown all 18 over this county. An ex-boss of mine even flew his 19 helicopter right to the plant and the security surrounded 20 him and he let them know he was a veteran and he knew what 21 he was doing and they let him fly away. He could have just 22 as easily had a bomb.

23 There's only a few ways to get out of here and' I 24 with any slight bottleneck whatsoever, we're all stuck. The 25 value of this property in this area is already outlandish.

l Ob ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

f I

1977 1 I can't imagine why anybody would pay these kind of prices 1 -

2 if they had any idea what was in their backyard.

3 Thank you.

f 4 [ Applause.)  !

i JUDGE BECHHOEFER:

5 Any others who thus far have

, l 6 not made a statement and who wish to do so? [

i 7 [No response.] i i

8 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: If not, you may make a  !

i 9 statement again, if you wish.  !

t f

10 MR. MASON: My name is Robert Mason. I made a  ;

11 statement the other night. This is completely different. I l 12 came here tonight because the issues are supposed to be  !

13 about the maintenance and safety of the plant. I heard Brad. j 14 Thomas, a spokesman for Diablo Canyon, state that the plant i 15 record speaks for itself. So let's hear the plant's record j i

16 speak for itself. i l

17 No one seems to mention that Bechtel Power l l

18 Corporation, Bechtel happens to be the general contractor j

  • l 19 since March of 1982. So that means they are responsible for -l l

20 the maintenance and upgrade work done at the plant-.

! 21 Bechtel, the lead builder of U.S. nuclear power plants, is 22 working on over 40 percent of the nuclear stations. They 4

23 also won the right to clean up the accident at Three Mile 24 Island.

25 Here comes the scary part. This comes from the ,

-1 i

'/"

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Court Reporters  !

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~.

9- ,, ,- ., , , . - ,y--- , , - - - . . . - - . . . - ,, -. __ _ _ _

i I

1978 1 book, Everybody's business, at Questa College Library. 'fou >

2 can all go there to look at it. The company was in the 3 limelight several times during the '70s. A bribery scheme j 4 involving construction of a New Jersey pipeline led to i 5 conviction for four Bechtel employees.  !

6 Unwanted publicity arose from revelation that ,

7 Bechtel had installed a 420-ton nuclear reactor vessel-  ;

8 backwards. We're talking about a nuclear reactor here, 9 folks, not some four-year-old tying their shoes.  !

i 10 Finally, in 1975, the U.S. Justice Department sued .

11 Bechtel for allegedly participating in the Arab boycott of '

12 Israel, a charge the company denied. In 1978, a lawsuit 13 concerning malfunctions at the Palo Sides nuclear generator 14 in Michigan cost Bechtel 14 million in settlement fees.

15 In addition, a 1984 Jones article suggested that

. 16 in attempting to secure nuclear power contracts in South 1

17 Korea, the company may have violated the 1977 Foreign 18 Corrupt Practice Act for the use of irregular payments. The 19 article also argued that certain Bechtel executives, who 20 later became top government officials, who may have known 21 the payments warranted investigation by the Federal Bureau

22 of Investigations and the Justice Department, but said 23 nothing.

, 24 This is from the book, Friends in High Places, by

)

4 25 Simon Schutzer, 1988. Bechtel had numerous links to l

IJHJ RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD. I Court Reporters 'l 1612 K Street, N.W , Suite 300 l Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950 1

i

~ , - - - , , . - - , - - - - , - - - - , - -

t 1979  :

I prominent U.S. Government officials during the Reagan  !

2 Administration. The former President, George P. Schultz,  !

3 was the Secretary of State in the Reagan cabinet. The l 4 former legal counsel, Casper W. Weinberger, was Secretary of i 5 Defense. Their former Vice President for Nuclear 6 Development. W. Kenneth Davis, was Deputy Secretary of Li 7 Energy.

8 In 1984, Bechtel's connections in Washington also 9 included CIA Director William Casey, Merlise Envoy, Philip  ;

10 Harib, and former CIA Director Richard Helms, all of who had i 1

11 worked for the company either as employees or as consultants 12 in the past.

13 Because of this, Diablo Canyon warrants an i

14 investigation, not an extension, along with these men and O 15 corporations I just mentioned. It seems to me these men i i

e 16 were only here to satisfy corporations such as Bechtel, PG&E f 17 or any other large corporation with a big wallet. l i

18 Thank you and good night. l 19 [ Applause.]  !

I 20 MS. APPLEBERG: My name is Liz Appleberg. I know ,

i 21 I gave a statement previously and it was in reference i 22 specifically to the Mothers for Peace and Diablo Canyon,. but l; 23 I had a document with me that I want -- at first I was going ..

I 24 to say something about, but then I decided not to until l i

25 Christine mentioned, in her.-- when she spoke, about what  !

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% w , < +

. _ _ _ _ _ -_ _ _ . . _ ._~ . . _

i i 1980 1 else was being hidden from the public.

{

, 2 What I have is a very old document. It's from i

3 1965. It's called the Brookhaven Report. At this point, at i

4 that time, the Atomic Energy Commission was commissioned to i t

5 do studies to determine the consequences of a nuclear power ,

6 accident. l 7 A study had been done in the '50s and gave results f;

8 of what would happen in the case of loss of fluid and  !

9 meltdown and release of radiation. In the '60s, they  ;

10 I commissioned a restudy to see, in the light of all the hours .

[j 11 of reactor -- the fact that reactors had been functioning 12 for so many years between the '50s and the '60s, what would 2

13 happen.

14 I would just like to mention some of the things (2) 15 form this report. More important than the fact that the i i

16 statistics were worse -- for example, they had no reason to 17 believe that the -- there was no reason to believe, in this 18 revision, that the results would be any better if there was 19 an accident at a nuclear power plant.

20 They examined all consequences of releases if 21 there were an accident. But even more important than that 22 was how were they going to deal with the results of the 23 statistics that they got, the fact that there would be no 24 reason to choose small releases of radiation rather than 100-25 percent release in the case of a large meltdown.

-. 1 i

. O. ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.. l l

Court Reporters i 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 )

(202)- 293-3950 '

. _ . _ _ . ,_. _ ._- _ . _ .m

I 1981 l

1 How were they going to deal with the results, and j 2 I'm just going to read some of what the Committee discussed. l 5

3 One way was to simply report that the conclusions were not i 4 proportionately lower, but that the amounts were higher, f 5 without giving how many times higher they would be. f 6 They asked how could they release this report [

7 without anybody, and, at that point, the anybody that they 8 were concerned with was the Joint Committee on Atomic 9 Energy, being between the House and Senate, how could they l i

i 10 release it without the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy L 11 knowing the results are 50 to 100 times worse than the i 12 report in the '50s.

13 One of the men on the panel stated the Committee  ;

14 must avoid giving support to the nuclear power opponents, O 15 and it went on and on, how were they going to keep these 16 results secret in such a way that we would not know what'  :

i 17 could really happen in case of a loss of fluid accident at a 18 nuclear power plant.

19 Thank you.

1 20 [ Applause.]

21 MS. FOSTER: My name is Susan Foster. I forgot to 22 bring up one thing earlier. Nothing has been mentioned here-23 about the fact that these power plants have been making 24 nuclear bombs and that we have stopped testing all over the 25 world right now and it took a lot of work and a lot of ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

t i

1982 j 1 people and a lot of writing and a lot of protesting.

2 This waste, we don't need to make it anymore. We j r

3 don't need it anymore. If you want to be a part of the 4 family and the movement to keep anymore bombs from being 5 made anywhere, I heard in Livermore there was going to be 6 some -- many nuke bombs they were going to make, and this is- i 7 scary. t 8 Anyway, a song came to me and I want to sing it.  !

i 9 It's called "How Long." When you look into a child's face  !

10 and you seen the face, the endless possibilities there, with '

i 11 so much to come to, when you think of the beautiful things a '

12 child can do. How long will the child survive? How long 2

13 will the child be alive? How long if it was up to you?

14 When you think about the money spent on defense by a l 15 government and the weapons of destruction we build, we're so 16 sure that we need, when you think of the beautiful things, I i

17 when you think of the millions and millions of people we (

h 18 could feed. i 1

19 How long do you hear people crying? How long?  !

1 20 dow long do you hear people dying before you've asked 21 yourselves why? How long will you hear people speaking i 1

i 22 about missiles through peace and just let it go by? How  :

I

23 long will they tell us these weapons are keeping us free? j e

24 That's a lie. How long?

25 When you see it from a satellite, with~its green ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

t 1983 1 and its blue and white, and the beauty of the curve of view 2 and its oceans below, you might think that it's paradise, if 1 3 you didn't know. You might think that it's turning, but  ;

I 4 it's turning so slow.

5 How long do we hear people crying? How long? How I

6 long do we hear people dying before-we've asked ourselves 7 why? How long will it be till we turn to the test and the l

8 skills that we'll have to have learned? If we're going te l I

9 find our place in the future and have something to offer 10 where this planet's concerned. How long, how long? How I 11 long? How long?

12 I want to ask you how long and the answer is up to 13 you. Thank you.

14 [ Applause.]

15 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: I think we'll take about a ten-16 minute break and we'll be back.

17 [ Recess.]

18 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Back on the record. Are there 19 any other person here who wish to make statements? Come on 20 up.

21 MR. REBOK: Good evening, ladies and gentlemen.

22 My name is Steve Rebok and I've lived in this area since the 23 early '50s, at a time when the PG&E plant was being graded 24 and built and long before the plant was built at Diablo. -l l

25 I just have a couple of observations about this l

-O IJUJ RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, _D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

i 1984 -

1 process and about the plants. I think, obviously, we have  :

-O 2 technology that works out there and produces electricity. l

' I 3 It boils water pretty well and creates energy for us.

i 4 But in the long-term, to me, it's kind of an ,

i 5 antiquated technology. It may be state-of-the-art, but the 6 thinking that went into it, while maybe good, hasn't  ;

7 resolved the decommission problems, what are we going to do  !

B with the plant once it does close down and what happens to  !

9 the waste.  ;

10 Having lived in this area during the time it was i

i 11 being built, I thought it was rather interesting that the  !

4 12 plant, at one point, one portion of it was built backwards 13 or upside down. Thousands of experts had reviewed plans and 14 checks on all that construction and probably thousands of 15 inspections, and, yet, years went by before that was  ;

4 16 recognized as a problem.

17 It seems to me that with that in mind and other 18 problems, a good example, I think, is going to happen 19 tomorrow with this spacecraft that's going to fly by. Mars,-a 20 billion dollar investment, and maybe it's going to stop.and 21 take some pictures and do some analysis and maybe it's just 22 going to buzz on by.

23 One thing I've learned in my short life is humans 24 are fallible. We make a lot of mistakes. We may do a lot 25 of wonderful things, but my car breaks regularly and i

i ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

.-- - , =. - -.

i 1985-

i 1 everything I own that's mechanical breaks occasionally. I l

l j 2 kind of look at this plant as a marvel, but it's fallible.

{

i 3 It had a projected life span and I think we ought to just, l 4 when we reach that point where this plant is due for i

5 decommission, just bite that bullet and move towards some i 6 better energy and not extend the life of this plant. It's 7 obsolete.

8 Thank you.  !

9 [ Applause.]

i 10 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Are there further statements? i l

11 MS. ODOM: Hello. My name is Lei Lynn Odom and j 1

12 I'm a Shomosh person. f i

13 FROM THE FLOOR: Your Honor, I can't hear her.

, 14 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Is there any way -- let's turn l 15 it up a little more. Can you speak as close into the l 16 microphone as possible? Especially the small black l i

17 microphone that the Court Reporter just put there. I 18 MS. ODOM: Is this better? I hope. I am Lei Lynn ,

a 19 Odom, a Shomosh person. My vocal chords are partially. i i

20 paralyzed. This is why I speak in a soft voice. I was one

! 21 of the people arrested at the gate just last week and this I 22 has been very emotional for me and my family. We've been in 1 23 this area a documented 9,000 years.

3 24 There's been a lot of grief because of Diablo, l.

25 because of PG&E, because of a lot of things, and I have felt-ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006

-(202) 293-3950

1986 1 this and I have felt very fearful about this situation. I l 2 think perhaps you have felt some of this grief, also, and l 3 some of this fear.

l 4 I would offer you a feather to cleanse your ears. '

5 I would offer you the softest doe skin to clean your eyes so j i

6 that you may see this pitiful place. I'd like to show you a j 7 picture of my granddaughter, who is just three-and-a-half, 8 and she speaks already of being a mother and her mother 9 being a grandmother. I would hope that you would make this 10 possible by denying this permit. l 11 She is of the Shomosh nation, the Miwak nation,  !

12 the Cherokee nation, and this United States, as you've come 13 to call it. Now, I would like to offer you a prayer and I 14 would like to do this in silence since there is a lot of I

\

15 anger in my heart and, as I said, a lot of fear. But I 16 would still like to offer you and everybody this prayer. It 17 comes from the heart and the people of this area. I wish 18 you a safe trip home. l 19 Thank you.  !

i 20 [ Applause.] )

21 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Does anyone else wish to make a I i

22 statement?

23 MS. DAVIS: I'm Sheila Davis. I spoke on 24 Wednesday regarding Ward Valley. I would just like to 25 request of the NRC that you have another hearing to address ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950  ;

1987 1 a very, very serious issue of where contaminants are going.

,O 2 Right now you have them stored on the site. You denied the f

3 Mothers for Peace the opportunity to voice that concern.

4 I think you owe it to this community and a good 5 one-quarter to one-third of this state that's fighting this 6 toxic dump site that may go in if PG&E has its way, I think 7 you owe it to the whole State of California, to the area of 8 Mexico that it's affected, to the area of Arizona, to the  !

I 9 Tinited States of America and to planet earth to give us 10 another hearing so that we can voice our concern and tell  !

l 11 you about our concerns about'the toxic contaminants that 12 will come from this plant. ,

13 Please, I urge you to do so. Thank you.

14 [ Applause.]

O. 15 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Identify yourself first.

I 16 MS. STEELE: I'm Ann Steele and I live in Grover 17 Beach. I've been a resident of the area for 20-some-odd I

i

. 18 years. The first thing I wanted to do is say some praise.

s 19 I was able to come in for an hour-and-a-half, two hours at 20 different times during the hearings and I want to praise all J

21 of the participants for their conscientious efforts. I've 22 wacched the Judges ask some very thoughtful questions and 23 I've listened to the Mothers for Peace as they were 24 concerned about specific issues and.the panel make 25 responses, and I want to praise everybody for their y ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3930

1988 1 participation. [

l 2 I hope that it continues that we're able to litten 3 to one another, what we're saying, and to really take the  ?

4 concern on all sides into consideration. f r

5 My particular concern are the health issues and 6 all of the questionable cancer rates are occurring in our j 7 community. We have these particular startling numbers, l l

8 where the issues could be the amount of material coming from i 9 Diablo Canyon, both airborne and in the water, and some of i

i 10 the fish and animals absorbing it. This is my concern.

- 11 I hope that in some way there might be a -- this  !

12 is the water quality particular search that they do. They j

, i 13 have mussels grown in laboratories and they place them l i

14 throughout the coastline and these mussels are then '

O 15 harvested and the materials are analyzed from these mussels.

t 16 I'd like to see some of that material -- unusual amounts to i

17 occur adjacent to Dicolo. Those are the concerns that I j 18 have. '

.l 19 I'm concerned about illnesses that occur by l 20 employees working at Diablo. I've had family members and 21 friends that were employed at Diablo through the years. So i 22 that's my area of concern. I hope that the panel will be 23 able to get some very detailed and concerned answers. I  ;

24 thank you all for your kind concern and your time to let me 25 speak. ,

1 ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

I' l

1, I

1989 i_ _ 1 Thank you.

2 [ Applause.]

3 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: I would just like to comment i 4 that limited appearances can also be made in writing and i

j 5 that, if you wish, you can submit anything you want in

! 6 writing at any length. So it isn't just limited to five l

7 minutes, and also at any time. So it's not like an oral l

f 8 session where we have time and place constraints.

i 9 MS. STEBLE: I appreciatr that very much. I would 10 like to take advantage of that. Is t _ . a person that I l

f' 11 need to communicate with that it might be done in an orderly 12 fashion?

i 13 JUDGE BECHHOEFER:

^

Yes. We have our assistant 14 here. The statements can be made to the Office of the l

l 15 Secretary, Docketing and Service Branch, U.S. NRC, t

I

( 16 Washington, D.C., 20005.

I

! 17 MS. STEELE: Is there some way I could get this in 18 print? I didn't bring materials with me for writing. Thank l 19 you so much. I appreciate that.

i 1 20 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Any others who wish to make a 1

1 j 21 statement?

i i 22 [No response.]

i

] 23 JUDGE BECHHOE'fER: I guess not seeing anyone who I

[ 24 wishes to, I think building management would like to get us 25 out of here as soon as possible. I wanted to wait to see if ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

._ . _ . . . . . m .

1990 l t

1 anyone wanted to make any further statements. Not seeing j 2 any, I guess we'll -- oh, one more. l 3 FROM THE FLOOR: Can we go up for a third time? i

4 JUDGE SHON
Let's not do that.  !

i 5 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: That's a little much. f i

6 MS. TRIPODI
My name is Camina Tripodi and I 7 spoke earlier about the evacuation plan. I've heard a lot ,

8 of people speak at these hearings about how they feel that'  !

.j 9 the plan is inadequate. I wanted to just give some facts, 1 i

t 10 because I have some facts offhand. I think when we all l 11 drive home, we can think about this. This is from a report j 12 called the TERA Report. It talks about the TERA Corporation 13 for PG&E in 1981.  !

I 14 I just wrote down real quickly some areas on a  ;

i 15 route, 101 North from the northern cities to SLO. This ,

i 16 report states the-cotton fields slopes are over-steep and l 1'

17 due to existing problems, blockage is anticipated. Rock j 18 flies, debris flies, closing two northbound. Higher hills j 19 will probably settle down and out, severing two south bound 20 lanes locally, and possibly all lanes. Route 101, the 21 central outlet to SLO limits. It's.a major concern to the 22 SLO Creek area. Lateral spreading and fill settlement may 23 remove one or more lanes.

24 Route 101 south out to the turnoff to one-fourth 25 mile south of Los Veros turnoff is expected to build-areas O ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

Court Reporters 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 (202) 293-3950

I I

1991 l

1. across lateral spreads. Settlements to all four lanes could j 2 be closed in several locations, Route 5, Rock Falls, may 3 close both south and north lanes north of Pismo Beach. San 4 Luis Bay Road, Route 101 west to South Abba Road, one lane 5 open for traffic. Significant damage anticipated for both  !

6 lanes over Sea Canyon drainage. Avila Road to the plant 7 entrance, major landslides, both lane closures anticipated 8 both east and west of Avila Beach community. Total closure I 9 of both lanes in several locations.

i 10 Total area of the public pier and the road from  ;

i 11 the bridge over SLO Creek east to below the storage tanks  !

12 have the highest susceptibility to damage. South Plant 5 13 Road, PG&E access road, and from Avila Bay landslide closure ,

14 and both lanes slumping and debris flies expected on fill 15 across major southwest drainage, resulting in closure of )

16 both lanes.  !

17 This report goes on and on and on, covering all 18 evacuation routes, talking about landslide factors and also 19 this old bridge and the bridges and potential for bridge 20 failures. I think that you should be very aware of this 21 report. Just nothing has been done about it.

22 Thanks.

23 [ Applause.]

24 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Was there anyone else to make a 25 statement?

O. ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

1 Court Reporters I 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20006 l (202) 293-3950

. ._.. - - - - . . - - . - . . - - . . . - -- . ~ ~ . . .- . . - . . . - . - . . - . _ - - . - - - . .,

i i

o i V

1992-2024  :

) i J- l' [No response.]  ;

2 JUDGE BECHHOEFER: Seeing none, I guess we'll j: .

j 3 adjourn for the evening. We thank you all for being here l I

j. 4 and we will continue with the hearings tomorrow morning.

i- 5 Then, as soon as possible, the parties will have to file 6 proposed findings. That will take some time. After that, f i 7 we will render a decision. But it will be some time, I l 1 )

8 think.  !

i i 9 So thank you very much and we appreciate your i

d '

10 Interest.  ;

i s >

j 11 [Whereupon, the meeting was concluded.] j i  ;

j 12 i E l*

J 13 I

i, 14

15 i ,i

! i j 16  ;

s t 2 l i 17 '

18 9

, 19 s

i 20 I

l 21 l l 22

i. 23

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i 24 l 25

.. ANN RILEY & ASSOCIATES, LTD.

! Court Reporters l 1612 K Street, N.W., Suite'300 L Washington, D.C. 20006 i (202) 293-3950 s

i REPORTER'S CERTIFICATE j This is to certify that the attached proceedings before the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission ,

in the matter of:

c NAME OF PROCEEDING: PG&E (Diablo Canyon) Limited Appearances l DOCKET NUMBER: 50-27-50LA PLACE OF PROCEEDING: San Luis Obispo, CA were held as herein appears, and that this is the original transcript thereof for the file of the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission taken by me and thereafter reduced to typewriting by =e l or under the direction of the court reporting l

) company, and that the transcript is a true and accurate record of the foregoing proceedings.

i j

( ,

l/cIlie (Ses?l Official Reporter Ann Riley & Associates, Ltd.

l 1

l I

l

O

/ j , LAW OFFICES OF

' JCHN H. !!1TCHELL 2

610 Newport Centet Drive p E f, d Ia pp --

Suite 1160

{ Newport Beach, CA 92660 8, ) (714) 644-7677 QEC 20 1933 Attorney for Plainti f f s g ,

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g SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR THE COUf4TY OF SAN LUIS OBISPO g

10

" .]r No.

381G7 THOMAS U. ADAMS; MERLE AMUND50tJ; )

12 )

JIt'MY E. ANGSTADT; WALT BARTON; MICHAEL CONLEY; FRANK CORTES; ) COMPLAlfvT F0P DAMAGES FOR j3 PHILLIP DAHN; MARIO DE LOS SANTOS; ) FERSONAL INJURIES BErdiARD J. DENK; THOMAS E. DENK; )

14 FRANKLIN D. DICK; ROBERT ELVIN; )

l, j $ ROBERT EPLEY; RUDOLPH FAZI; LARRY )

FREIL'.NG; DONALD GARRETT; PHILIP )

GIKAS; CHARLES E. HAUSER; MICHAEL )

16 JACOBY; EDWARD JOURDAN, JR.; GARY J. )

KENNEDY; CHARLES R. LENHART; )

j#

ERNEST 0 LUCER0; TIM MAY; RONALD K. )

l'AZAN; DANIEL PHELPS; FELIX Y. )

jg RAMIREZ; ROBERT E. ROGERS; JOSEPH )

JOHN SMITH; GEORGE STAEHLING; )

yg NATHAtt STEPHEllSON; RALPH STERLING )

ST0UT; ROBERT WALLACE; CARLTON )

20 WEBB; BRUCE E. WHITLEY; DONNIE C. )

'JILLMAN, 21 Plaintiffs, g

vs. )

23 BECHTEL POWER CORPORATION, a tor- )

24 poration; PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC )

)

25 . COMPANY, a corporation; DOE ONE

.tbrough DOE ONE HUNDRED, ir.clusive, MI De fendant s . )

)

27 28

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. HOGE, FENTON, JONES & APPEL, INC. , ,

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$t$o$ E,$N c..: I ubb r e L  :

.4 Auorneysft: Defendanis llECllTEL POWER COhPO!tATION l and PAC II IC GAS AtJD ELECTP1C COMPANY  ;

5  !

0 i

7 8 SUPERIOR COU'(T OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF San Luis Obispo l l

9 E MC W. ADAMS, etc., et al.

m, >

10 Plaint if f s, No. 59167 i

li

- ;s- Fr1PU'ATI34 'IO C0JSOLIDATE-

_ 1

/CTIOiS AND OICER l 12 PICIFIC G\S ;. ELlrrRIC CO. ;  !

BII3 RILL ITMER CORPOIWrJU;, e 13 Defendants.

/ .

l DAVID EDi& DS: JAMES F. FREEM7d; MARrlN 11.

!!ARRIS: POI 1Elu llOBLITZEKI.; EDWARD l'ADDOX; PARUL FORf2D; EINEST PEllALTA; CARY 14. 5 TAEFEll, ,

16 Phiint i fI s, No. 58418 ,

17

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I D!rtITI2, POWER OOldClWP10 , a c(>rporation-PIClFIC CAS L ELDCTRIC 0 A 'Pl6Y, a corportit2cn: ,

'39 DOF. QJE through DOE O.E * !! . DRED , inclusive, t

20 ,, ,,nt, j 21 i

A 22 IT IS ;IERDiY An .1-2.1 Bh*164 ' DIE PARr1ES 11ER1;IO TIIAT Action !;o. 58418, j 23 entitled David Dhos.c . Janes F. Precann, etc. , et al . , plaintif fs, vs 21 Bechtel Pcuur Corpora' t., etc. , et al. , defeidants, venued in the Superior  :

A Court of the State of a l it crnia, in and for the Comity of San Luis Obispo, '

26 Le cor.:ulid.itui f or i  ! ,ini a U other our' men with Action 58167, entitled j 27 Thw a W. Adans, et . , us 3:chtel l'tu.r O.' y. , et al, venued in the Superior j 2d. Coult Of '.1.e St.m .'INrnla, in ud Elr 'he Coun?.y (jf gan 1,uis Obisp..

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I JOHN H. 111TCHELL. g 610 flewport Center Drive ,

, 2 Suite 1160 g g.3m.z ,

liewport Deach. CA 92660 3 (714) 644-7677 [-]! [, r,1..,d) l l

4 Attorney for Plaintif fs J Att 2 5 B a 4 l IIA lid 3 la. C00hH, Cot! HY 'M.aK 5 gig.gg.g c;?uTY CLtng 7

g SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORfilA g TOR THE COUt4TY OF SAtt LUIS OBISPD ,

10 . ..

n 58270 ROBERT BRAZIL; DICK A. HEETHER; ) fio .

12 MICHAEL JACOBY; W. T. LAWREf1CE;

)

13 ROBERT liEZA; JEFF PACHEC0; ) COMPLAlllT FOR DAP. AGES FOR FREDDIE A. TREECE, ~ )' PERS0llAL It! JURY Id Plaintiffs, O is vs. )

)

10 BECHTEL POUER CORPORATION, a )

corporation; PACIFIC GAS AliD )

I# ELECTRIC COMPAI1Y, a corporation; )

jg DOE ONE through DOE ONE HUNDRED, )

inclusive, , )

~

19 De fenda nt t. . )

20 ,

23 FIRST CAUSE OF ACTION

~

22 Plaintiff, Robert Brazil, complains of defendants, and each of thep, 23 and for a cause of action alleges:

21 1. Plaintif fs do not Enou the true names or capacities of defendants 25 sued herein as Doc One through Doe One llundred, inclusive,'and pray leave that 20 when the true names or capacitics of said defendants are ascertained, plain-tiffs may be permitted to amend to insert the same herein with appropriate Q 27 allegations. Plaintif fs are inforTed and believe and thereon allege that each

'2S 1Y

'I .e...-

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1 of the defendanh designated herein as a Doe is ..egligently responsible and/or 2 strictly liable for the events herein referred to and proximately caused the  ;

Oa in;uries 8nd d8m89es to the Pleiotirre 8s aercio en eoed-4 2. At all tines herein mentioned, all 'cTendants were the agents, 5 servants and employees of all of the other defendants herein and were at all 6 times acting within the course and scope of their said agency and employment.

7 3. Defendants, Pacific Gas and Electric Company and Bechtel Power g Corporation, were corpocations duly organized and existing and engaged in 9

business in the State'of California, with offices in the County of San Luis 10 Obispo.

jy 4. At all times herein mentioned, defendants, Pacific Gas and 12 Electric Company, and Doe One through Doe Ten, inclusive, and each of them, wn d, p ssessed and controlled a certain piece of property known as the 13 Diablo Canyon fluclear Power Plant, located on Diablo Canyon Road, in Avila 34 B ach, County of San Luis Obispo, State of California, upon which construction Q 15 work was being performed, such construction being performed by said defendants, yg g and by their agents , servants, employees, general contractors and subcontractor:

g 5. At all times herein mentioned, defendants, Bechtel Power Corpora-tion and Doe Eleven through Doe Twenty, inclusive,. were duly licensed con- i g

tractors and the general contractors on the aforementioned construction site;

,0 2 l that 11. P. foley Company and defendants, Doe Twenty-one through Doe Thirty, i I

inclusive, were subcontractors on said construction site and plaintiffs herein 22 were employees of said H. P. Foley, acting uithin the course and scope of their employment and engaged in the performed of their duties.

6. On or about Jan'uary 26, 1983, and continuing through August, 1983, in the fuel llandling Facility, Units I and II, of the Diablo Canyon 4 2G fluclear Power Plant, located on Diablo Canyon Road, "

in Avila Beach, County of 27  ! .

- .O San Luis Obispo, State of California, defendants, and each of them, 28  !

2 15

W V

,J .

.  ! n ,

1 negligently and" carelessly owned, possessed, ope.ated, constructed, inspected, l

2 maintained, contracted, subcontracted, supervised, controlled and had a right  ;

3 to control, engineered, designed, perfomed and planned construction work and '

,j supplied men and materials for the construction site referred to herein in  !

r, that they failed to provide adequate, safe and sufficient ventilation in and g about said fuel handling units, thereby creating a risk of injury to persons i 7 working on said job site and failing to provide plaintiffs with a reasonably -

8 safe place in which to work. Said defendants were further neg1Igent and care-(

9 less in that they allowed the air in said fuel handling units to be filled i0 with toxic, deleterious substances, creating an additional risk of injury to jy persons working at said job site. Said defendants were further negl.igent and 12 careless in that they failed to provide adequate and sufficient inspection and 13 testing of the air in said fuel handling units to determine whether or not the  :

y air in said units was fit' for human inhalation, thereby creating a substantial I 15 risk of injury to persons working on said job site. Said defendants were ,

16 further negligent and careless in that they failed to provide persons working ,

g on said job site with adequate and sufficient safety devices, appliances or 2

jg appurtenances in order to protect the plaintiffs from exposure to deleterious g substances existing in said nuclear power plant, creat.ing an additional yo susstentie, risk of injury to persons working ori said site. Defendants further g provided persons working on said construction sit,e with unsafe 'and inadequate -

g equipment, said equipment being allowed to exist and remain in an unsafe and  !

dancerous condition. Defendants knew or, in the exercise of ordinary care, should have known that the work in which plaintif fs and others uere engaged l uould necessarily create during the course of its progress a condition involv- )

2a_ , i ing' peculiar risk of harm to others unless special precautions were taken and  !

,2_1 that defendants failed to take such special precautions or to otherwise remedy '

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I conditions, had.g a reasonable opportunity to' . do; that defendants, and 2 cach of them, were further negligent and careless in that they failed to  !

3 exercise ordinary care in order to avoid exposing persons' thercon to an unrea- j

~

4 sonable risk of harm. As a direct and proxirdte result of the aforesaid ,

5 conduct of defendants, plaintiffs uere caused to inhale toxic substances while l 6 working in the aforesaid fuel handling facility, thereby causing plaintiffs to  !

. t 7 sustain severe personal injuries.

8 7. Defendant, pacific Gas and Electric Company, is a public  !

t 9 utility and as such was franchised by the State of California and others to  !

t 10 construct this project above-mentioned and in the performance of said work it 33 could not by law delegate its responsibility to any other person, firm or 12 corp ration. As a result of its franchise, said defendant is vicariously ,

33 liable (in addition to the negligence stated heretofore) for the acts or 34 omissions of the contractors and others contract 6d by it to perform the work, ach of whom was negligent,.pr'oximately causing plaintiffs' injuries.

15

)g 8. As a direct and proximate result of the aforesaid conduct of g defendants, and each of them, plaintiff sustained severe personal injuries, 33 all to his general damage in an amount within the jurisdiction of the

)g Superior Court. .

9. As a further direct and proximate result of the aforesaid con-20 duct of defendants, and each of them, plaintiff ljas necessarily incurred -

21 liability for cedical aid and attention, hospitalization, x-rays, nursing 22 care and drugs f r the proper care and treatment of plaintiff's injuries, and 23 plaintiff will continue to incur such liability for an indefinite time in g

the future, all to plaintiff's further damage in an amount presently unascer-2a

,jg tained, and plaintiff prays leave that when said amount is ascertained',

plaintiff may be permitted to amend to insert the same herein with appropriate 21 .

~

O .u- 'iesatio"e-4 17

.- ,s

. )*

4- -

LM <

V

.. 1 10. As a direct and proximate result v. the aforesaid conduct of 2 defendants, and each of them, plaintif f has necessarily suf fered a loss of 3 earnings and earning capacity and plaintif f will continue to suffer such loss 4 for an indefinite time in the future, all to plaintiff's further damage in an 5 amount presently unascertained, and plaintiff prays leave that when said g amount is ascertained, plaihtiff may be permitted to amend to insert the same  !

7 herein with appropriate allegations.

g SECOND CAUSE OF ACTION l

~

9 . plaintiff, Dick A. !!eether, complains of defendants, and each of 10 them, and for a cause of action alleges:

yy 11. i'laintiff refers to all of the allegations contained in [

12 paragraphs 1 through 7 of the first Cause of Action and by such reference 13 inc rporates the same herein as though fully set forth at length, r

34

12. As a direct and proximate result of the aforesaid conduct of  ;

defendants, and each of them, plaintiff sustained severe personal injuries, g all to plaintiff's general damage in an amount within the jurisdiction of the g Superior Court. [

yg 13. As a further direct and proximate result of the aforesaid yg conduct of defendants, and each of them, ' plaintiff has necessarily incurred 20 liability for medical aid and attention, hospitalization, x-rays, nursing care  !

and drugs for the proper care and treatment of plajntiff's injuries, and 2

,1 plaintiff will continue to incur such liability for an indefinite time in the g future, all to plaintif f's further damage in an amount presently unascer-j tained, and plaintif f prays leave t hat when said amount is ascertained, plain- t tiff may be permitted to insert the same herein with appropriate allegations.

2a

14. As a direct and proximate result of the aforesaid ' conduct of defendants, and each of them, plaintiff has necessarily suffered a loss of  ;

27 -

cereings end cereing capecity, end p,ainu n om sunue to surfer such u,s O .28 '

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(, - ~19-Dec-84 H.P. Foley Safety Department U Page 1-O Gas Sanpilns Summary Tube Readinss

  • I l

i

====================================================================  ;

I Ucek i Tesel n Readinss in Abovel Lccatlon-L 1 ]

1 Ends IOronel CO 1 NO2 IOther! Limitsi Comments '

l==========l=====l====l==u=al=====l=======l========================l 115-Jan-83 41 41 {

1 4 1 4 *) D l

  • Phossene pr! arily I 122-Jan-83.1 37 l' 41 1 37 1 1 1 l'Orone'(MSA); FH Bids  !

l 129-Jan-83 1 D l 22 l 2? I I D i '

!D5-Feb-83 l' 38 1171 27 l 1 1 5 l ' 02 cr.e ' (MS A ) ; FHB ,4 ; C-3 11 I

[

112-Feb-83 1 42 1, 14 I 81 6 l 11 l'02cne s(MSA)IFHB,9;T-2,21 119-Feb-83 1 95 1 41 21 1 1 32 l'02ane'(MSA); FH Bids j l

126-Feb-83 1 16 l 11 I I D 1 l  !

IDS-Mar-83 1 198 l 2 I I 1 46 l'02cne'(MSA); FH Bids 1 112-Mar-83 1 39 i 81 31 31 7 119-Mar-83 1 2D 1 19 1 l'02one'(MSA)I FH Bido I 38 1 13 1 3 l'02cne'(MSA)iC-1 L T-2 1 '

126-Mar-83 1 91 7 I 6 l 5 l 1 l ' Or o n e ' ( ME A ) i-Tu r b i r.e 2I lD2-Apr-83 i l B 1 26 i 36 1 51 2 l'Orone'(MSA); FH Bids I

+0 ID9-Apr-83 i B 1 45 1 44 1 2 l 1 l'Orone'(MSA); Turbine 2I

'O .(

116-Apr-83 1 26 1 58 1 56 1 41 2 v 123-Apr-83 1 l'Orone'(MSA); FH Bids I i 33 1 55 1 54 l 21 23 l' Ozone'(MSA); Turbine 2 1  ;

130-Apr-83 1 27 1 61 1 65 1 31 5 l'0:ene'(MEA); Turbine 2 I lD7-May-83 l 16142 1 4D l t D i

I i 114-May-83 1 6 1 44 1 45 1 1 D I l  !

121-May-83 1 18 1 78 1 78 I I D 1 128-May-83 1 36 I 48 I 48 I 1 D 1 l

l lD4-Jun-83 l 11 1 55 l 55 I I D I 1

i 111-Jun-83 l 2D l 68 1 68 1 21 2 l'02one'(MSA); Cont-2 1 i

i 118-Jun-83 1 5 1 43 1 43 I I D 1 125-Jun-83 I I 36 1 36 I I D I 1

i ID2-Jul-83 1 1 1 41 1 41 1 I D 1 ID9-Jul-83 1 1 1 19 1 38 I i D I 1

lI6-Jul-83 1 8 l 34 1 34 1 -1 D I I

l '

123-Jul-83 1 1 1 25 l 25 l l D 1 1

13D-Jul-83 1 4 1 31 1 31 i l D l j

l IDL-Aus-83 1 4 l 28 1 28 I I D I I

., 113-Aus-83 1 5 1 43 1 43 l l D 1 l -

12D-Aus-83 1 3 1 24 1 24 l I D I '

127-Aus-83 1 4 1 3D 1 30 l l 0 l l lD3-Sep-83 1 l 3 1 2R I 28 I l D I l 110-Sep-83 I 7.1 22 l 22 1 1 0 1 1

137-Sep-83 1 2 1 28 i 38 I l D I I 124-Sep-83 1 8 1 23 1 23 I i

I D I j

ID1-Oct-83,I 27 1 I

() IDS-Oct-83 I 9 l 5 1 27 29 1 1

29 I 1

I D

D I

I i

l l i

Pn/E EXHlBIT " 38 "

PAGE17 of F 1

I

. t 19-Dec-04 H.P. Foley Safety Department Pase 1 v

)

O Gas Sampilns Summary DASIB1 Ozone Readinss Mar to Dec, 1983'

u==================================

l Ueek l Total in Abovel See notes  !

I Ends IRea di ns l D.1 PFMI fors I

!==========l=======l=======l==================g 112-Mar-83 1 297 l 9 1 3/7 l 119-Mar-83 l 981 1 2 1 1

126-Mar-83 1 693 1 7,11,31 3/22,3/25,3/28 I ID2-Apr-83 1 914 1 1,2 1 3/29,3/3D l lD9-Apr-83 1 1,189 I I wl 116-Apr-83 1 808 1 4 1,4 1 4/14,4/15,4/16 l 123-Apr-83 1 941 1 3 1 4/17' i 13D-Apr-83 1 871 l  ! l ID7-May-63 1 1,D56 1 3 114-May-83 1 1,D73 1 1 5/4 'l 1 1 5/12 _l 121-May-83 1 1,057 l 1 1 5/21 1

128-May-83 1 726 l 1 i l ID4-Jun-83 1

() '

111-Jun-83 1 1,127 I 118-Jun-83 l 696 l 945 l l

l 1

l 1

125-Jun-83 1 1,011 1 5 l 6/23 1

I lD2-Jus-83 1 774 l 2 1 6/27 I ID9-Jul-83 1 833 I I l 12 6-Ju l-83 i 1,3D5 1 2 1 7/12 i 123-Jul-83 1 1,497 1 3 1 7/19 I 130-Ju l- 83 1 1,345 1 1 1 7/28 i lD6-Aus-83 l 591 1 4,2 1 8/4,8/5 1 113-Gus-83 1 1,066 1 1,3,151 8/9 (ma l f unc t ion) I 120-Aus-83 1 591 1 1,1 1 8/14 1 127-Aus-83 1 190 l 1 1 8/25 l ID3-Sep-83 1 209 l 2 110-Sep-83 1 1 8/29 1 176 I l l 117-Sep-83 1 175 I I I

i24-Sep-83 1 172 1 2 I 9/20 l IDI-Oct-83 1 226 I I I IDS-Oct-83 I 234 I I i 115-Oct-83 1 196 I I i 122-Oct-83 1 179 l l l 129-Oct-83 l 17D 1 i 1 IDS-Nov-83 1 22D I I i 112-fJov-83 1 152 I I I l 19-tJo v- 8 3 1 215 1 1 1

126-fJov-83 1 170 l 16 1 11/22 1ts5 ID3-Dec-83 1 258 1 6 l

1 12/2 I

&g/FKs EXHlBIT " 30 "

PAGE 4 of _31

,/

  • e-( (.

g t

19-Dec-84 H.P. Foley Safety Department Page 2

/()

.....=........==......=...=.=.....=..=.....= .

1 Ueck i Total l# Abovel See notes 1 i Ends IRead i ng lD.1 PP fors l l..==..====l===.===l.=.===MI =

============.==..=g 110-Dec-83 1 159 I I I 117-Dec-83 1 227 l **

124-Dec-83 1 23D 1 1,1 112/12(malfunction)I 1 12/21,12/23 1 131-Dec-63 1 151 I g___________________________i 1

__________________g t i+* TOTALS: 29,216 l l______________________13D (>0.57. of total) l

(.(2) i

()

(.

Pav/6G EXHIBlT " 3/3" PAGE c29 of 3J

1

\. N The Foley/Pul1 man Safety Depts Air Test Data Summary Particulate Concentrenions fm

(

o) - - _ _ _ _....~ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ -__ _ _ _ _ _

Alere- neacaines 1983 --

1984

,f %

k /

x __/

1 4

_l- a Ju'e[ 2d_ O

x v j l

28-Nov-84 H.P. Foley -- Saicty Dept. Pace 2 I

(~

\

O ==e==

=============e=======e=ece================== ,

I n i n i Date 21 MGm/ I Eample  ! '

iloc.15 amp i Off 'l m3 i Locations I i====l=====l========'==l======l=========================l  !

! 51 723 1 08/09/83 1 0.50 l Turbine 1 i [

l 5 1 82 l'09/08/83 1 0.8D l 119, A-Area l -

1 5 1 133 1 09/09/83 1 1.50 l_________________________I I 6 -1 603 1 04/23/83 1 0.70 1. I i

I 6 1 667 l 04/28/83 1 0.53 1 1 I 6 l 269 1 06/D8/83 i D.6D I Containment 2 i l 6 I 435 1.07/08/83 l 0.64 i Top of Scaifolo I i i 6 I 475 1 07/25/83 I D.54 I i i i 6 1 78 1 09/08/83 11 0.50.l_________________________I i 7 1 26D 1 D2/D7/83,1 2.63 I Containment 1 i I 7 I 630 1 07/28/83 1 1.00 l 140, Outer Uall i 1 7 1 620 1 07/30/83 1 0.50 l_________________________!

l 8 1 206 1 02/08/53 1 0.76 i F H Bids 1 i ,

I 8 1 468 I 11/23/83 1 0.70 l______Eest Scaiioid______i I 9 1 265 i D2/05/83 1 0.67 i F H Bids 1 i  ;

I 9 i 248 1 D2/08/83 1 D.62 i Top Ecaiiold I l 9 1 277 1 02/16/83 I 0.97 l_________________________

I 9 I 457 1 05/01/E3 1 0.60 l___C-1,91, Reactor Usil i ,

1 3D i 242 1 02/09/63 1 1.30 i -

1 I k() I i

20 10 1

1 539 1 03/14/83 4E1 1 07/08/53 1 0.60 i 1 0.55 i Con ainment 1 117, Outer Uell i

i l

i 1D I 631 i 07/27/83 i G.90 !_________________________i j i 11 l LE4 1 03/08/63 l 1.00 1 F H Bids 2 1  ;

i 12 i SD3 1 03/08/83 i D.SD l______Uest Scaiiolo______i l I 13 1 214 1 02/05/83 1 0.64 I i i 1 13 1 257 1 02/07/83 l 1.36 i Turo 1, East Catualk i i 13 1 213 1 02/10/63 1 0.67 i i i 13 1 534 1 12/06/83 i D.60 1 I i 13 1 525 i 12/06/83 1 0.70 1 i 13 1 563 1 12/36/83 i D.90 I I i 13 i 636 1 12/21/83 1 0.70 1  :

i 13 I 645 1 12/23/63 i D.90 I ,

i 13 1 519 1 02/17/84 1 0.52 i e i

. I 13 1 47 i D3/D7/E4 1 1.60 I .

I 13 1 41 1 03/07/E4 1 1.20 I i .

i 13 1 25 i D3/16/84 i D.60 1 Ehee t wet a l Facshop  :

1 13 1 159 I 04/D2/64 1 1.60 i i '

i 13 1 188 1 D4/03/84 1 1.20 I i e i 13 1 245 1 04/1D/84 1 1.00 1  ! l 1 13 i 21D 1 04/11/84 i D.6D I  : t I 13 1 214 1 04/12/84 1 D.70 : t i 13 1 270 1 04/18/04 1 D.90 I .

i 13 1 339 1 04/19/84 i 1.20 i i 1 13 1 338 1 DL/20/84 1 2.40 I 8

() i 13 1 435 1 05/02/64 l 1.50 i 1 13 1 414 i 05/04/84 1 1.50 1 i

i N<

l F%//O EXHIBIT " 38 PAGE 3! of.21 j

,. JUL-07-1 M 3 10:06 FFOll THE INCEFAR CORP 10 100ST811035 P.01

. . t

. VALS PAR CORPORATION PAGE 1  !

MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET 37-013F12L i

\' V****************** SECTION 1: PRODUCT IDE!!TIFICATION *****************

i MANUFACTURERS ADDRESS  : 1301 THIRD STREET SOUTH, MINNEAPOLIS, MN 55415 i HTG TELEPHO!TE llUMDER (612) 332-7371 24 !!R EMERGENCY PHO!!E NO : 1-800-228-5635 CHEMICAL NAME OR FAMILY  : PAINT PRODUCT FORMULA  : NOT APPLICADLE

  • TRADE NAME  : 37 13P12L IOZ RICH LIQUID ,

REVISION DATE  : 08-19-92 DATE PRINTED : 07-07-93 l

  • ....*..************ SECTION 2 HAIARDOUS INGREDIENTS ***************** l t

APPROX ,

NAME WT %

  • COMMON (NA): XYLENE < it TLV TWA 200.00 PPM TLV STEL 150.00 PPM CAS 1330-20-7 CHEMICAL: PHENYL, DIMETHYL OSHA PEL 100.00 PPM CEILING NOT ESTAB RECOMND NOT ESTAB
  • COliMON (llA ) : ETHY LB ENIENE < 1% TLV THA 100.00 PPM TLV STEL 125.00 PPM CAS 100-41-4 CHEMICAL: BENZENE, ETilYL OSHA PEL 100.00 PPM ,

O CEILING NOT ESTAB RECOMND NOT ESTAB

  • COMMO!!(!! A) : MICA 5% TLV TWA 20.00 MPPCF TLV STEL NOT ESTAB .

CAS 212001-2'a-2 CHEMICAL: MUSCOVITE MICA '

OSHA PEL 3.00 MG/CU M CEILING NOT ESTAB RECOMND NOT ESTAB COILMOH( I) SILICA 5% TLV TWA 0.10 MG/CU M TLV STEL NOT ISTAB CAS 7631-86-9 CHEMICAL: SILICA OSHA PEL 10.00 MG/CU M

CEILING HOT ESTAD RECOMND NOT ESTAB -

COMMON (NA) ETHYL SILICATE 50s TLV TWA 10.00 PPM I TLV STEL NOT ESTAB CAS211099-06-2 CHEMILAL: SILICIC ACID, ETHYL ESTER OSHA PEL i '). 00 PPM i

CEILING NOT ESTAB l RECOMND NOT ESTAB l

  • COMMON ( 2) DUTYL CELLOSOLVE '5% TLV TWA 25.00 PPM

., TLV STEL NOT ESTAD CAS: 111-76-2 CHEMICAL: ETHANOL, 2-BUTOXY- OS!!A PEL 25.00 PPM CEILING NOT ESTAB  !

RECOMND NOT ESTAB I MON (NA): PROPYLENE GLYCOL MONO MET!!YL ETHER . 204 TLv TWA 100.00 PPM TLv STEL 150.00 PPM CAS: 307-98-2 CHEMICAL: 1-METHOxY 2-PROPANOL OSHA PEL 200.00 PPM i

CEILING NOT ESTAB RECOMND NOT ESTAB '

4 yt i e n a p rn o nR R - t a tr - -- 9

_l

, JUL-07-1993 10:27 FFDM THE UALSPAR CORP TO 18057811035 P.02 MKitM1 AL SAFETY DATA SHEET 37-013F12L

~

                                        • SECTION 2: HAZARDOUS INGREDIENTS **** CONTINUED ****
  • COMMON (NA): METHYL ETHYL KETONE 54 TLV TWA 200.00 PPM TLV STEL 300.00 PPM CAS2 8-93-3 CHEHICAL: 2-DUTANOME OSHA PEL 200.00 PPM I

CEILING NOT ESTAB RECOMND NOT ESTAB l

J CHEMICALS NOTED WITH A (*) ARE REPORTABLE ONOER SECTION 313 OF SARA TITLE III i

-( I) e THIS MATERIAL IS A CARCINOGEN PER IARC j

( 2) = GLYCOL ETHER, SEE SECTION 5. ,

5

                                        • SECTION 3: PHYSICAL DATA *****************

DOILING POINT: 156 DEG F.

VAPOR. PRESSURE MM HC AT 68 DEG F: 78.0

[

VAPOR DENSITY (AIR = 1.0): 4.1 SPECIFIC CRAVITY: 1.13 PEPCENT VOLATILE BY VOLUME: 41.24

EVAPCRATION RATE (BUTYL ACETATE = I): 5.6  ;

SOLUBILITY IN WATER: No f

APPEARANCE AND ODOR: NORMAL FOR A COATINGS PRODUCT.

.******************* SECTION 4: FIRE AND EXPLOSION HAZARD *****************

FLASH POINT TCC/FM DEG F : 69 LOWER EXPLOSIVE LIMIT 1.00 UPP R EXPLOSIVE LIMIT  : 16.00 EXTINGUISHINO MEDIA: CARBON DIOXIDE, DRY CHEMICAL, FOAM, AND/CR WATER FOG.

  • SPECIAL FIRE FIGHTING PROCEDURES:

FIRE FIGHTERS MUST WEAR SELF CONTAINED BREATHING APPARATUS OR AIR MASKS.

CONTAINERS EXPOSED TO FIRE SHOULD BE KEPT COOL WITH WATER SPRAY.

UNUSUAL FIRE AND EXPLOSIVE HA:ARDS:

NONE-t

                                        • SECTICM 5: HEALTH HAZARD DATA *****************  !

THRESHOLD LIMIT VALUE: NOT REQUIRED TOR MIXTURE.

EFFECTS OF OVEREXPOSURE:

}

IMMEDIATE EFFECTS (ACUTE):

CAN BE ABSOREED THROUGH THE SKIN.

HARMFUL IF INHALED. MAY AFFECT THE ERAIN, NERVOUS SYSTEM OR RES- l PIRATORY SYSTEM, CAUSING DIZZINESS, HEADACnE, NAUSEA OR RESPIRATORY IRRITATION. I OVEREXPOSURE TO INGREDIENTS IN THIS PRODUCT MAY CAUSE NOSE AND THROAT IRRITATION, EYE IRRITATION, SKIN IRRITATION, LIVER DAMAGE, I KIDNEY DAMAGE.

DELAYED EFFECTS (CHRONIC):

i E

._ ,, - gg,oprsw YD 18357811035 P.03

  • Y A L S P A R -C O R P O R A T I~O N PAGE 3 MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET 37-013F12L ev.a .... ...eme****

SECTION 5: HEALTH HAZARD DATA **** CONTINUED ****

CONTAINS GLYCOL ETHER WHICH HAS BEEN SHOWN To CAUSE BLOOD EFFECTS DAM-AGE IN LABORATORY ANIMALS.

f - '

PROLONGED EXPOSURE OVER TLV MAY PRODUCE PNEUMOCONIOSIS NOTICE:

REPORTS HAVE ASSOCIATED REPEATED AND PROLONGED OCCUPATIONAL OVEREXPOSUPE TO SOLVENTS WITH PERMANENT BRAIN AND NERVOUS SYSTEM DAMAGE. INTENTIONAL MISUSE BY DELIBERATELY CONCENTFATING AND INHALING THE CONTENTS MAY BE HARMFUL OR FATAL.

CONTAINS INGREDIENTS WHICH MAY CAUSE LUNG IRRITATION, LIVER DAMAGE, KIDNEY DAMAGE.

PROPOSITION 65 STATEMENT WARNING! THIS PRODUCT CONTAINS A CHEMICAL KNOWN TO THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA TO CAUSE CANCER AND BIRTH DEFECTS OR OTHER REPRODUCTIVE HARM.

MEDICAL CONDITIONS GENERALLY AGGRAVATED BY EXPOSURE - ANY RESPIRATORY OR SKIN CONDITION.

EMERGENCY AND FIRST AID PROCEDURES:

EYE CONTACT:

FLUSH IMMEDIATELY WITH PLENTY OF WATER FOR AT LEAST IS MINUTES AND GET MEDICAL ATTENTION.

SKIN CONTACT: WASH THOROUGHLY WITH SOAP AND WATER.

CLOTHING:

REMOVE CONTAMINATED CLOTHING AND SHOES. WASH CLOTHING BEFORE REU5E. THOROUGHLY CLEAN CONTAMINATED SHOES.

INHALATION: IF AFFECTED BY INHALATION OF VAPOR OR SPRAY MIST, REMOVE TO FRESH AIR.

SWALLOWING: IF SWALLOWED, GET MEDICAL ATTENTION IMMEDIATELY.

POSSIBLE ROUTES OF ENTRY: INHALATION, INGESTION, SKIN ADSORBTION.

  • d
                              • SECTION 6: REACTIVITY DATA *****************

THIS PRODUCT IS STABLE CONDITIONS TO AVOID: NONE INCOMPATIBILITY: STRONG OXIDIZERS HAZARDOUS DECCMPOSITION PRODUCTS:

SILICON DIOXIDE NITROGEN OXIDES CARBON DIOXIDE / MONOXIDE METAL OXIDES HAZARDOUS POLYMERIIATION: NONE

...************a==**

SECTION 7: SPILL OR LEAK PROCEDURES *****************

VENTILATE AREA. AVOID BREATHING OF VAPORS. USE SELF-CONTAINED BREATHING APPARATUS OR AIRMASK FOR LARGE SPILLS IN A CONFINED AREA.

-ELIMINATE IGNITION SOURCES. '

REMOVE WITH INERT AESORDENT AND MON-SPARKING TOOLS.

AVOID CONTACT WITH EYES. ,

WASTE DISPOSAL METHOD:

DISPOSE IN CHEMICAL DISPOSAL AREA OR IN A MANNER THAT COMPLIES WITH LOCAL, STATE, AND FEDERAL REGULATIONS. DO NOT INCINERATE CLOSED CONTAINERS. '

I I

._. l 1

r- .

l

. JLL-07-l h w: c0 F Ful i 1HE h rs dFP IU E ' " w.4 P.04 >

[ ,

VALSPAR CORPORATION PAGE 4 I J MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET 37-OI3FI2L j .-

1-

+ i j ******************** SECTION 8: SPECIAL PROTECTION INFCRMATION *****************

I r AE( hATORY PROTECTION:

f NEAR AFPROPRIATE, PROPERLY FITTED RESPIRATOR (NIOSH/MSHA APPROVED) DURING j' AND AFTER APPLICATION UNLESS AIR MONITORING VAPCR/ MIST LEVELS ARE BELOW l APPLICAELE LIMITS. FOLLOW RESPIRATOR MANUFACTURERS DIRECTIONS FOR j  ;

RESPIRATOR USE.

a jVENTILATION: f 1 REQUIRED FOR SPRAYING OR IN A CONFINED AREA, VENTILATION EQUIPMENT SHOULD SE f EXPLOSION PROOF. ELIMINATE IGNITION SOURCES IPROTECTIVE GLOVES: USUAL HAND PROTECTION FOR PAINT APPLICATION. ~

  • EYE PROTECTION: FCR SPRAY APPLICATION, USE CHEMICAL GOGGLES AS A MINIMUM. OTHERWISE, USE SAFETY GLASSES i

. WITH SIDE SHIELDS AS A MINIMUM.

OTHER PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT: USUAL CLOTHING FOR PAINTING OPERATIONS.  !

' * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

  • S E CT I ON 9 : SPECIAL PRECAUTIONS *****************

FRECAUTIONS TO BE TALEN IN HANDLING AND STORAGE:

CONTAINERS SHOULD BE GROUNDED /DONDED WHEN POURING. AVOID FREE FALL OF f LIQUID IN EXCESS OF A FEW INCHES. i KEEP AWAY FROM HEAT, SPARKS AND OPEN FLAMES. KEEP CONTAINER CLOSED WHEN NOT IN USE. DO NOT STORE ABOVE 120 DEG F. BASED ON THE PRODUCT FLASH i POI g IN ACCORDANCE WITH ,

OSH(pTANDVAPCRPRESSURESUITABLESTORAGESHOULDEEPROVIDED JCULATION 1910. 106. EMPTY CONTAINERS MAY CONTAIN PRODUCT RESIDUE, [

INCLUDING FLAMAELE OR EXPLOSIVE VAPORS. DO NOT CUT, PUNCTURE OR WELD ON OR i

.NEAR CONTAINER. ALL LABEL WARNINGS MUST BE OBSERVED UNTIL THE CONTAINER HAS "t BEEN CLEANED OR RECONDITIONED.

ABEREVIATIONS USED: E OSHA-OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH ADMINISTRATION; ,

IARC-INTERNATIONAL AGENCY FOR RESEARCH ON CANCER LEL-LOWER EXPLOSIVE LIMITS; l UEL-UPPER EXPLOSIVE LIMITS; MG CU M-MILLIGRAMS PER METERS CUBED; MM-MILLIMETEAS l

- MPPCF-MILLIONS OF PARTICLES PER CUBIC FOOT; MSHA-MINE SAFETY AND HEALTH i ADMINISTRATION: NA-NOT APPLICADLE; NIOSH-NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF OCCUPATIONAL '

SAFETY AND HEALTH; NOT EST-NOT ESTABLISHED; NTP-NATIONAL TOXICOLOGY PROGRAM;  !

,PS-LEAD; PEL-FERMISSIBLE EXPOSURE LEVEL; PPM-PARTS PER MILLION;

-TCC/FM-TAG CLOSED CUP /PENSKY-MARTEN;RECM-RECOMMENDED;TLV-THRESHOLD LIMIT VALUES. I

-ena...............** DISCLAIMER SECTION *****************

l 1

THE INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN IS BASED ON DATA CONSIDERED TO DE ACCURATE.. ]

THE VALSPAR CORPCRATION MAKES NO WARRANTIES EXPRESS OR IMPLIED AND ASSUMES NO i RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ACCURACY OR COMPLETENESS OF THE DATA. THE VALSPAR CORPORATICH FURTHER ASSUMES NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR PERSONAL INJURY OR PROPERTY l DAMAGE TO VENDEES, USERS, OR' THIRD PARTIES CAUSED BY THIS MATERIAL. SUCH VENDEES OR USERS ASSUME'ALL RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH THE USE OF THIS MATERIAL.

THISgDSCONTAINSADDITIONALINFORMATION REQi4 D BY THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, PENNSYLVANIA, NEW JERSEY i

1

. JUL b.ss 10 29 .F UIi 1HE UML5EHR CORP. 10 iws . 1 .,5 P.05-

, (' VALSPAR CORPORATION PAGE 1 j MATERIAL SATETY DATA SHEET 37-DOOMz7M

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  • SECTION 1: PRODUCT IDENTIFICATION * * * * " * * * * * * * * * '

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.{ MANUFACTURERS ADDRESS  : 1101 THIRD STREET SOUTH, MINNEAPOLIS, MN 55415 I MFG TELEPHONE NUMBER  : (612) 332-7371 ,

24 HR EMERGENCY PHONE NO 1-800-228-5635 CHEMICAL NAME CR FAMILY  : PAINT PRODUCT

$ FORMULA  : NOT APPLICABLE i fTRADENAME  : 37 MI7M ZINC DUST

-ISSUE DATE  : 04-19-93 DATE PRINTED : 07-07-93 ,

  • * * * * * * " * * * * * * * * * *
  • SECTION 2: HAZARDOUS INGREDIENTS **"*"**********

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, APPROX i t NAME WT %

  • COMMON (NA):2INC POWDER PIGMENT 100% TLV TWA O.05 MG/CU M TLV STEL NOT ESTAB CAS 7440-66-6 CHEMICAL: ZINC OSHA PEL f

O.05 MG/CU M CEILING NOT ESTAB RECOMND NOT ESTAB LEAD (AS PD) IS LESS THAN 1 PERCENT I t

CHEMICALS NOTED WITH A (*) ARE REPORTABLE UNDER SECTION.313 OF SARA TITLE III I i

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  • S E CTI ON 3 : PHYSICAL DATA *****************

BOILING POINT: NA DEG T.

VAPOR PRESSURE MM HG AT NA DEG F: NA 5 VAPOR DENSITY (AIR = I.0): NA I SPECITIC GRAVITY: 7.Il

' PERCENT VOLATILE BY VOLUME: 0.00 f i

EVAPORATION RATE (BUTYL ACETATE = 1): NA i SOLUBILITY IN WATER: NO  !

APPEARANCE AND ODOR: NORMAL FOR A COATINGS PRODUCT.

f

                                        • SECTION 4: FIRE AND EXPLOSION HAZARD ****"***********

FLASH POINT TCC/PM DEG F : 999 i LOaER EXPLOSIVE LIMIT  : NA I UPPER EXPLOSIVE LIMIT NA t

EXTINGUISHING MEDIA: CARBON DIOXIDE, DRY CHEMICAL, TOAM, AND/OR WATER FOG.

SPECIAL FIRE FIGHTING PROCEDURES: i FIRE FIGHTERS MUST WEAR SELF CONTAINED DREATHING APPARATUS CR AIR MASKS.

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. AL-07-1984 10:29 FROM THE UAL5FAR CORP TO 180 2 11035 P.06 VALSPAR C0RPORATION PAGE.2 l MATERIAL SAFETY CATA SHEET 37-COCMZ7M l 1

                                        • SECTION 4: FIRE AND EXPLOSION HAZARD * * *
  • CONTI NUED * * * *

, UNUSUAL FIRE AND EXPLOSIVE HAZARDS: l e

TEACTION WITH ACIDS OR ALKALIES GENERATES EXPLOSIVE GAS. l e

1 l

-l *enee *************, SECTION S HEALTH HAZARD DATA *****************  !

I

.,l THRESHOLD LIMIT VALUE: NOT REQUIRED FOR MIXTURE.

i j EFFECTS OF OVEREXPOSURE:  ;

'IMMEDIATE EFFECTS (ACUTE): {

OVEREXPOSURE TO INGREDIENTS IN THIS PRODUCT MAY CAUSE EYC IRRITATION, l EYE BURNS.  !

DELAYED EFFECTS (CHRONIC):  !

BIRTH DEFECT HAZARD. CONTAINS LEAD WHICH MAY CAUSE BIRTH DEFECTS. ,

CONTAINS LEAD COMPOUNDS WHICH MAY CAUSE KIDNEY, NERVOUS SYSTEM AND BLOOD EFFECTS DAMAGE.

j FRESHLY FORMED ZINC OXIDE FUME MAY CAUSE ' METAL FUME FEVER' WITH ,

FLU-LIKE SYMPTOMS OF TEVER AND CHILLS. SYMPTOMS USUALLY DISAPPER  ;

l MITHIN 24-40 HOURS.

PROPOSITION 65 STATEMENT I WARNING! THIS PRODUCT CONTAINS A CHEMICAL KNOWN TO THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA TO CAUSE CANCER AND BIRTH DEFECTS OR OTHER REPRODUCTIVE l HARM.

MEDICAL CONDITIONS GENERALLY AGGRAVATED BY EXPOSURE - NONE KNOWN.

EMERGENCY AND FIRST AID PROCEDURES:

NONE

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PO v LE ROUTES OF ENTRY: INHALATION, INGESTION, SEIN ABSORBTION.

                                        • SECTION 6: REACTIVITY DATA *****************

THIS PRODUCT IS STABLE i CONDITIONS TO AVOID: NONE INCOMPATIBILITY: ACIDS CR ALKALIES

  • HAZARDOUS DECOMPOSITION PRODUCTS:

METAL OXIDES i

HAZARDOUS POLYKERIZATION: NONE >

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                                        • SECTION 7: SPILL OR LEAK PROCEDURES *****************

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AVOIP CONTACT WITH EYES. '

WASTE DISPOSAL METHOD:

DISPOSE IN CHEMICAL DISPOSAL AREA OR IN A MANNER THAT COMPLIES WITH LOCAL, STATE, AND FEDERAL REGULATIONS. DO NOT INCINERATE CLOSED CONTAINERS.

                                        • SECTION B: SPECIAL PROTECTION INFORKhTION *****************

RESPIRATORY PROTECTION: .

  • ]AR APPROPRIATE, PROPERLY FITTED RESPIRATOR (NIOSH/MSHA APPROVED) DURINO 'l jD AFTER APPLICATION UNLESS AIR MONITORING VAPOR / MIST LEVELS ARE EELOW APPLICAULE LIMITS. FOLLOW RESPIRATOR MANUFACTURERS DIRECTIONS FOR J RESPIRATOR UEE.

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im< 7' VALSPAR C0RPORATION PACE 3 h i

'I MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHIET 37-OOOMZ7M I~  !

SPECIAL PROTECTION INF0F#.ATION ""

  • CONTINUED'" l k]_********************SECTIONB:

VENIILATION:

l

)QUIREDTORSPRAYINCORINACONFINEDAREA, VENTILATION EQUIPMENT SHOULD BE' '!'

q 's!XPLOSION PROOF.

1  ;

lPROTECTIVECLOVES: USUAL HAND PROTECTICN FOR PAINT APPLICATICN. f

{ EYE PROTECTICN: FOR SPRAY APPLICATION, USE CHEMICAL j

' GOGGLES AS A MINIMUM. OTHERWISE, USE SAFETY GLASSES  !

WITH SIDE SHIELDS AS A MINIMUM. I i

OTHER PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT: USUAL CLOTHING TCR PAINTING OPERATIONS. 1

" " * * * * * " ' " * * '

  • S ECTI ON 9 : SPECIAL PRECAUTIONS ********'*******'  !

),

i PRECAUTIONS TO BE TAKEN IN HANDLINO AND STORAGE:

i KEEP AWAY FROM HEAT, SPARKS AND OPEN FLAMES. KEEP CONTAINER '

4. CLOSED WHEN NOT IN USE. DO NOT STORE ABOVE 120 DEG F. BvED ON THE PRODUCT TLASH  !

j POINT AND VAPOR PRESSURE SUITABLE STORAGE SHOULD DE PROVIA,oD IN ACCORDANCE WITH i jOSHA REGULATION 2920. 206. EMPTY CONTAINERS MAY CONTAIN PRODUCT RESIDUE, 1

' INCLUDING FLAMABLE OR EXPLOSIVE VAPORS. DO NOT CUT, PUNCTUPI OR WELD ON CR

,NEAR CONTAINER. ALL LABEL WARNINGS MUST BE OBSERVED UNTIL THE CONTAINER HAS'

,BEEN CLEANED OR RECONDITIONED.

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) AEBREVIATIONS USED: '

OSHA-OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH ADMINISTRATION; IARC-INTERNATIONAL AGENCY FOR RESEARCH ON CANCER; LEL-LOWER EXPLOSIVE LIMITS; f

UEL PER EXPLOSIVE LIMITS; MG CU M-MILLIGRAMS PER METERS CUBED; MM-MILLIMETERS  !

, MF ILLIONS OF PARTICI.ES PER CUBIC TOOT; MSHA-MINE SAFETY AND HEALTH'  !

lADM STRATION; NA-NOT APPLICABLE; NIOSH-NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH; NOT EFT-NOT ESTABLISHED; NTP-NATIONAL TOXICOLOGY PROGRAM; PB-LEAD; FIL-PERMISSIDLE EXPOSURE LEVEL; PPM-PARTS PER MILLIONt -

TCC/PM-TAG CLOSED CUP /PENSKY-MARTEN;RECM-RECOMMENDED;TLV-THPISHOLD LIMIT VALUES.

eas***************** DISCLAIMER SECTION ""*"*"***

THE INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN IS BASED ON DATA CONSIDERED'TO BE ACCURATE. -

t THE VALSPAR CORPORATION MAKES NO WARRANTIES EXPRESS OR IMPLIED AND ASSUMES NO  ;

. RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ACCURACY OR COMPLETENESS OF THE DATA. THE VALSPAR I CORPOP.ATION FURTHER ASSUMES NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR PERSONAL INJURY OR PROPERTY ,"  !

DAMAGE TO VENDEES, USERS, OR THIRD PARTIES CAUSED BY THIS MATERIAL. SUCH  ;

VENDEES OR USERS ASSUME ALL RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH THE USE OF THIS MATERIAL. {

THIS MSDS CONTAINS ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

' REQUIRED BY THE STATE OF : CALIFORNIA, PENNSYLVANIA, NEW JERSEY  !

I Post-it' bran:! fax vansmital memo 7571

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  • CCD 2340-(9/73)

Mobil Chemical ~ " "

l MOa'a' S^rerv otra sseer (Approved ti y U.S. Department of Labor " E s s e ntlolly Similar

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C0f1 FORMS WITH AIR POLLUTIOff RULES & REGULATIO!!S _

S E C T ION I MANUFACTURER S ADDRESS CHEMICAL NAME OR FAMILY EMERGENCY TELEPHONE 212/ 083-5368 Sthyl Silicate Zinc Rich Primer TRACE NAME FORMULA MObilzinc 7 Inorganic Zinc Rich N.A. Liouid Base

  • 13F12 comp A SECTIDia 2 HAZARDOUS INGREDIE NTS

'/o w T. TLV (Units )

CELLCSOLVE SOLVENT 40 200 FF?4 ETHYL SILICATE 40 JOT ESTABLISHE3 BY ACGIH C H R O .'. I J:4 OXIDE PIGMT <5 WOT ESTABLISHED BY ACGIH -

!.! ETHYL ETHYL KETONE <5 200 PPM BUTYL CELLOSOLVE (5 50 PPM ,

  • To be mixed with 13F12 Comp B (zine dust) before use.

I i

SECTIOi 3 PH YSIC A L DATA BOILING POINT VAPOR PRESSURE VAPOR DENSITY SPECIFIC GR AviTY */o VOL ATILE BY EVAP. RATE

  • F mmHg of 68 CF ( AIR 1.0 ) (H O: 1. 0 ) VOL UME (BUTYL ACETel).

10.32 255 2.3 I.06 n3 1. 0? '

SOLUBILIT Y IN WATER i40 A._P P E A R A tJ C E AND ODOR

'40 R V A L FOR A PAINT OR COATING TYPE PRODUCT

ECIIO.a .g rlRE AND E X P LOS tDN HAZARD FLASH P OI N T F L AM M ABLE LIMIT S E x itNGUISHING MEDIA TCC/PM 'F LEL UEL CARBON DIOX f DE DRY CHEMICALS FOA M ,

s AND /OR WATER FOG.

SPECIAL FIRE FtGHT ts PROCEDURES r te tigntets must weer seit contait ed trectning coporcius or car mosks e

Conte >r er s esposed to fire shoum te beet cool wetti =cter spror U t< U S U A L FIRE AND E X PLO SIO N HAZARDS t

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r e . ..e ,., o, ,,,, .o,,,,e..o, , ome oeo ,,,, , ,, ,m ,,n, , o, s , ,,,, , ,, o e 3, m ,,,oo e,, u m , .. , e ,, o oox , o, ,,,, ,, s s ,s ,,,e o,. w ,n, .ee,,,,, m, m c :..ms e, e , .*, o w e, ao. oc,e .e c oms.,n e .. . , e ~..,,, e, , ,,c e ns, ,,,.oe, e . , ..., or u n ew , ,,, ,~n n,% uoc~ e $syw a ao ow so, ea, ,asoa,,-

e.em .% .+e. e..se os on rae n.se oe .-e cw . v ~e , .e ....e ,*e, ,es o.co.,c es e. ene se er,.4,wes . .ca ,, se,s . <-.m voc.a o'5cta w5 At t OrHe a e% Anna % %g S ee.ee.ng noteep* watts emcO*SCL A M5 Ae L .M etFRAN rt( 5 Pi t e'mG 101mt sn e s+1 ocaisOh eeuress or moneo *NC L UDmG twe nor e<m rec to

..nem.es go wI set o.aN f A eis 4 f v eno * , f 4 e 5 $ w g#og u.., t w'orse 6 er e.ov orowucts tro<a wot-,5 ( r ,m.c e*4 s.*'.ags D.* 5.or' t ons'.8u'** ectto'eace D' the aerms ce ra e Me"eme c oatee>i o< ov>s pas os s..<t r e ae creces r

  • to.thsteaper.3 en vae ovea' vast Mcar-a f.nss trier ea.o<swe rs ces ve en e e ers sper.5.caseria mod.8
    • er .os so.e r ss recon ests.or neo ete ne p ocaws or rewsc tr.e ow sosese e orge use ros eno upto.n a gso.ge e* one o= r sese remn.es ssen ne tevee* s sone
  • e=eo, Moon ones sonne no t =s ums.ences t,e , etre ton conseovent.eu come.tes * *< ene <mse'er es *. eda *e =s mer'oesers ree *** Motvaede or**ver suDowess er e3 ..- -a-me we. m.:so emnnh a - m- aa-

r;pc7]<y, q HEALTH HAZARD DATA THRESHOLD LIMIT VALUE N r,t R e q uir e d for Mistures EFFECTS OF OVEREXPOSURE EYE IdulfATIJa '

G r% RESPIRATORY IHRITATION, DIZZINESS, NAUSEA, LOSS OF CDdSCIOUSHESS *

~. .

E M E R G E te C Y AND FIRST AID PROCEDURES, IudALATIUu HE..;U/E rERSUH FHOM EXPOSURE AREA IF BREATHidG HAS STOPPED, USE MOUTH TO MOUTH RESUSCITATIDH I AND GET MEDICAL ATTENTION -

EYE C0dTACT: FLUSH HITH HATER FOR 15 MINUTES.  !

GET l4EDICAL ATTENTION -

SKIN CodTACT: HASH WITH SOAP AND HATER i

SECTina 6 RE ACTIVIT Y DATA STABLE UNS TA B L E CONDITIONS TO AVOID v

INCOMPATIBILITY i,O n E

  • HAZARDOUS DECOMPOSITION PRODUCTS SILICUd DIDXIDE CAdB0J DIDXIDE AND CARBON M0J0XIDE HAZARDOUS POLY MERIZ ATION CONDITIONS TO AVOID '

NONE M AY OCCUR x '

p SECf j (la 7 SPILL OR LEAK PROCEDURES ('

U ELilIHATE IUalTIDJ SOUHCES I VEWTILATE AREA. AVOID BREATHIHG OF VAP0HS -

i USE SELF-COWTAluED BREATHIHG APPARATUS OR AIR MASK ,

FOR LARGE SPILLS Id A CONFINED AREA' "

-i i AVOID CoaTACT ilITH EYES g RE".7V; .IITH 1 JCR T AF.SOHHCaT AsiD IJ0J-SP ARK liJG TOOLS -

WASTE DISPOS AL METHOD <

Dispose in chemical disposet crea or in a rnonner thof complie s wlfh local, s tate and f e deral re g u f ollo ns.

Do not incinerate closed cen t o ine r s .

SECilib d SPEcrAL PROTECTION INFORMATION R ES PIR ATORY PROTECTION '

Use appropriote Bureau of Mines approved r e spira t ory device in confined creas and for spray opplicollons, s

VE NT IL AT ION LOCAL OTHER Roowered for sproying or in o confine d creo.

V e n tif o tion equipment s h ovid be e s plo sion proof. F L J .t l ,J ATc IGiJ IT l ad SOURCES PROTECTIVE GLOVES v3dql J\i.') r> !iO TEC r i ),,

FUd PA I.e f ArvLICA flad EYE PROTECTION USUAL FYE PHGiECflue FOd A Pr> LY I aG P A l uT OTHER PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT J5JAL Clarill.<G FOR PAliiTI..G OPEitATI0ds 2

SECTf 0N IX SPECI AL PRECAUTIONS D R E C AUTIONS TO BE TAKER 4 IN HANDLING AND STORAGE C e n t oin e r s should be groundec when pouring Avolo free foil of ficuld in excess of a few inches. Keep c wp- f r e m hool, spcrks and cpsn flame s. Keep contoiner clot e d when not in use. Do not store above -

12( F.

Based on the product flo s h peint and vapor pressure s uit cble storo;e should be provided in ocIsr do n c e wit h OSHA R e C u f o t io n 1910.106 i

tSSUE DATE 4-B-75 T his doto is based on formulation in effect of core of issue.

Consult Monuf actur e r en current p u blic o t ro"' -

S Krug/Ed i ROI, I

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( n p :P loin flaid V

,e CONF 9t'M5 WITH Alit POLLUTION TERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET E U *l'2*'10HS

.. ved by U. S. De partme n t of Lucer " bsent;cHy Simsic, " to rorm _O p a t. 2 0 )

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S E C T ION I MANur ACT UR E R 's AppnESS P. O. Box 25C Edison, New Jersev 08917 CHE WICA L NAt,'E DR TA M IL Y 'EMERBENCY 7ELEPHONE Zinc Powder Pigment 212/ 0B3*5368 FORMULA i

papg usur [10BILZINC 7 i

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INORGANIC ZINC RICH '  ?

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13 -F- 12--C omo . "B" SECTION 2 HAZARDOUS INGREDIENTS 0

/o W T. T LV (Units )

ZINC POWDER PIG lGT # fUU NOT ESI ABL1SHED BY ACGIH A

' MI X WI TH C OMP . "A" BY WEIGHT AS PER MANUFACTURER'S SPECI FICATI ONS BEFORE USING.

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/ 5 SECTION 3 PHYSIC AL DATA BOILING POINT VAPOR PRESSURE VAPOR DENSITY SPECIFIC GR AVITY /o VOLATILE DY OF EVAP. R ATE mmHg of 68 CF ( AIR : 1.0 ) (Hg 0: 1. 0 ) VOLUME (BUTYL ACET = 1 )

NK NK NK 7.II O NK SOLU BI LI T Y IN WATER NO i APPEARANCE AND ODOR NORMAL FOR A PAINT OR COATING TYPE P R O DUC T SECTION 4 FIRE AND E X P LOSION HAZARD .

FLASH POINT FL AMM ABLE LIMIT S '

TCC/ P M CF E X TINGUISHING MEDIA LEL UEL CARBON D40XIDE, DR Y CHEMICAL, FOAM , '

999 TH d. A NA AND/OR WATER FOG.

SP E CI AL F t RE ' ~~1G HT ING PROCEDURES -

Fin fighters mus t weer self conf oine d br e o t hir q opporotus or air masks. t C otit oin e r s esposed to fire should be kept cool with water sprc>.

UNUSUAL FIRE AND EXPLOSION HAZARDS l

TIONS WITH ACIDS OR ALKALINES GENERATES EXPLDSIVE GAS I

,.e _ _. _ _ _._._,_...._,_,. _ .._ .

t ra as

    • ='4 v ag term rars, e,or gt:,s if Etmf rve r*e remet of a swr.e v ver ew teem tre vem ev ers,w;4 :, t*tru'ashews res 4.stwy frw any eneme-
      • sch Pief errte Ovf Of fbe tr$P Of fr*e tyfMtsti M Of*r me**en't :h8f dt strTJCNftt1 ***Pt Ibe tree rid a'ary*t enf=sc h tf S ef for them MDt..f 015CL AosS ALL Of NF R WARRANitt Soe'aungtothe orensacts andOtSCLAIMS AL L MnnA N1IE5 RE LAttr4G TO THE IN At'*L 'CA f tDN repress or unos.ed tNCL - < < UDit*G but rol **m te marrantensct ut PCHANTA6turv snalsttd SS sar twrt.cua sopersvne Pete o*o*cocxsut os sromr u b.s:Chen nocaermos cav.s on tonstavs-s screcrance vt tr'e JerW's t>l trvs VJananty Contigry gwDesse(res of garthos9 Urt}@rS reteruvnth tf 8*9d**eq in th9 pogett thg1 Mtstul 9 ergs trnal g>*ta1utts (19En tit *O A t* ON SOffstatit*On UOD*$
    • af8 er etS Srs8P Cf>1C'P'*fFT 9effuer reDatt e f** CFftCW1 SW **'w*tPt l'* BhMLhebe 48 I8(f**MT
    • ***UF M*sted mM IP*eO M t *I*'I t C ho*E P trftanP De shasa reme<s+s shast be Ouyer 3 soie trutwar F50 C-1 prNLierM1 le d mDe 9 #C CT**'tmou'v8=8' Dem*?Pt P8 0e(18 *atD*e' 4 5 3' A D*My *5 Fie etistets by few Mohrf are8f Underetr OtOGuCf1 et
      • PT*e l***8tl ***%fJf 4f el of 3 f eebOnetWy Abat FO ETO 10 Ema 181st et thead reOr (se depap for tQ spg pg gegcgqgv_gegrugeg'71h5det' - - - - - - - - - '--^ - -

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'I I SECTInN 5 +4EA1.-T44 4tA-ZitRD -OAT.A 13-F-12 Camn. B THRESHOLD LIMIT VALUE Not Rosusecd er M uturas I

EFFECTS OF OVEREXPOSURE '

svulte .

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l EMERGENCY AND FIRST AfD PROCEDURES '

InHALA11UH 140 PROBLEM AT NORMAL TEMPERATURE EYE CONTACT: FLUSH hlTH WATER FOR 15 MIliUTES.

SKIN CONTACT: ' WASH WITH SOAP Al4D WATER .

SECTION 6 RE ACTIVITY OATA STABLE UNSTABLE CONDITIONS T O- AVOID X

INCOMPATIBILITY AC]nq nD t.1 V AT T C C ,

HAZARDOUS DECOMPOSITION PRODUCTS METAL DXIDES HAZARDOUS POLY MERIZ ATION CONDITIONS TO AVOID NONE MAY OCCUR A

f SECTIDH 7 SPILL OR LEAK PROCEDURES A ,lD COufACI 11TH EYES WIPE UP OR ABSORB ON SUITABLE MATERI AL AND SHOVEL UP t/ASTF DISPDS AL v.E THD D Dispose m rwernc ol 2f ts:msel :cerm rr m :n vanner -f ttet : complies , wit h locol,istote tond -tedotal tagulations.

Do rio t incineret e cicsett centraers.

SECl}ON 8 SPECIAL PROTECTION t H FOR M ATION l RESPIRATORY PROTECTION ,

Use oppropriote Bureou of Mines opproved r e s pir a t o r y device in confined orecs and for sprey opplications.

VEN T IL AT IO N LOCAL OTHER i Required for spraying or in o confined cre o.

Ventilation souipment s h o uld be emplosion proof. g r hjC PROTECTIVE GLOVES USUAL 4AND PROTECTION F04 PAINT ARPLICtTInN i

! EYE PROTECTION USUAL EYE PROTECTION FOR APPLYIdG PAINT

'OTHER PROTECTIVE EOUtPMENT USd AL CLUTdlHG FOR PAlHTING OPERATIONS '

s .

SECTION IX SPECI AL PRECAUTIONS ,

P R E C AUTIONS TO DE TAKEN IN HANDLING AND STORAGE Containers s hould be grounded when pouring. Avoid free f all of liquid in escess of a few inches. Vesp i op"] f rom beat, sparks and cren f l o rn e s . Keep contoiner c los e d when not in use. Do not store a tie v e f fl,j F . Based on the product flesh point and vapor pressure suitable storoge should be prov toed in t cccorconce wit h OSHA R e g u la t io n 1910.IOG ISSUE DATE 9/29/77 RJH This dato is bored on f o r tnu tat ion en effect at dato of issue. l Consult Menuf acturer on current publications.

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PAclFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPA e .' ,. ;* Contract Change Order i

Page 1 of 1  ;

p DATE October 12, 1984 i cunct oneen no. 2 p Nuclear Power Generation cournAcr8o.

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._ setcmcArios so.

22-062-82 6969 Bechtel Construction. Inc. P.O. Box 39f 5. San Francisco, CA 94119 eC oos ,m AC To ms 8 a 0 0. = 3 s:

JOB LOCATION Diablo Canyon Project, San Luis Obispo County, CA CONTRACT FOR Diablo Canyon Project Completion Servir.es '

The *ollowing changes are hereby author: Zed subject to the terrns and conditions contained in the contract referred to above dated __Ma rch 22. 1982 i

Pactfic Gas and Electric Company (PGandE) authorf

~

Bechtel Construction, Inc. (Bechtel), to comience oper6fon f the Diablo alc facilit es, exclusive of Canyon licensed physicians, troject jobsite at 12:01 construction a.m., ctot first,h 1 1984

_ The insurance being provide nde 8 '

set forth in Article XI.A' o the t .

reh niive liability as ra t cover ese services. ,

All other term No +

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  1. ADDITION DEDUCTION INCETERMINATE Recommended _

O N. u s Constructor' Approval PAEVIOUS CONTRACT TOTAL $ INDETERM.'*J i ADDITION OR DEOUCTION $ I NDE TE:v '. '.r E MateriOs Orpt. Approval -

REvtSED CONTRACT TOTAL s INDETEDw"a E .

0, C o. .. s . .. - _ 22 c... M0 cG,..., -

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cosrRACTOR; Send stnorces in triproco Ut T. 4 Tde-l.L i Q )}"fly' e i

.m+,n e.c. wns contr,cc no. ca no. 4%<runo&,entHiBfTe&**

r> l wam ry. s.. conr,,ce io, .no,c, ,,,,.1,<,a ,ae

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( Contract 22-062-82 Attachment C Page 1 of 2

( PAC IluIC G A S A 1T D E LE C T R,IC C O M PAny POWb l 77 8[ALC Sf8tET

  • SAN ra ANC15CC, CALeFORNIA 94108 . (415)751 4211 . tw

.s. o. scnuvL a n April 25,1984 PGandE File No. 202.2 PGandE Letter No. 50-771

.- Mr. H. B. Friend

~ Bechtel Power Corporation 50 Beale Street San Francisco, CA 94106

Dear Mr. Friend:

O Assi 9nment Proposai ~

by Bechtel P.ower Corporation for Diablo Canyon Project Completion Services (Bechtel Job 15320)

As requested in our meeting with you on April 11, 1984, PGandE has reviewed Inc. the above proposal for the assignment to Bechtel Construction, fcplementa tion.The attached approved assignment document is forwarded for i

sincerely, 0 /

JOS:kal "

Attachment -

~ l cc: DA3 rand WPNoone J RHerrera O xooiesen SM5kicmore J0sairrer i IE5amson GMRueger ST5kinner J LPo t ter JBHoch TAMoulta GAManea tt s t

x3 qw /RPt EXHlBIT ,, '1 se

7

-[ , c -

Change Order t<o

{ ,

Contract 22-062-82 Pa9e 2 of 2 O -

cuanuitcE ossess This Guarantee is made by Bechtel Pomtr Corporation, a Nevada corporation

("0PC"), in favor of Pacific Cas & Electric Cocpany ("Ovrera). 3 REEAS, BPC and 0 ner are parties to a contract for Project Cocoletion '

Services cated March 22, 1982, identified as Becntel Jobs 15320/16293 and Owrer Contract No. 22-062-82, as a enced ("Contrac t") , relating to tne Diaolo Canyen of California; andProject Units 1 & 2 locateo near Avila Beach in the State WiEEAS , EPC desires to assign its rights and obligations under the Contract to Becntel Construction, Inc., a Nevada corporation ("EC1"),

effective on or about April 23, 1984, and DCI will assume and perform all of the rights assigreent; and coligations of EPC under the Contract pursuant to such and MiEEAS, Owner, in consideration of tre guarantee of EPC contaired herein, is willing to consent to sucn assignmt from EPC to ECI, 140W, THEEF0E, DPC hereby guarantees to Owner the full performance and discharge Contract, by ECI of all of the uncertakings and obligations in the subject and limitations of liability expressed in the Contract.to all waivers, disclaicers a -

EPC further represents and guarantees that.the reorganization and related result in rew or increased costs for the Contract or unoer o agreecents between Owner and PCanE.

EPC further agrees that PCanE shall have the right to perform such audits in aCCordance with Article VIII of thereport certified Contractby or, won PCand's recuest EPC snall provice a its indecencent auditor, as may be reasonaoly necessary to verify the aforecentioned guarantee. l 1

l

', IN WITNESS hSEFEOF, EPC has caused tnis instrument -to t>e executed on this _ 19tg cay of_

assigruent.

nril _, 1984, er ective won suct' EE01TEL A- JFORATION

~

~ ,

1 f' t F

r,i ~

O By

__ 5&

1

$/ -

O DV ' C. D. Statton B Ji l 1Ul f, Vice President and Director i

i_.J W [

C345ENT TO ASSICmENT '

O In consideration of tne foregoing Cuarantee, the uncersigned consents to the assigncentInc., of tne Construction, as Contract cescricedfrom Becntel Power Corporation to Becntel above.

PACITIC CAS & ELECTRIC CCFPANY

.-e>

fcGlBPc-EWXL a- Y - - - -

~~; ,

.a r .. ,,

Change Order No. I

- g, g g Contract 22-052-82

\

'~ \ ~ Attachment A 3

)

Page 1 grJ 056688 6V P.A.C I F I d G A S JLN D ELE CT RIC C OMPAwy l 77 BEALE STREET

  • SAN F R A N CIS C O. C AllFO R NI A 94t09. +

O t o ft Q C A. ,4 A N C ATI& . .

  • ^ #
  • July 25,.1983 Mr. C. D. Statton Vice President nn y _.

and Division General Manager qg San Francisco Power Division Vdi Vi J

l JV a i JV I Bechtel Power Corporation P. O. Box 3965 San Francisco, California 94119

Dear Mr. Statton:

(]~

' As provided for under the tems of ARTICLE II (Scope of

~: h, Services), Paragraph B, of the current contract between Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PGandE)'and Bechtel Power Corporation (BECHTEL),

this letter designates BECHTEL to perfom certain of the supplemental

' maintenance and upgrading work at the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, Units 1 and 2 to be designated by PGandE.

The work designated shall require a minimum of one year. of ~ .

continuing activity and may include plant modification, outage support facilities, and such other general maintenance activities to support PGandE's overall program to comercial operation of both units.

i We understand that the foregoing meets the requirements of the General President's Maintenance Agreernent.

We would appreciate BECHTEL taking the appropriate action with the General President's Maintenance Comittee to provide for BECHTEL to implement this agrtement at Diablo Canyon.

Sincerely, Original signed by J_T v GA MANEATIS GAM:adb bec MHFurbush '

-ee GSBates nn.,_s dwrAfire EXHIBIT ,, o-,

-u i Page 1 or 1

(

PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY l Contract Change Order C 056688 pATg July 5, 1984_. -

cwAuct onces no.

Nuclear Power Generation 1 on-' aao* a 'aa e coNinact no.22-062-82 SPECIFICArtoN No. 6g69 Bechtel Construction, .co~ ,..c ,...

Incorporated, P.O. Box 3965 San Francisco, California 94119

..oo.....

JOs LOCATION Diablo Canyon Project, san Luis Obispo County, Cailrornic CONTRACT FOR Diablo Canyon Project Completion Services The following changes are hereby authorized subject to the terms .

and conditions contained in the contract referred to above dated March 22,1982 The following shall be incorporated:

1. Authorization letter from r x utveVjce 1 resident, FERD to Bechtel Power pep ra ti nt pleMnt the General President's Mainteqanc Agr nt s prdvig d for under the terms and condi ion of tci II anagraph B (Attachme n .\ /
2. Fir en ent t O date 10/18/pt echmem e rtract i for

%o'c Com 1 .on Services -

~

i

3. Consen / Ass 6Sen\ isihnmentoft Co from Bechtel Power rpora ko C truc -

Incorporated, dited 4/lp/84' l(Att Bechtle hmeQt W .

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' [n n 3r' GGht UiWIC: ne'gY a

  1. ADDITION D E OUCTION INDETERMINA TE DOLLA R ecommerged PREvlCUS CONTR ACT TOTAL s INDETERMI*.~. E Constructor's Approval
  • ADDITION OR DEDUCTION s INDET ER:'!'.f i Matuiats Dept. Approva REv! SED - TRACT, TOTAL 5 INDETERMI*.;~;

2'C o... . 22' c- 450 "

4. c.,,c as. tE c raic c'ca.p.~v C6 . . ..i

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e. -..... ..... s n ece - . .. npg Centrii Files --

c ROBac#'nIMMouT*a~'hlfNeUell'CC'eson. "~ ,sechtel Construc: on Incorpori -

JRManning. GMRueger. Sechtel Ccr - ; :mn *i- e" "r-** ~~

m-.. m.f 2**

WE? 'Q ass

  • CONTRACTOR: Send un.veces on trioticore ror toch '
h

~~

Men due. showing Contract No.. Chonge Orcer No . *"d Sor$

No. Set contraer fne .w* ==* ' -- --'--- * " " ~ ' ' ~ ~ ^

., $. Y h " ~ ~  ;

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553 J Constructiont u ancmn cr.our, tsc.i.v i f no, # ., positions. liefmanaged to accumulate a small fortune and
- e i f ormed the W. A. Bechtel Company with his three sons

.r-

-i his brother. The young company began many new untures, including construction cf the Northern Califor-

- . ;,e!g- s 4+p . ' _

- ]r -

,y 1 nia Highw ay and the Bowman Dam, which was at the time the se=ood t2treet roc'-rat dam ia the -orta or the time i

s ,

the company incorporated in 1925, Bechtel was the largest 3 W -

y) -'

p construction firm in the Western U.S.1When a six-company consortium received the 549 million contract for construction of the Hoover Dam, Warren Bechtel became president of the group. Work on the enormous dam lasted

.e f! L. a, y y

_. 3 y from 1931 to 1936. Warten Bechtel did not live to see the

. o 1- t project completed, howeser; he died suddenly in 1933 at BECHTEL. GROUP, INC. age 61.

~ P.O. Box 3%5 Stephen Bechtel, one cf the founder's three sons, took -

San Francisco, Cahfornia 94119 over the presidency in 1935;He had previously been a sice

~ U.S. A . president. The' young executive directed the company to <

(415) 768-1234 new financial and industrial heights, supervising comple- I

- ? mare Com;w ry tion of the }}ooser Dam as well as woik on the San .;

Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, a hydrogeneration plant, Incorporavd: 1925 and the Mene Grande Pipeline in Venezuela.

Employca: 25,090 As the United States entered World War 11, an aircady '

Scles: 16.8 bChon estabhshed partnership between Bechtel and John 4 i McCone, a steel saicsman, grew to encompass a syndicate One industry ana!pt has noted that Bechters achiete-ments as the largest United States construction and en-of companies participating in the construction of large shipyards. McCone and Stephen Bechtel had met at the -

[h pincering firm have reshaped rnore of the carth's land- University of California and had become business associ- -

scape than virtually any other human efforts in history. As ates during wcrk on the llocner Dam. As an emplo)ec of a pr?; ate and piedominantly family-controlled company, Consolidated ,iteel, McCone secured the supply of neces-3k Jf

~

jBechtcl;haClong been averse to publicity,;anfattit,ude 'sary support structures for Bechtch The business associa-

% AYhas sometimes :been ' problematic inllight ~of:the , y5 tic'n proved so successful that after the dam was finished I

'L IriuiSerdas(linksitojprominentlU S$*goErninent '

- the former' classmates formed a partnership. By 1940 officials? Ahhough as a private rompany Bechtel is not McCone secured contracts for the partnership to build k

O*

reduired to publish fmancial information about its opera-

~ billion in revenues " ' '

~

! 1ions l1W5 estimates suggest the company generated 58.6 lh ~ <C "

2 ships and tankers, and to modify aircraft for the war effort.

"Later the partnership developed the syndicate that built [f n ir f' ' the Ca!> hip and Marinship 3 ards in California, as well as a Most of IIcchters business comes' from building tradi- total of 500 ships. When McCone took a postwar position h(

tional electric utility plants, ahhough the company has also _

p as undersect sry of defense, it was revealed that the jg
played a key role in the development of the dome <, tic and ,

directors of Calship earned 440 times their initial invest-t foreign nuclear power industriesJ The' downturn in the !M ment of 5100,000-a profit of 544 million.

economy during the catly 19SO's, and the ~ concurrent e j'k

' recession in energy-relat'ed inJustry;compelle' J Bechtel to Bechtcrs operations continued to expand in the years I '

T fo!!owing the war. The 1104 mile Trans-Arabian Pipeline, i

' consolidate its operations (byfreducing" th'eiworkforce, E

  • comp!cted in 1947,'is re;iarded as the first major structure N idiveinfying into areastoutside rits traditional m'arkets, Fof its kind. The South' Korean Power Project effectively  !

h cor:tractingijobs previocidy considered too sm;all, and , '}doub!cd that nation's energy' output in one move. In 1951 i ,' i

'providing operating services for existing power plants. - .

In 1684 when he was 12 years oldl Warren"Al Bechtel the 'ricncering company developed the first electricity- V- (

generating nudear power plant, in Arco,' Jdaho. Later the '

' moved with his family from a farm in Illidois to the frontier ~

{1 company built a nuclear fuel reprocessing plant there. By ll

' area ^of Peabody',-Kansas. Aftei ~ graduating?f r'om' 5high t 3choo!,t Bechtel ientured unniccessful!y F (into L a music i he end of the'1950's Bechtel had construction and en- l?

' gineering projects'on six continents and was ready to take e

}I carecrgWhen'".The Ladies Bandi failed; Bechters father . . . ."

' advantage of the emerging market for nuclear power.H '

wired seturn fate'to the stranded plide tromoonist. The -

7 In 1960 Stephen Bechtel became chairman of the board,

{

i:

~

' dis 5ppdinted: musician we'nt back to Gork 'on the family ?and Stephen Jr., a Stanford Business School graduate and j firm} Some y ears 1 !aterl pdorsfarming :fonditions 'lef t Bechtelairtua!!y.without'any'p'ossessions 'other 'than ra

grandson of the founder, stepped into the chief executise 1 j; officci' post.iAT1978 estimate sugges*ed that the two men

' team of 14 heahby mules. When the Chicago Rock Ishmd contro: led at least 40% of company stockiln the likely

{ [

and Peoria Railwa3 Company pushed westward in 1U9,- Ferent of the ' younger. Stephen one day ~ inheriting his (

Bechtel gathered up his mule tedm and worked his way

~

s 9 father's weahh, it is estimated that he could become the w the continent grading railbed for frontier train lines.

, richest person in the U.S. (The other 60Tof Bechtel stock '

htel edatually sold his mule. team, but he continued _ _ is hdd by some 60 tep executives who have agreed to sell _

woning for the rail. industry in a sariety of manuallabor _.

__ 9

' back their shares when they leme the company or die.) -

[

P

  • - k n .. v m s aawyme-c ganggemg,

m .

. ggin .a - - \

.N hkNkb b

3 '

~ i p '

d '

' df ,

W, , . h l Conuruction: n intcum. crotn 'd ;isc. 559 D

f -

. - - , , u,.;s7; c .- -.- .- m ,7 m - ~

,.., 'With a. new generation of leadership;in' place; the' ' backward. Finally, in 1975,the. U.S. Justice Department .

s / company wught to pin hegemony in the emerging nuclear , sued Bech.tel for a.l.lege.dly pa.r.ticipating in~ an

. 4 # . ,- - m n Arab . .- b.oycott power industry. In 1960 Bcchtel comp lcted the nation's

- of_ Israel,3a charge,the co.mpany dem.e d..

3a

? firrt commercial nuclear station,in Dresden. IMinois
.Tio ,

The , decade was' also a turmng p,omt for Bectiters l C . ears !ater the company built Canada's first nuclear power traditional, business in con.cruction and ' engineering.

plant: Construction in foreign markets bega i to incleaie Piom~

(g # i

'me t ' immediately' therecftEr/ Altho' uch the?n._ucl,e3r' i.b. c,o'nomic g' , e. ,c.onditions',

pted b'y I increased ;oveEnmerit're; i

.b, ,

B. .echiel~ einb.3rk' ed.g'oni ?w

. .  % .w power mdustry iubse'quemly'ran inid'diff:culties such as

. , - m 7 program o,fjina,ncm,ng,and, ope,ratgnal seyices,.;S rl cost oserrunt questions about environmental safety,' and th,cyQegaret,he;ne,w g stiff regulatory measures. Ecchtel still continues to pro'; rgen,uesg T p,de,frayy}ncreivisions hts the,p contrit;uted j

p .

note nuclear energy as a necessary option to convention: . company now; secures, fman,agng. constgcmgjor, M any generated power. c'  ;. ." ' ',. m a-some cases esen puts up its own rnoneyl.Bechtels diversifi-kP l Bechtcrs construction Projects in the 19Ws'an'd.1970's

~

gth,m,'also,l'n.cl.uded t. E.c.i uiring /e a. .. I.S, g Ts..id,ie o. f t.h.!

,i

.e

~ ciitio,h p.ro.C. oal$ C. o, Read

.ncluded the San Fran.c isco Bay Area Rapid, Transit system Peabodyo mpany,. and* a'a . .mm, s, .ajor + in,,.te,re.st inf the.

. - i

-(BART), the subway transit system h and around Wash? . .

f f L7 - - prest.igious Dillon. , .; , ..omp .. i ve q mgton. D.C:;.a slurry pipe in Brazil, and an inr.ovative tar. .%

vver halfN'the company"'s bu. .any n~.st.

i1982'.. - smess involved ov.u erseas :

[F.

1

.+ n 'e n . .#..oYN*".

- sands project iri A!berta, Canada.? < . .3 3 market $' WM #'

/c m v,

' In the 19 '0's t60 former Nixon cabinet members too.k executive posts at the' company. Later both inen, Osorge p D. ~urm.- ~n.g' the.; R ;.

- federal governm. e.agan.,

y; pre.s:

den.c..'".'Bechier.

e. tie. s. . t,o; tl

~en.t incre. a2 pres.i.de.ncy.o. f.. .r.at.i.on B.echtel a C..orpod.m. se .

-.~

Shutz and Caspar Weinberger, would leave Bechtel for i,i? Se .

- . m w u f poutions in the Reagan. Adminr.stratiet Bechtcl has State after Alexander. Haig,*,

~

form. toofb.ec.ome.x,c,r er chairman

.w United

i. O g actircly cultivated its ties to the federal government. and , T.ic.hholog[es',' le ft' th.ejos..t' ir,E.1982 D@einbirN..,yrM. u 's?(

emp:ovs several former: hich : officia s-a fact c w hich

- ., 4c % -

us .i

,ly e Bechtel ge o s. .

1

.. ra

. .ne. s.ls. couns..e. was m,s S ec.r.etarys of Def v

bothers critics of the company. h* . ' h. :W m

.~ .

n fo.. .th.

r h,e.f.ir.st m.

.. th.e,,f,' n .w e.ns.e. .

s .

. .t.t ,.u se,ve.n. y,ea,,n r.s. :.o,f ^.u.

,Rea.ga.n a.d,.m. i.rus.trat. ion. B..y.

p . In 1976 Bechtel unvei'ed plans for its Jubail Project, the c

s Be.ch,

.s in- t.a.shi.ngt.on. a.l ml

]1 . largest' undertaking es,er. attempted by a construction, ~,198.4

CIA, direct.or y.

ill.am t.e.r,yc.o.nn.e,ctio.n,s,u asey,

~

e;E,ast;special. envoy s.o:.inc y .ud,.e.d W,iidd 9

f. company. On Saudi Arabia's' Persian Gulf coastj 'the -P. hilip H.ab.i.b 4

er and

~

CIA form lJ di,re,.cte

[c a d company is buNing a tuturistic industrial community on' . of,w -n hon,ih,ad w_o.rk.e"d,.for t.h, e. m<om. p c ei

2. m." - ~
m. . . - m 'emp.loyees or as consultants m the past;3 %,,,ny ,ther as.pp i the site of t an ancient r hshing viHage. De project is f espccted to be comp!cted in 1996'at an estimated cost of #

Se 't' phen Bechtelp Jrf is 'now chairrnan,'of'the board.i

~

j 5100 b.Hion %e new city _ will be the home of Saudi Alden P., Yatesg Bechtel president, has' led.the firm into

Ard iis integrated petrdchemical industry. A 1973 meet. numerous projects previously regarded as too small' fort ing between Stephen Bechtel, Jr. and King Faisal was the DechteL-Dese include finishing jobs aban'doned byLthe' t

catahst for the plan to hau! eff 370 miUion cubic meters of company's competitors and actively seeking" contracts? i

^

sand and budd a modern city complete with a five.million- even those as small as $2 mi!!ionfFurtlicrizioreNein'oliYfi-  !

j puon desalination plant, modular homes, a sex-segregat- , cation a'nd rhodernization;efforis'at existing' plants offsit t ~

e i cd swimming marina, and a number of factories. o

' t.h,E -~ l.E.k.". o.,f 'cdhtia'c'ts' .foT'3e'wTc~ nstruction?,'

. , - Fin.allyf thI

! Due in part to a broad po:itical effort aimed at halting company's operating'servicesidivision* keeps skilled!cx ' ,

the use of nuclear power in the U.S', in recent years 'the' l perts 'at"w ork' in' their'. fieldifin'o~stIy? in' orIcoir@ Aiaine j company has had to turn away from nuclear energ'y to ! css tchance'of 'iisting e faci!! ties. Despite measures to locate-f L t controversial markets. However, problems in the nuclear new sources ofincome, Bechtel had to cut its workforce in

l power industry persist';. A 1978 lawsuit concerning mal;

~

19S4 to 35.000 (from 45,000 in 1982), a> < ,

j j functions at the Palisades nuclear generator in Michigan With new Bechtel offices open in' New DcIhi 'and;

'j '

cost Bechtel $14 million in settlement fees. In ~ addition; a' l Deijing, and a large amount of construction underway in'  !

L 19S4 Mother Jo :cs' magazine article suggest'ed.thati jn' the Pacific Basin, industry analysts' predict. that in the l attempting ~ to secure nuclear power contracts in South future approximately 70% of the company's business will' l

! Korea the company rnay base violated the 1977 Foreign be abroad. While Bechtel consolidates its business and  !

[ Corrupt Practices Act through the use of irregular I.ay--

' enters new markets,it continues to maintain an imriressive 1 ments. The article also argued that certain Bechtel execti- presence within the international constructiod industryL tives u ho later became top U.S. gosernment officials may 2 hase known the payments warranted investigations by the Principal .Lluidiaries: Bechtel Western Power. Corp.;

, Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Justice Depart- Bechtel Eastern Power- Corp.; Bechtel Inc.; Bechtel-ment but said nothing. (The company issued its emp!ayees National, Inc.; Bechtel Limited; Hydro & CommunityI a point.t'y-poir.t rebuttal of the artic!c.) Facilities Division. The company also has subsidiaries in'

The company was in the limelight sevetal times during Argentina, Australia, . Brazil," Canada, Chile," China, he 1970's. A 1972 class-action suit aueging sex discrimina- Eg3 pt. France, Indonesia, Korea, Saudia Arabia 'and-

! i s

Q v

tion at Ucchtel settled out of court for $1.4 million. A bribery scheme invohing construction of a New Jersey Spain. - *' '

.l

' ~pipeline led to convictioas for four' Bechtel employees. Funher Reading: Ihe Bechtcl Srcry:3crenry Years of Further. unwanted publicity aros= from the revelation that: AcccmpWenent i?i Engincering and Cordtruction,' San -

. Bechtel had instaued!a 420. tori rmclear-reactor? vessel Francisco, He Company,1963. + i l t

1 l

I. I

j'

% d M M M :: i '

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h l

~

.- ENQNEERSH. .

.- Bechis.@5P.E

.:y m.sg ^M m[ w a$g[w$g., @m . ,

,' .na ....M w q mm.co.4 MW; ,, % f .

m m mgygw m;4my l

y, ::m

,Dw%> . w)w. W .T - -

a . . . . .

s. . . . . . . -

N@muy# N ENGINEERS' T" s,e gum m pp. n m:42,000, employ %

ees,' tne- payroll snrank t0117,500.2 It: Wa's'.' . W W :M N.

( - -

Lfh;e g m g l. kE  ;'paniesiin build clams,high"' BechtcYs\wont: slump {sinceithe)i%}fifsf,h

~

^

hih l

\

h?bt%$LQ liarliars, bridces, power.

  • siod.: ' ' T .

.l~2: hk40&& Qll

\ b, n l%iGEts-even " Aitriple'wliaminy~didlit)D'echTe1Nk's%j@

. Nfm%yf.beYfirif.r' f s. a entire .

structures citic's. Thef.

i are. plants -

beingn m

. -an d the(leading)

.~

this b~usm.< - ess - > dne v ~. dz-% builder up n~

dun.w ng (ofEnucleir[p6

,,g a~

MQw-

' thei1980s't Becht'el3as'aficTdiiig b'hililer%] '

M$ ' .> ,

' MW[on*rebtn/tuAnd government con-D JM dRc1Mrlifim'portarif to.] theibig .$$f

%y@$8Et$1EFdustry.

M%riit'eQlobally, buildinc a sky
. The f/

J of Ports, the~neiv plunged;athe big^ cities}ibntjvh'enloilyric'5EKfy entirh ~ companies'.

'oilJproducing'r[atioli's

~

infrastrdctur ist.h'dS.~l$.%nQhi, p }

gM,;yp[fle,,MEF

,m u % .

t .

doim trv, ' clearing .

grab.world jun cut ba.

cie rr.!Tild' international c k. on.constructw.n pro-> g m t

. .o ,

panop nc G

~%w-@g:q"rneermg; g " ifs giants s N ng,* S wc o. . ..en 's Alex. Jon, nson,< . competit. Britain's'..

4 fin}Lm,o,"1_taly'.s.Snainprogetti,J .

u.. . jectf lu des; Finally, France's

~ . . ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Bechtel . ..

fa'c6d 9 9 M ,w ng@

n5

' Even'so, mn Irom construction Bechtel','still?ciu'alifiesiasi compames x.f th

@& "9hijkiihiYb Hyundai; Japan's Kumagai, . based in Ja' ~

W pan an 7&5EdIOhbayashi and

  1. America's- i world's biggestengin'eer.'AUtli&sta'rt'ofM MQhbkt!

M@MtcInd'Fhior. .c  ; 1990, tliey were'w~orking o'nT,650'projectsjc-3m YfFil WM h hdh.

WMMK4M$ .

, for 550 clisnts droiind thsw'6rldi Overe the Eurotunnel ,o_ct_ ween F,h.icl.ud

,. .m.

Q d$e$4NM. i w Mgf

.a n

a intsin6L'Q 9 %M s%w$;NMdete-h iRihfr f England;l two C int 5hiati'onhlfaii 7 yS u M, m a$ g ? W .L. .,

c Saudi? A.rab.ia;"thiff energy pr.oject i,n,Ma.. ....ssa, c usetts;ydeco.n2.L A .s.

t -,MSEM,h.

, %. 1:. .

%kp N

R. S.w y

ihl: c g g# @m .

dn.k.

.c t a, ,m. ~ mati

. ~ . .. .o n o f. .t.h e. T,

. e Um..tG. aa .? a sq=umg,.n ng:.s. 2- re a ct o r; a 17 0,n.ree. M.il... Island. s -

-r s .. .n

.;-91 p W;g A a

.: sAtNe e e..

w. - - <Js ,

,, mile. ? stretcliT6f'_'ilid' Tra n s ,da t. ion al, h.ighw.a y ,. system ... -in*; -;m%e j p.yg m .. .

4 W

up(lqs

'lbrkey; and the ambitious citati6h of ah' ;pq t dM GQ[W%M M';< IfhD P1,"-  :

QO r industrial city, Jubail, in the middle 6f the

[NNM'E Qg g- "

o Saudi- Arabian desert? According to the:

Guimiess Book of World Rec'ords, Jubail is

'ddQQ WHMy

% 7 ffiffi&l

%g,y}}fMyph 'M:m. the largest construction project in history.  :%W M5 gg, 6;-.{8MMM <$

engmcerms Engineers have had to raise the site's' eler M$k.C Employees:3saco vation by more than'2'nieters and m' ove' $ d%$

more than: 3.;0 million cubic meteis' of ' ~hM% i

?Mdhl MRPM.f . ~ Sales:

Founded: IMS us cclifomiaLi!!!nn earth. On the drawing bciards is'a' project- pHp p

kb i San Francisco, QR!hof quarfers:

hk n'[Highl Places (Simon '&:

to build two geothermal power'plahts in'-

s uthern Japan. 1s _',-Qc fis }!]$Mif4 Apl%p g

ghurie31988) journabst' Laton Mc- Histor}. Bechters successLluis.b'een'. 5 0Mb

$gMncyc profiled the familviow n e d closely tied to the growth and Iswer of big" ph$Mel, Group; depicting the giant engi- government in' the U.S/ The: company- '

AdC $Nhh I N cMMymg and construction firm as prosper- ~ began in 1698; when War'ren'Al Bechtel;?

virtue of th'eir high-level contacts lef't his Kansas ranch and hired out with MNrh WQEg(yj[olitical leaders. If there x Mihilf kp , his weremu!e team sub-to grade a stretch of railroad-

@hja&C,0do;this' j scenario, Bechtel should in Oklahoma. Bechtel folloived the~ rails to iG%W y Q1 riding high'dming the 1980s. Oakland, California, where 'he continEcd: ,

D O$P jid contracting for railroad constructiori and.

l dh IMQMgc!,mpr J7 resident,in the Reagan George P.ne',c Shulti,. T. :S i

retary of State

%th ir,foimer legal counsel, Caspar W.

cabi- cdded projects like irrigation canals l

.Oe .U

?. , " %

f g erger,5was Secretary of Defense; 6
D g(ph0VSNdient M gkgformerivice president. for' nuclear

] I Kenneth Davis; was  : .W.7 * - - - - - -

-=

j;h.,

,f

./

.utyJecretary.cf Energy. These con- p veryycar only 3 percent of i .

)MO Qctions notw.thstandmg, Bechtel took a brengmeenny and scie'nce. >

- . ' *1 [*e^

4 Qerebeatm . 2 degrecs are conferred on bla.cks ' o p

Sq w e A@s.,tnes.en,,fn.g in- tlm 1980sand. when the" hadp.,vw n,~: .n .,nds m. . high

,c ,. : w>.

n . . ; ;w. ,.- ,... . ,_ Hispanics. > -

~,'

q ~

www. m u a .

N 458 'Tcds: frorn Hish Technology to Hemy A'.cd h

'2 hihk-m.g s,96h , .

'f. iXiMbh  ; ',

mc ., n+-

f liighf ays and pipelines. Bechtel's three sons grew up among tr,ctors rmd steam it.

department They even m 1988.created a human

, M m::WNresdukM

{.

.o b g; -) shovels and were runnin;; field projects in gocial responsibility.

. A ED W 'h"e L 7

1 the.ir early 20s.,

By the time they m.corporated in 1925, owned. Bechtel doesn't have to dis'c]8.s Bc1ng pnvatelgp 49=hv

~ jyT -

cate'gt s.-

.t .jn tc

'i Bechtel .was one of the West's biwest any information about themselve- s+'b, u @am avWg1 i .

y they brist!c at the frequent designatm.m.y ~

p construction outfits. In 1931 a consortium ..

secretive," and as each year goes byM rh'6hrig ACCO2 2

i of six companies Bechtel organized won %A.m . .

r ,the contract to bu.ld i Hoover Dam, the veils are dropped.The annual report thebc

.u- ; m < Cit)w n e . , issue to emp.oyees is made available toU 3

e e 'SCD E biggest m. lu.s tory. More huge proj.ects to!-

Q the press. And when McCartney'o sib'.ogd ( :bv.- ' T55 lowed: Fanother dam on the Colorado eme5: 4 up~),

River, Bonneville Dam on the Colum,o.m

. appeared in 1988, labeling them,on thm

p cover as ethe most secret corpor'ation.Fa.m a sSo;,; &,Romc
j ,: and the foundations for the aan I,rancisc .

Bechtel didn't turn the other cheek"Th'e~yfN.D Tc'n !?

j Bay Undge. Warren Bechtel died m 1933, ;chlle'

) but his son Steve expanded the busmess labeled point-by-point the book rebuttal. ~ " trash" They'cand alfog is'siiedM$f@

q and was primed when World . , ar11 brought ~

, Wcb11m a flood of contracts. Bechtel turned out Ytlef.1

.q j

almost 600 ships for the war effort. .

circulated publication, Engineering an editorial News-Ric8 from dj$1the iridi s thbir^

^

After the war Bechtel followed the gov.

that answered follows: . Having fn. ends McCartney's .

in high pla+ces mdin w.

is yoiht, i

as<y~

equyir.

L ~-

y -

crnment .mio new areas. Benefitmg from -

~

i

' Amen.ca's role. .m the Middle East, Bechtel no sin. In tact, bem' g in the n'g1at p1a"ce;a*te w' '"% 3"D8if(

}N. 4 began an extensive mvolvement there the ~right time and knosing -tholis.. - ~ - Mlith MmidM'IS. e.< .

people can be called entr'epreneurslup, / us w+ -.

when the} contracted to biuld the 1.100- Bechtels relationships with the Arman.d%w

'g n /

.w .- .- -

z-fw 7

-]c' . mile Traris-Arabian pipelm.e. Bechte, 4 als - 'Hainmers and Ibn Sauds, and itsiibilifiEsW d,Y

.g .

built the first c clectncity-generatmg nu-i to' attract the 3Veinberger's'and SliElEis 3

hYs have the stuff:that Bechtelm competitors n w _s @

- - - ~

,a/ '.clea.riplan.t m -An,:o, Idaho, m 1951, .and as ,

%mW W

y, ' constructed a. nuclear
fu. el. re. processmg - have envied,~ thud),h'thE yedrs'.ilt3sMifd%

,L -

r p} ant. at th.e Same site. Alone or ,m concert remains'the real" power behm.-d thww4@

t e ,com-umA eA

.a

- .with other compam.es, Bechtel has.bu.lt i ~

t he~ n ca

  • a. 4 pany. Th'is book ~ won,t change tha .,w,w+Mp%w:

-;the subway systems for Washm.gt on, D.C.,- .WW MW

{T' and tho' San Francisco Bay Area and half Globalpresence. .Less thari beforo egg

}-

jji . Jof America's nuclear poGer plants. They sides the Eurotunnel, Bechtel is wapr gph.- g@gangg t

- y M Malso have the distinction of being the first on the Trans-Tokyo Bay Bndge and a newpgNg trk g ,l rapid transit system for Taipei. Bugt[eg('fg@.j.Q !

.[ plant d  ; aRer an' accident:They' contracted mternatmnal to:hportw, , c'othhiny[t6 n of their busmess,g rehabilitate g 4n close to 80 percent m 1980, was down,G;p gp.ge-mi cit ,Mcosi 6'f SiOD'niillion~over four .- .

.,l yearsh 43 percent ' ' . clean in 1988. up Three Mile IslandhyhP,.l{ .

f. y.< wbgIM Spmeet l at an e

' ~ - .

T-

.OMnens arid ruln. Tstephen" Bechtel, Bechtel Group, Inc., P.O. Box 3965,5,0,Be,aleggggg; I j. gy Jr.', grandson of the foun'dcr, stepped down- Street, San Francisco,, CA 94119,; (4,1 gfg

'j T as'CEO ahd chairman of Bechtel in 1990. M ,234,.,,, ,, q ; }, yg

,, g gg jh51d '

d> IForbe^s' estimates he is worth'S1.2 billion, ,; , -

wy- ,j]M W F y g'an'El) yd

$f ' ;niostly from his' family's. 50 percent own- -

~

m o, o'y

- i ership 'of the ' company (senior managers y .. n . g h @$N p6fg fah

~ oivn thelbalance). His son, Riley Bechtel, '

. M 9f M.y'g qHpsM@yg$ gal's5

.4{f

.took his place. When Riley became presi- .

.35Jgj. u% M3MWMMVist J.

, ';r i

" dent fiiq1989;at age ,37, he ' succeeded Alden yatesl president from 1983101989,.

~

k.j%.W@ggh$iiBi)

,.. @ -% M 5d hf3Wi h%

'.h.podejof,oni stwofnonfamily members to - - ,o . g ., ., '._I ;& $d ib4 ; hold the presidency (the 'other was George < .

i, r -

A> n- M%@y$k .3/ jf %g bifiir (h ~ f iShultz).3Yates died ofl cancer in -1989.. Afts[leMin'g

n. . a 3; thb Reaganfcabinet hissa

. .... .w;p.ppyggpsTM&

L pn . .t_ rejoined the Bechtel board. ~. . .

y npdhg wgg~ W gr.yNih..j[7 C ' NA' 4p_lcics s W: to.otrk." Beclit'el has a rep,.u'- -

' n * " WWMd egtra. et.

i tdtion as driinhrohn, stuffy place to work, - yhh"h. g553 0[6 l' 2 ' lea's't'thes'e days they seem to be NM aware of _

Y. Ao6e'with~an'engiric'ering mentality. But at - '

pypandMlWA

.. t

l:Q k $

., ~

._ m m h 4 hWiht W WiATNW % W M Ma% M& WWWW&E*3 **'"P'"Y

.. I?*lycu Iisca ends: December 31 '

(' h.cchtel 3 J 931 revenues (37.5 bil! ion) rose 34%

Environmental cleanup has proved particu- 4 <,

~

from 19M levels, rakir.g Bechtel #1 among US !arly successful in recent years. Bechtel is the i-enginct r ng an.! construction fams. Based in nation's top ranking environmental considt- M1M M MMRW M M NIM @Q 'I i San Francino. Ded.te! is prhately owned and . M : '

family-comrol:cd The pkhal company has ant, with 1990 revenues totaling $974 million.

Its construction business will benefit from Ga.innan Emnuus: Stephen D. Dechtel, Jr.,

age 6S g g!

workeJ cn mme than 15,009 prWects in over rebuilding by industries (particularly oil com, I' resident and CEO: Riley P. Bechtel, age 40 O 135 couraries on al! 7 continents. At the end of panies) that are required to upgrade facihties 1991, it had 653 tRnts and about 1,759 active M Wham L Friend, age 56 Em D n J. Cunther, age 53 g]p '@

to mect environmental standards.

projects and studies worldwide.

In 1991 a Urchtel team of over 1.000 work- EVP: Cordel Em J hn h,1 W. Hull, age6059 44 .

Bechtel projects include ekctric power gen-tration (nuc! car, fossil, solar, hydro), oil and ers, hired by Saudi Arabia and Kuwait to re- eerhout, Jr., age y$

y pair Guif War damage, quenched 650 well fires EVP: Adrian Zaccaria, age 47

-Q ;p gas pipelines, oil facihty construction and up- in 9 months - much more picHy than SVP and Centro!!cr:L, I aul Unruh

' grading, chcmical p! ants, transpertation sys. scheduled -and recover;d mi!! ions of barre!s SVP 8"d M*"88"'III"**" II'5 "'" 8 y,g ,J*

tems, mining, and telecommunicatione. It is the Icading builder of US nuclear plants and is of oil in Kuwait's surface pools. Bechtel is con _ Charles R. Collyer Auditors: Cocpers & Lybrand g ih :ti, ,! ;

tinuing its work in Saudi Arabia, building g working on over 40% of US nuclear stations.

, {g ]j ,

Jubail, an industrial city fur 275,000 peopic.

gg g gg Wf MWW%?N90PM.'FMhBMW/MG 9WWWWM  ;"

In 1898 26-ycar-o!d Warren Bechtel left his IlQ: Fifty Beale St., San Francisco, CA 941D_>

'4M Kansas farm to grade railroads in tbc Oklahoma Ind:an ttrritories, where he soon James Bay hydroelectric project was begun in 1972 (comp leted in the mid-1980s, it supphes 1895 Phone: 415 763-1234 76

. ,i t founded his own company. After Bechtel energy to S miUion people). Bechters Jubail project, begun in 1976, will raise from the Fax: 415 768 9038 Id l[t settled in Oakland, Canfornia, his engineering Arabian desert a city of 275,000 (projected Bechtel operates worldwide with 4 regional offices in the US (Caithersburg, MD; Houston; k J.'

and management ski Is brnught h:m large completion date 199C)- A E projects such as the Northern Cahfornia High- With the attractions of nuclear pov er fad' los Angeles; and San Francisco) and a regional ' Y d way and Bowman Dam. By the time ofits in- ing in the wake of the Three Mile Island acci- ofGce in London. .i 'N < I corporation in 1925, Bechtel was the West's dent (which Bechtel won the right to clean up,  % % m s.,hed $ .(A ,

1argest construcCon conmany. starting in 1979 and sti!! ongoir'g). Bechtel  %% Q Steph(n Bechtel (presider.t after his father's concentrated on less controversial markets

. W@ b death in 1931! wea'hered the Dyression with huge projects ble the Hoover Dam Where such as mining in New Cuinea (gold and cep- $hcr countries b' h

Bechtel superdsed 8 companies) and the San per,1981-64) and China (coal,19S4).

Bechtel rected under the general recession Mal -

M - g /y 5 y

,' s r rancisco Bay Bridge. Wil meant full recov- p gt WNA J %dMC.hIA> e - u and rising Third World debt of the early 1980s.

. the many contracts including the con. The com;iany cut its work fcrce by 22,000 action of 570 ships in Bechtel-built yards in L,ahfornia, (almost 1/2 the total) and stemmed the ' arses "

E"$,". [j,C"l["d"' ("[',

h' gi by taking on plant moderni:ations and other ,

In the postwar years Dechtel cxpanded over- smau pro;cct3- CWrWeca Airpris Dechtel Construction to.  %'N - U seas, bui! ding pipehnes (TransArabian,1947; Under 4th generation Riley Bechte! (CEO in Dechtcl ud. M.

Canadis TrantMountain,1954, Austraha's 1990), the resurgent Bechtel (beginning the smtomgs cechtet Nauonaunc. h first,1964) and numerous power projects, including one that doubled South Korea'3 1990s with 50% more chents than a decade Pubbe transit systems waste to-encre riants Ecchtel retro;eum, chemical & Industrial d;?gp.

carlier) has won numerous contracts, includ. Mrvessinalants energy cutpd (1MS). By the time Stephen

~

ing a $16 bi!! ion deal with Hong Kong for a Mwem Nc3 Nants Co.

Bechtei Power Corp. yN h, Bechtel, Jr., became CEO in 1960 (when his *"*8'"d*'****""

e '

new airport and transit system and project B " C*"'t"'C# ~ .T father mosed to chairman), the compny was management of the channel tunnel between "

optratmg on 6 continents.

Britain and France. In 1991 it won a contraci ht p,nts .

ch Y NWeet

~

_,y 1: N 4 y

Bechte! huilt many nucicar power p' ants in to oversee a $3 biHion expansion of the Dallas- hrehnes centra! Artery Harbor & ag 4 j the next 2 decades, including the world's first fort Worth Airport. Venezuela's national oil ' I"""'3 * **"I large one to be privately financed (Dresden, company, PDVSA, chose Bechtel to build the Power p: ants '

PWP and paper m31:

~'?99 IUinois. creneJ 1960) and Canada's first process units in its extensive upgrade ofits peapmtorage and E gIa 7"rance)

1

[ '

(1962h Large transportation projects included refinery in Paraguana. secunty systems Internationalairport @

San Francisco's Day Area Rapid Transit system . In late 1991 Cary Bechte!, Riley's older Enviramentat gy g .g, (BART,1961-74) and Washington, DC's sub. . Mait Q brother,was appointed president of the Environmentar assessment (saudi industrial city) ., (.g way system (early 1970s). Wor k on Canada's , . ;' company's civil umt, Dechtel Civil Company. frw a.

11a:ardous waste cicanuts SDt4SS(waste.to-enere K ; 3 (EPA Superfand sites, project, Massac.husetts) d i

M N d ' Mai![MMWWW9Kg7yNMWFM3MyMHMAMii%WW5Q1 P"

'(( '

} ,

hastewater treatment decontamination; *% l c 19S2 1983 1954 1985 1956 1987 1988 1999 1990 1991 Operations Damp Wod &pd [  % l Sa!cs i$ rni) fu3a ) 13.f.00 14.100 8.f.00 LM1 N"*

New wmk baaed d al) 2 71 % 5.700 13.D00 5,000 6.891 6.679 4.4 72 5.M6 5.031 7.516 **!'"Y  ;, c 4.9F2 3,675 3.537 4.486 5.427 4,757 7245 " ## ' ' " ' #

kaber of chtnts 30  % B00 .900 950 J

900 850 'M Ner of actwe pm;ccu - -

1300 1350 W,~

1,450 1.f,oD 1.700 1.750 Em;hces 16 8M 161.0N 0 I- . NIII kh f

132.00{ 90.000 80,000 50.000 - -

27.800 32.500 30.9 % N N.'" & l"" (

3.A ABB Hanson um~ g q s Mics ($ m3.) un g-- y Ashtand McDermott Q

19S2-91 mp g ,o .- @

W~ 53. Baker Hughes British Aerosrace peter Kiewit Sons' Raytheon ]Q

@ N uno - M

] p!__

g-_ r%-

- Consolidated Rail -~ Safety Kken p y n fu ._

Dresser TRW  ;%p 4 4200-.-- ;q;. m Duke power ue p g -

-s 7

_q--g --

y, -- [ Fb Union Pacific Waste Management r

U - h 4

3 -_

_ pp7-_g_ j m

M -

W.,R. ,crace Wesunghouse O~ d n2 n, ,,, 3g g Hoovtres HmDaoon ormuca Busmess m3 sg m d; i l

- a j

f ,

I CAiiE HERE TONIGHT BECAUSE Tile ISSUES ARE SUPPOSED TO BE ABOUT THE MAINTENANCE ,

AND SAFETY OF THE PLANT, AND I HEARD BRAD THOMAS, A SPOKESMAN FOR DIABLO CANYON, 9

S TE THAT THE PLANTS RECORD SPEAKS FOR ITSELF. SO LET'S HEAR THE PLANT'S RECORD

(

S'1 AK FOR ITSELF.

i t NO ONE SEEMS TO MENTION DECllTEL POWER CORPORATION. BECIITEL llAS BEEN THE GENERAL C0f1 TRACTOR SINCE MARCH, 1962. 50 THAT MEANS TilEY WERE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE MAINTENANCE ~AND UPGRADING WORK DONE AT THE PLANT.

. l 4 .

BECllTFL IS THE LEADING BUILDER OF U.S. NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS, AND IS WORKING ON f

OVER 40% OF U.S. NUCL$AR STATIONS. THEY ALSO WON THE RIGHT TO CLEAN UP THE ACCIDENT. AT'TilREE MILE ISLAND.

NOW COMES THE SCARY PART. THIS COMES FROM THE BOOK, "EVERYBor)y's BUSINESS AT THE CUESTA COLLEGE LIBRAEY.

O l

'IilE CollPA!1Y NnE 111 TIIE LIrir. LIGHT SEVERAL TI!1ES DURI!JG Tile '70'S. A DRIDERY '

SCllEllE INVOLVIf1G COllSTRUCTI0t1 0F A IJEW JERSEY PIPELI!JE LED TO CONVICTIONS FOR FOUR BECIITEL EllPLOYEES. @ UlJWANTED PUBLICITY AROSE FR0t! REVELATI0t1 1

4 Til AT BECilTEL IIAD INSTALLED A 420 TON fl0CLE Ai? FEACTOR VESSEL DACKWARDS. WE"RE !

TALHIf1G isBOUT A NUCLEAR REACTOR llERE FOLKS, tJOT SOME 4 YEAR OLD TYI!JG TilEIR I 4

SHOES. FINALLY IU 1975 Tile U.S. JUSTICE DEPART!1E!JT SUED BECilTEL FOR ALLEGEDLY 1 PARTICIPATING IN AN ARAD DOYCOTT OF ISREAL, A CilARGE Tile C0!!PATJY DE!JIED.  !

I 1 11 1970 A LAWSUIT CONCERNI!JG 11ALFUtJCTIONS AT Tile PALISADES NUCLEAR GElJERATOR Ill MICllIGAN COST BECIITEL $11 Mll.LIOf1 I!1 SETTLEf!ENT FEES.

.4 It! ADDITION, A 1984 110 tiler J0!JES MAGAZI!JE ARTICLE SUGGESTED TilAT IN IsTTE11PTING TO SECURE IJUCLEAR R

P/NER CONTRACTS IN SOUTH HOHEA Tile C011PA!JY 11AY llAVE VIOLATED Tile 1977 FOREIGN d

CORRUPT PRACTICES ACT TilROUGil Tile USE OF IRREGULAR PAYi1Ef1TS ,

THE ARTICLE ALSO ARGUED TilAT CERTAll! DECllTEL EXECUTIVES Ullo LATER DECA?tE TCP GOVERtJ!!EllT OFFICIALS !!AY IIAVE Hij0NN T!!E PAYME!JTS UARRAtlTED-I!1VESTIGATIntJS DY Tile FEDERAL

I

)

O l

r

_(FRO!! Tile BOOK FRI EtJDS IN IIIGli Pi, Aces Dy s1rtor; T. SCilllSTER , 1 (1H 0 )

BECllTEL HAS llAD fluf1EROUS LI Nits TO PR0!!I!JEiJT U. S. GOVERN!!E!IT OFFICIALS DURI!JG Tile RE AGlill ADl11111STitATIOT1. Tile l R FOR!!ER PR ES 111Ef1T , GEORGE P.

. I SilH LTZ , WAS SECRETAllY OF Tile STATE 1 11 REAGArlS CAllIIJET; Til r.1 R F0Hf1ER LEGAL, COUf1SEL, C W. WEINBERGER, WAS SECRETARY OF DEFEf1SE; TIIE I R FOR11ER VICE PRESIDEf1T FOR NUCLEAR DEVELOPMENT, W.

R EtJtJ ETil 1) AVIS, WAS DEl'l}Ty SErRETARY OF Ef1ERGY.

O BY 1(384 BECHTEL'S CONNECTIONS IN WASHINGTON ALSO INCLUDED CIA DIRECTOR WILLIAM CASEY, MIDDLE EAST ENVOY PilILLIP IIABIB, AND FORMER CIA DIRECTOR RICHARD HELMS.

ALL OF WHOM HAD WORKED FOR THE COMPANY EITHER AS EMPLOYEES OF AS CONSULTANTS IN ,

THE PAST. BECAUSE OF THIS, DIABLO CANYON WARRANTS AN INVESTIGATION, NOT AN EXTENSION ALONG WITli TilESE MEN AND CORPORATIONS I JUST MENTIONED.

h O

t

f l f  ;

GOOD EVENING. MY NAME IS ROBERT MEZA._I AM SPEAKING HERE TONIGHT ,

oECAUSE I AM PRESENTLY GOING THROUGH A THIRD-PARTY CLASS ACTION LAWSUIT t AGAINST PGLE AND BECHTEL POWER CORPORATION. I HAVE NOT WORKED IN MY l

PPOFESSION AS A JOURNEYMAN RODMAN IPONWORKER SINCE NOVEMBER, 1983,

{

WHEN I WAS HURT AT DIABLO CANYON NUCLEAR POWER PLANT.

  • i I WAS IN MY PROFESSION FOR 17 YRS. FROM 1966-1983 BEFORE I BECAME .

' INJURED WHILE PEING EXPOSEE TO TOXIC PAINT FUMES WHILE WORKING AT DIABLO. '

I I HAVE BEEN SENT TO UUMEROUS DOCTORS BY THE DEFENSE ATTORNEYS OF BECHTEL AND PGLE, AND ALSO BY MY ATTORNEYS AT THE TIME. THEY NEVER CHECKED ME FOR TOXICS AND METALS IN MY BODY. IN FACT, NY ATTORNEY AND THE DEFENSE t

ATTORNEY AT-A WORK COMP HEARING, AGREED TO SEND ME TO AN AGREED-UPON MEDICAL  !

EXAMINER, TO GIVE ME A CLEAN BILL OF HEALTH. THIS WAS TOLD OUTRIGHT TO MY WIFE AND I AT THIS HEARING, AND MY WIFE HA3 IT ON TAPE. [

ON MY OWN I HAVE FOUND SPECIALISTS WHO SPECIALIZE IN NEUROTOXICOLOGY

' AND IMMUNOTOXICOLOGY. THESE SPECIALISTS TESTED AND FOUND TOXICS AND METALS IN MY BODY. THE SAME TOXICS AND METALS FOUND IN THE PAINT THAT WAS USED AT DIABLO. THESE DOCTORS ALSO TOLD ME THAT I HAVE DAMAGE TO MY KIDNEYS AND TO  ;

MY LIVER BECAUSE OF THIS.

I AM THE ONIY ONE LEFT OUT OF SO WORKERS IN THIS CLASS ACTION SU"

.JUST RECENTLY I POUND OUT THE LAST TWO PLAINTIFFS SETTLED ON JULY I4, 199.. '

MY TRIAL DATE WAS SET FOR AUGUST 9, 1993 IN SAN LUIS OBISPO SUPERIOR COURT-

  • HAD TO POSTPONE MY TRIAL DATE, BECAUSE OF THIS NEWLY FOUND EVIDENCE AND

. PERT WITNESSES. I WOULDN'T HAVE BEEN ABLE TO HAVE ALL THIS IN, IN TIME t FOR THE TRIAL.

  • THE CAUSE OF OUR TOXIC EXPOSURE IS BECAUSE OF POOR VENTILATION, WHILE
  • WORKING IN THE FUEL HANDLING BUILDING, AND OTHER BUILDINGS AT DIABLO.

THERE WERE AROUND"IOO WELDERS IN THE FUEL HANDLING EUILDING, AND  ;

I 00 IRONWORKERS, HALF ON ONE SIDE AND HALF ON THE OTHER WITH NOTHING BUT -

A FETITICN BETWEEN US. "E WERE WORKING G DAYS A WEEK, 10 HRS. A DAY. A i SAFETYMAN AT DIABLO TOLD US THAT WORKING MORE THAN B HRS. IN THERE WAS  !

VERY HAZARDOUS TO OUR HEALTH. THE AIR WAS SO BAD YOU COULDN'T SEE A WORKER  !

20 FT. AWAY. YOU COULD JUST BARELY SEE AN OUTLINE OF HIM. WE WERE IN THERE FOR A SOLID WEEK. THE WORKERS ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE PETITION WERE GOING OUT FOR AIR ABOUT 2 HOURS AT A TIME, THEN THEY WOULD COME BACK IN FOR AN HOUR 'f i

OR TWO, THEN GO BACK OUT FOR AIR FOR A COUPLE OF HOURS. ETC. THIS WENT ON ALL WEEK. MEANWHILE, THE WORKERS WORKING ON MY SIDE OF THE BUILDING KEPT ON WORKING. WE WONDERED WHAT WAS GOING ON. THAT WHOLE WEEK GUYS WERE DROPPING

, LIKE FLIES, ME BEING ONE OF THEM. THIS HAPPENED THE LAST WEEK IN AUGUST, 1983.

I WENT DOWN AUGUST 30, 1983 AT 11 PM. WE FOUND OUT LATER THAT THE KID THAT t WAS HIRED TO READ THE METER DIDN'T KNOW HOW TO READ IT.  ;

'I CAN IN HERE AND COUNTED 20 LAWYERS FOR DIABLO CANYON, THEY LOOKED KIND OF INTIMIDATING. AND ALSO THREE PEOPLE ON THE NRC PANEL. I WOULD LIKE i TO SAY THIS TO YOU IT PGLE AND BECHTEL CANNOT INSURE THE SAEETY OF THE  !

WORKERS:IN THE PLANT, HOW ARE THEY GOING TO INSURE THE SAFETY OF THE PEOPLE  !

OUR COMMUNITY AND SURROUNDING COMMUNITIES? IN OTHER WOEDS, ATTORNEYS FCR i

'")hBLO CANYON AND THE URC PANEL, THIS PLANT SHOULD NOT BE OPERATING NOW, MUCH  !

LESS GET AN EXTENSION. AND IF YOU PEOPLL THAT I MENTIONED THINK IT IS SAFE,  ;

THEN YOU SHOULD ALL SIGN A DOCUMENT STATING SO. SO IN CASE OF AN ACCIDENT  ;

HAPPENING LIKE AT 3 MILE ISLAND OR CHERNOBYL, YOU ALL CAN BE HELD ACCOUNTED  ;

FOR , AND HAVE CRIMINAL CHARGES FILED AGAINST YOU, BY THE CITIZENS IN THE i COMMUNITY AND THE SURROUNDING COMMUNITIES. l t

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THE REASON I CAME HERE TO SPEAK TONIGHT IS BECAUSE THE SAME VENTILATION -l PROBLEM WE HAD IN 1983 IS.STILL EXISTING TODAY AT DIABLO. THIS WAS TOLD TO ME '

BY A WELDER WHO IS WORKING.THERE AT DIABLO NOWA'I HAVE IT.IN HIS DEPOSITION

.IN HIS OWN WORDS. ALSO, MY CONCERN FOR THE PEOPLE'IN THE ENTIRE COMMUNITY. '

I DON'T WANT ANYONE TO HAVE TO GO THROUGH WHAT MY FAMILY AND I HAVE GONE fROUGH FOR ALL.THESE YEARS.

THANK YOU ALL FOR LISTENING. I I

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