ML20150F726

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Expresses Concerns That Commission May Be Considering Timetable for Deciding Whether Plant Should Be Allowed to Restart Which Does Not Give Adequate Consideration to Large Number of Relevant Factors Involved
ML20150F726
Person / Time
Site: Pilgrim
Issue date: 02/17/1988
From: Erin Kennedy
SENATE, LABOR & HUMAN RESOURCES
To: Zech L
NRC COMMISSION (OCM)
Shared Package
ML20150F711 List:
References
NUDOCS 8804050365
Download: ML20150F726 (4)


Text

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ECWARD M . KENNEDY w mcm hitch 6tated 6 enate WASHINGTON. DC 20510 February 17, 1988 Mr. Lando W. Zeci, Jr.

Chairman Nuclear Regulatory Commission 1717 H Street, N.W.

Washington, D.C. 20555

Dear Mr. Chairman:

I am sure that Commission staff have brought to your attention the highlights of our recent Senate Labor Committee hearing in plymouth, Massachusetts, concerning the problems involved with the proposed re-start of the pilgrim I nuclear power plant.

You are also probably aware of the investigation which has been launched by the National Institutes of Health concerning the possible relationship between cancer and radiation from nuclear power plants. As NIH Director James B. Wyngaarden pointed out in the attached response to my request for such a study, the NIH inquiry was prompted in part by the reports of increased incidence of leukemia around the Pilgrim plant. These  :

reports were part of the testimony at our hearings. l I am concerned that the Commission may be considering a timetable for deciding whether the pilgrim plant should be i allowed to re-start which does not give adequate consideration to the large number of relevant factors involved. I previously urged you to use your discretionary authority to provide an adjudicatory hearing at which all of these issues could be appropriately aired. Unfortunately, you rejected this approach, leaving the people of Massachusetts, who would stand the most j to lose if pilgrim is permitted to re-start, and their elected i state officials, without a formal and meaningful contribution into the re-start decision-making process.

In view of the urgency of this situation, and in light of my responsibilities as Chairman of the Senate Committee responsible for matters relating to the public health and safety. I want to stress the following points for your consideration:

1. Until we receive satisfactory answers to the question whether there is a link between cancer and nuclear power, the pilgrim plant should not be permitted to re-start. l 8804050365 880329 PDR COMMS NRCC CORRESPONDENCE PDR

Mr. Lando W. Zech, Jr.

Page Two

2. Until there is an evacuation plan which is approved by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and is acceptable to the i Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the plant should not be permitted to re-start.
3. Members of the Commission should make an on-site visit to the Pilgrim plant to assess for themselves the merits of the serious health and safety problems which have been raised.-
4. Prior to any consideration of whether the Pilgrim plant should be permitted to re-start, Commission members should convene a public meeting to receive first-hand testimony from state and local officials and experts from the Plymouth area.
5. Finally, I request that in my capacity as Chairman of the Senate Committee on Labor and Human Resources, with experience concerning, and responsibility for, the health and safety issues involved, I be given the opportunity to appear before the Commission to present information on this issue, prior to any Commission deliberation on the question whether the Pilgrim plant should be permitted to re-start.

I would appreciate hearing from you at your earliest convenience concerning the Commission's position with respect to these requests.

Since .

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waFd M. Kenne hairman W Committee on Labor and Human Resources

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DEFAATMENT OF HEALTtt k HUMAN SERVICES

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The Honorable Edward M. Kennedy United States Senate ,

Washington, D.C. 20510

Dear Senator Kennedy:

I am pleased to respond to your letter of January 7, 1988 regarding potential Specifically, you raised health risks associated witn low level radiation.

concerns about the health consequences of nuclear power plant accidents, aaverse effects related to nuclear power plant operations, and cancer risks linked to esdioactive f allout from nuclear weapons testing.

The Nationni Institutes of Health is actively involved in studying the adverse effects of ionizing radiation and we concur with your view that the risks at We know, of course, that radiation can low levels need further clarification.

cause cancer, but the biological effects of quite low levels ate a subject of i

current scientific conjecture. Because new information relevant to the assessment of low level risks will be available within the next one or two years, we do not believe public discussions at this time would be es fruitful as i

they might he in the future. Our reasoning is discussed below.

The descriptive studies of leukemia clusters around the Pilgrim power plant in

' Massachusetts, and several plants in the United Kingdom, have led us to initiate a large scale evaluation of cancer deaths occurring among persons living near the over 100 reactors operating in the United States. We are correlating county reortality data from the 1950s through early 1980s with reactor operations to determine whether tne previous reports might be chance occurrences based on small numbers, or unether there might be valid reasons for concern. This evaluation should be completed within about one year.

4 One of the major radioactive isotopes emitted during nuclear power plant For the past three operations, and from nuclear weapons testing, is iodine-131.

years we have been collaborating with Swedish colleagues onThis a study largeofstudy 40,000 patients given low doses of iodine-131 for diagnostic reasons.

I will be finished within one year and will prove invaluable in estimating We have also the possible adverse effects from this environmental contaminant.

l evaluated descriptive mortality data regarding possible cancer risks While in themany general population living downwind of the Nevada nuclear test site.

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reported associations are unsupported by these data, a small increaseOur contract- in leukemia in southwest Utah cannot be ruled out at this time.

supported study with the University of Utah should provide mor answers within the next year.

l the military personnel participating at nuclear weapons te No excess mortality from other malignancies l

participants at one test series.

l was found among participants at any test series.

P, age 2 - The Honorable Edward 'i. Knnedy The most serious health impact of the Three Mile Island (THI) accident that can be ;Jentified witn certainty is nental stress to those living near the plant, particularly pregnant women and families with teenagers and young enildren.

Although increased risks of cancer, birth defects and genetic abnormalities are potential long-term consequences of low-level irradiation, few if any such effects are likely. The average dose of radiation to the 36,000 people living within a five-mile radius of the plant was only 2-4 mrem, or approximately what might be received from natural background radiation within one o effects that could be detected epidemiologically. (In contrast, at Chernccyl in the llSSR the average dose to the 24,000 people living near the reactor was estimated as 44,000 mram.) The pennsylvania Department of public Health, in consultation with the Centers for Disease Control, however, is conducting periodic nealth and behavior surveys of the population living near P11.

Although psychological effects are temporary in most individuals, the ultimate impact of these effects remains to be fully assessed, as does the degree toThe wnich they may differ from those caused by other accidents or disasters.

mental stress following T41, of course, has been aggravated by the fear that a larger release of radiation might take place, with conseq'Jences that could be lisastrous ss now exemplified by the Cnernobyl accident. While we are thankful that such an event has not occurred in the United States, we should profit from these experiences by taking steps to minimize the risks of sucn accidents in the future.

Finally, within two years' the Netional Academy of Sciences and the United Nations will complete their next reports on the biological effects of low-level radiation. We are also awaiting the publication of these scientific documents before embarking upon our next revision of the Radiospidemiological Tables mandated by Congress.

It is important to stress that useful information about very small health effects, like those associated with very low levels of radiation, is extremely difficult and expensive to obtain. An indirect approach, such as studying populations with higher level exposures and extrapolating the results to lower levels, tends to be f ar more productive. For example, studies of the workers at nuclear power plants would be particularly informative because the doses, thougn low, would be higher than to the general population, and cumulative doses could reach levels where radiation effects night be detectable. By law, radiation doses are recorded on individual workers, and we have contacted the Nuclear Regulatory Comission about the value of creating a registry ofYour the encouragement almost 100,000 workers they monitor each year in the United States.

and support for the development of such a registry would be invaluable and greatly appreciated.

In closing, I appreciate your continued support for our medical research program, and I will keep you informed on developments in the area of radiation studies as results from our investigations become available.

$1ncerely.

-m $ hyq=?=

James B. Wyngaardan H.O.

Otractor