ML20084M929

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Comment from Skip Short on the Indian Point Consideration of Approval of Transfer of Control of Licenses and Conforming Amendments (NRC-2020-0021)
ML20084M929
Person / Time
Site: Indian Point  Entergy icon.png
Issue date: 03/13/2020
From: Short S
- No Known Affiliation
To:
SECY/RAS
References
85FR03947, NRC-2020-0021
Download: ML20084M929 (1)


Text

From: Skip Short To: Docket, Hearing Cc: cwaction@googlegroups.com

Subject:

[External_Sender] Docket ID NRC-2020-0021 - Opposing Indian Point License Transfer to Holtec Date: Friday, March 13, 2020 10:13:43 PM From: Skip H Short Dobbs Ferry, New York 10522 Holtec is not qualified to decommission Indian Point, given their inexperience and history of questionable business practices. Their entire nuclear fleet was acquired less than a year ago. Theyve demonstrated dangerous incompetence handling spent fuel at San Onofre and put cost ahead of safety by hiring unqualified, low-skilled workers at Oyster Creek.

In their prematurely filed Post-Shutdown Activities Report, Holtec greatly underestimated the cost of decommissioning Indian Point and ignored the Algonquin Pipeline passing near the plants critical components, which greatly complicates decommissioning and raises risks of ruptures and fires. They do not plan to treat the radioactive groundwater leaking into the Hudson River or contaminated soil below three feet. Theyre also considering shipping large radioactive components by barge down the Hudson, raising more unacceptable risks.

Holtecs undercapitalized LLCs shield them from liability and accountability, while maximally leveraging the decommissioning trust fund for their own profit. Embroiled in numerous scandals, which refute their claims of high standards and trusted stewardship of nuclear materials, their actual record is full of corruption, bribery, fraud, and lying to officials

-- barring them from doing business with TVA and the World Bank.

As NY Attorney General Letitia James said when filing a petition challenging the license transfer to Holtec, Putting the decommissioning of Indian Point in the hands of a company with no experience and uncertain financial resources is very risky.

20 million people live and work within 50 miles of Indian Point. Decommissioning is a complex undertaking on which the safety of our region depends. Indian Points licensee must be competent and trustworthy, free of the serial malfeasance Holtec has committed. The NRC must therefore reject Holtecs license transfer application.

Yours truly, Skip H Short