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{{#Wiki_filter:Official Transcript of Proceedings NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
==Title:==
10 CFR 2.206 Petition Review Board Docket Number:    (n/a)
Location:          (teleconference)
Date:              Tuesday, April 2, 2013 Work Order No.:    NRC-41 01                        Pages 1-36 CORIGINAL NEAL R. GROSS AND CO., INC.
Court Reporters and Transcribers 1323 Rhode Island Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20005 (202) 234-4433
1 1                      UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 2                  NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION 4            10 CFR 2.206 PETITION REVIEW BOARD              (PRB) 5                            CONFERENCE CALL 6                                      RE 7                              VERMONT YANKEE 8                                  . . . . .
9                                    TUESDAY 10                                APRIL 2,      2013 11 12 13                    The    conference        call      was  held,        Mary 14  Muessle,        Chair      of    the    Petition      Review      Board, 15  presiding.
16 17  PETITIONER:        MICHAEL MULLIGAN 18 19  PETITION REVIEW BOARD MEMBERS PRESENT:
20  MARY MUESSLE,        Deputy Director,          Office of 21              Nuclear Materials Safety and Safeguards 22  JAMES KIM,      Petition Manager for 2.206 petition 23  ANDREA RUSSELL,        Petition Coordinator,            Office of 24            Nuclear Materials        Safety and Safeguards 25 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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2 1 NRC TECHNICAL STAFF PRESENT:
2  JOHN BILLERBECK,        Mechanical        Engineer,      NRR 3 JOSEPH DeBOER,        Project Engineer,            Region I 4  SEAN MEIGHAN,      Acting Branch Chief,              Division of 5            Operating Reactor Licensing 6 MUHAMMAD RAZZAQUE,          Reactor Systems Branch 7 SCOTT RUTENKROGER,          Senior Resident          Inspector 8            Vermont Yankee 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
(202) 234-4433          WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701        www.neal rgross.com
3 1                            TABLE OF CONTENTS 2                                                                    PAGE 3  I.          Opening Remarks by Mr.        Kim                          4 4  II.        Introductions                                              5 5  III.        Remarks by Chair Muessle                                    7 6 IV.        Presentation by Petitioner Mulligan                      12 7
8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
(202) 234-4433          WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701  www.nealrgross.com
4 1                          P-R-O-C-E-E-D-I-N-G-S 2                                                                (9:00 a.m.)
3                    MR. KIM:      Okay. Good morning.        I'd    like 4 to thank everybody for attending this meeting.
5                    My name is      James Kim,        and I am a Project 6 Manager in        NRR.
7                    We are here today to allow the Petitioner, 8 Mr. Michael Mulligan,          to address the Petition Review 9 Board regarding 2.206 petition dated December 5,                          2012.
10                    I    am    the    Petition          Manager  for        the 11 petition.        The Petition Review Board Chairman is                    Mary 12 Muessle.
13                    As part      of  the    Petition Review          Board's 14 review        of this    petition,      Mr. Michael    Mulligan        has 15 requested this opportunity to address the PRB.                            This 16 meeting is        scheduled from 9:00 to 10:00 a.m.
17                    The meeting is        being recorded by the NRC 18 Operations Center and will be transcribed by a Court 19 Reporter.        The transcript will become a supplement to 20 the      petition.        The    transcript        will  also    be    made 21 publicly available.
22                    I  would    like    to open        this meeting      with 23 introductions.            As we go around the room,              please be 24 sure to clearly state your name,                    your position,          and 25 the office that you work for within the NRC for the NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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5 1 record.          I will start      off.
2                    This is    James Kim.      I am a Project Manager 3 in the Division of Operating Reactor Licensing in NRR.
4                    CHAIR MUESSLE:          My name is      Mary Muessle.
5 I    am the      Petition      Review Board          Chairman.      I'm the 6 Office        of  NRR.      I'm  an    SES  manager      there    in    the 7 Division of Policy and Rulemaking.
8                    MR. BILLERBECK:        I'm John Billerbeck.              I'm 9 a    Mechanical        Engineer      with    NRR    in  the  Division          of 10 Engineering.
11                    MR. RAZZAQUE:        This is      Muhammad Razzaque 12 from Reactor Systems Branch,                  NRR.
13                    MR. MEIGHAN:      Sean Meighan,        Acting Branch 14 Chief,          Division      of  Operating          Reactor    Licensing, 15 Branch 11.
16                    MS. RUSSELL:          Andrea      Russell,        2.206 17 Coordinator.
18                    MR. KIM:    At this time,        are there any NRC 19 participants          from headquarters on the phone?
20                      (No response.)
21                    Are there any NRC participants                  from the 22 regional office on the phone?
23                    MR. DeBOER:      Yes. My name is      Joe DeBoer.
24 I'm a Project Engineer in                Region I.
25                    MR. KIM:          Okay.          Are    there        any NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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6 1 representatives                for the licensee on the phone?
2                        (No response.)
3                      Mr. Mulligan,      would you please introduce 4 yourself          for the record?
5                        PETITIONER MULLIGAN:              Mike Mulligan.        I'm 6 a whistleblower.                  I worked at Vermont Yankee              for 13 7 years.          I was in      the Navy on a fast-track submarine.
8  I have been working on --                    ever since then,      I've been 9  --  and      I    got  fired      from Vermont        Yankee  for    raising 10 safety issues.
11                      And I've been working on Vermont Yankee, 12 Palisades,          Pilgrim,        and a bunch of plants.          I've been 13 keeping close track of all                      of the correspondence            and 14 the inspection reports and the LERs and all                            of that 15 sort of stuff.                I've spent an enormous amount of time 16 on their          website.
17                        Thank you.
18                      MR.      KIM:    Okay. Thanks.
19                        It  is  not required for the members of the 20 public          to    introduce        themselves        for  this        call.
21 However,          if  there are any members of the public on the 22 phone that wish to do so at this time,                          please state 23 your name for the record.
24                        (No response.)
25                      Hearing none,          I  would like      to emphasize NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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7 1 that we each need to speak clearly and loudly to make 2 sure that the Court Reporter can accurately transcribe 3 this meeting.            If  you have something that you'd like 4 to say,        please first      state your name for the record.
5                      For those dialing into the meeting, please 6 remember          to  mute      your      phones        to    minimize        any 7 background noise or distractions.                        If  you do not have 8 a mute button,          this can be done by pressing the keys 9 star six.          To unmute,      press the star            six keys again.
10                      Thank you.
11                      At this time,        I will turn it          over to the 12 PRB Chairman,          Mary Muessle.
13                      CHAIR MUESSLE:          Good morning.          Welcome to 14 our meeting regarding the 2.206 petition submitted by 15 Mr.      Mulligan.          First,      I'd    like      to  share        some 16 background on our process.                    Section 2.206 of Title X 17 of    the      Code  of  Federal      Regulations          describes        the 18 petition process,            the primary mechanism for the public 19 to request enforcement              action by the NRC in            a public 20 process.
21                      This process permits            anyone      to pet-ition 22 NRC    to    take  enforcement-type          action        related    to NRC 23 licensees        or licensed activities.                  Depending on the 24 results of this evaluation, NRC could modify, suspend, 25 or revoke an NRC-issued                license,        or take      any other NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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8 1 appropriate enforcement                action to resolve a problem.
2                    The NRC staff guidance for the disposition 3 of        2.206      petition's            request          is    Management 4 Directive        8.11,    which is      publicly available.
5                    The purpose of today's meeting is                    to give 6 the Petitioner an opportunity to comment on the PRB's 7 initial        recommendation to not accept the petition and 8 a    second      opportunity        to      provide      any    additional 9 explanation          or    support      for    the      petition.            The 10 Petitioner will have 45 minutes to address the PRB.
11                    This meeting is            not a hearing,      nor is        it 12 an      opportunity        for    the    Petitioner        to  request        or 13 examine the PRB on the merits or the issues presented 14 in    the petition request.                No decisions regarding the 15 merits of the petition will be made at this meeting.
16                    The PRB typically consists of a Chairman, 17 usually a manager at the                  SES level        at the NRC,          the 18 Senior Executive            Service.        It  has a Petition Manager 19 and a PRB Coordinator.                Other members of the Board are 20 determined        by the NRC staff based on the content of 21 the information and the petition request.
22                    At this time,          I would      like to introduce 23 the Board.          I am Mary Muessle;            I am the PRB Chairman.
24 James      Kim is    the    Petition Manager            for  the petition 25 under      discussion today.              And Andrea        Russell    is    the NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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9 1 office's        PRB Coordinator.
2                      Our    technical        staff      includes      Muhammad 3 Razzaque          from    the    Reactor        Systems    Branch,          John 4 Billerbeck from the Component Performance and Testing 5 Branch, Dave DeBoer from the NRC's Region I's                          Division 6 of Reactor Programs.                We also expect a representative 7 from our Office of General Counsel to join us today on 8 the    call,      but  she has      not    --    she  has not    dialed        in 9 yet.
10                      MR. RUTENKROGER:            Excuse me,    Mary.        This 11 is    Scott Rutenkroger.              I  just want to        let    you know 12 that I did dial in,              about a minute late,            but --
13                      CHAIR MUESSLE:            Okay.      Thank you.            And 14 Scott        is  the    Senior    Resident        Inspector      at  Vermont 15 Yankee Nuclear Power Station.
16                      As described in our process,              the NRC staff 17 may ask clarifying questions in                      order to better under 18 the Petitioner's presentation and to reach a reasoned 19 decision whether to accept or reject the Petitioner's 20 request        for a review under the 2.206 process.
21                      I would like to describe the scope of the 22 petition under consideration and the NRC activities                                to 23 date.        On December 5,        2012,    Mr. Mulligan submitted to 24 the NRC a petition under 2.206 regarding the Vermont 25 Yankee Nuclear Power Station.                      Mr. Mulligan requested NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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10 1 an immediate          shutdown of Vermont Yankee because,                        in 2 Mr. Mulligan's words,          "the NRC and Entergy can't keep 3 their nuclear safety paperwork and documents accurate 4 and up to date."
5                      He also requested 10 additional actions, 6 which I will not state now unless someone would like 7 me to on the call.
8                      (No response.)
9                      Okay.        So  now    to    discuss      the      NRC's 10 activities        to date.      On December 20,          2012,  the PRB met 11 internally to discuss the request for immediate action 12 of    emergency        shutdown      of  Vermont        Yankee.      The      PRB 13 denied the request for immediate action because there 14 was no immediate safety concern to the plant or to the 15 health and safety of the public.
16                      On December        21,    2012,      Mr. Mulligan        was 17 informed of the PRB's decision on the immediate action 18 request.          On January 9,        2012,    Mr. Mulligan addressed 19 the    PRB    via  teleconference          to    provide      supplemental 20 information for the Board's consideration prior to the 21 PRB's          internal        meeting      to      make      an      initial 22 recommendation.
23                      On    January        23,    2013,      the    PRB        met 24 internally          to  discuss      the    petition      and  to    make      an 25 initial        recommendation.          The PRB determined that some NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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11 1 of the petition requests do not meet the criteria                                    for 2 review        because      the      petition        failed    to    meet      --    to 3 provide sufficient facts to warrant                            further inquiry.
4                        The remaining requests within the petition 5 meet        the      requirements          --      sorry.        The    remaining 6 requests          within      the petition meet              the  criteria          for 7 rejection            because      they were        not enforcement-related 8 actions.
9                        We also confirmed at that time that there 10 were no safety concerns at the plant.                            Therefore,          the 11 PRB's        initial      recommendation            was    to not      accept        the 12 petition.
13                        On  March      21,    2013,      Mr. Mulligan          was 14  informed          of  the    PRB's      initial        recommendation            and 15 requested            another      opportunity          to  address      the      PRB, 16 which is          the purpose of today's call.                    Following this 17 meeting,          the    PRB will      meet      internally      to    determine 18 whether          a  modification          or a      change    to    its    initial 19 recommendation              is    warranted.          The    outcome      of    this 20 internal            meeting        will      be      discussed          with        the 21 Petitioner.
22                        As a reminder for the phone participants, 23 please identify yourself if                      you make any remarks,                as 24 this      will      help    in    the  preparation          of  the    meeting 25 transcript that will be made publicly available.
NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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12 1                      Thank you for that.
2                      Mr. Mulligan,        I will now turn it              over to 3 you to allow you to provide any information that you 4 believe        the      PRB      should      consider        as    part      of    the 5 petition.
6                      It    is    now      9:10,    so you will        have      until 7 9:55 for your remarks.
8                      Thank you.
9                      PETITIONER MULLIGAN:              Well,      thank you very 10 much for this opportunity.                        I  can remember          --    I  can 11 remember when Entergy first                      came onto the scene over 12 here      at    Vermont          Yankee.          I  remember,        you      know, 13 employees coming up to me on the streets                              and they are 14 talking to me about Entergy.                        And, you know,          I asked, 15  "Well,      how are they?"                This was probably,            you know, 16 2007.        No,    2008,      and stuff.
17                      And they basically said, you know,                        "Mike, 18 they      are    all      business.            Everything        about      them    is 19 business.            It's      all      money  and    stuff,      and      they're 20 arrogant."            And so,        you know,      of course I had issues 21 with Vermont Yankee before that,                        and stuff like that.
22                      And      so      --    and  then      I    remember        --    I 23 remember reading the Palisades inspection reports and 24 documents.            These guys are --              these guys are out of 25 control        and the agencies                can't    figure      out  a way to NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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13 1 interact with them and put a stop to it.
2                      And, you know --            and I remember saying to 3 myself,          well,    what      --    you    know,    what    are      your 4 expectations?            I said, well,          I'll    just get something 5 on paper anyways.
6                      And I pondered,            I says,    you know,    can you 7 imagine        this --    in    2011,    I can remember thinking --
8 I've got it        on paper and I says,                "Can you imagine all 9 of the problems that are going to happen in                            the next 10 year,      next    two years,          or so?        Can you    imagine        the 11 mind-boggling number of problems?"
12                      Even though            you've    talked    about    it    and 13 you've        identified        there's      a pretty big problem,              and 14 stuff like that,              and --      you know,      and then Palisades 15 showed up with all              of their unimaginable problems that 16 showed up,        and then they have continued to be a leaky 17 plant over and over again,                    and stuff like that.
18                      And    I    can    remember,      you  know,    Vermont 19 Yankee was before that with their tritium problem, and 20 the essence of Entergy not being honest and truthful.
21 And the whole thing was kind of revolving around plant 22 disclosures            and      being      honest      and  truthful          and 23 immediate disclosures and thorough documentation, you 24 know,      because everybody reads documents later                        on,    and 25 it's      critical      that we        know the history          to  interact NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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14 1 with the future and stuff,                and,  you know,    the essence 2 of    --    of accurate documents            and stuff.
3                      And Entergy had problems being truthful, 4 playing word games up there in                    Montpelier,    and that 5 type of stuff.          They just --        they showed arrogance in 6 a lot of their communications and stuff to the state, 7 and we are seeing the results of that today.
8                      You know,      repeated arrogance,        you know,        I 9 tell      everybody it's          a cold-hearted ideology,          really, 10 that propels a lot of this sort of stuff,                        this sense 11 of    entitlement        of    --  they    work    for  themselves        and 12 their profits and the company,                  and they don't work for 13 us    as    an  entity    for    our  nation      and  our  national 14 interest and our greatest                interest.
15                      And so those are the things that                  I    have 16 been concerned about,                and I really haven't seen much 17 of    a  change.      You    know,    I  understand      everybody        is 18 following the rules and that type of thing,                        but,        you 19 know,        rules    are    very    --    they    carry    very    little 20 information.          They carry zero intelligence.              And, you 21 know,      we've all    got to follow the rules, but we've all 22 got to --        rules are the basics,          the very basics of how 23 we control our behavior.
24                      On the other end of it,            our intelligence, 25 the ability          to focus on something and pay attention NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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15 1 and keep attention to what you're doing and interact 2 and create        a voice,        and those        types        of    things,        you 3 know,      is  what our great              nation    is    built      on,      is  the 4 ability        to  be  --    it's    not    to  say      --    to    equate      this 5 system that all            we are concerned about                    is    the rules 6 and following the rules.
7                    We have enormous capabilities to act above 8 the    rules,    to  interact        --  you    know,        a  rule      doesn't 9 tell      us when to        interact        with a problem.                It's      our 10 intelligence          and stuff          and    the    ability        to    interact 11 with      our world      and to      assess      it    and      to    anticipate 12 problems        and change        the world.          I  think we all have 13 those kind of --          these kind of gifts,                and they are all 14  in  us,    and we just have to develop them.
15                    You know,        I was just thinking with the --
16 a lot of documents and the inspection reports and the 17 public        declarations          of    the    utilities,            they        are 18 structured to not communicate.                    They are structured to 19 give limited information out there,                            you know,          to not 20 be held accountable and that type of thing.
21                    I see it        in  the LERs,        their      --  you know, 22 the    rules    say  you have          to  --  you      have      to  give      the 23 minimum amount of information, because, you know,                                    your 24 enemies are out there and they will take advantage of 25 it    and stuff like that.
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16 1                      So      the    whole      thing      is    the    essence        of 2 giving        very    little        information,          and    it  has    gotten 3 worse        in  the        last      two    decades,        both    under        the 4 Republicans and the Democrats.                        The Democrats are just 5 as bad as the Republicans,                      unfortunately,          with this.
6 They        don't        seem        to      understand          how    important 7 information is              to people like me and my community and 8 the idea that it's                part of our constitutional ideals.
9                      We are an open government.                      We are one of 10 the most open governments                      on the face of the planet, 11 and we strive to take into consideration how important 12 an open government and an open society is,                              and we give 13 information.              We give it          to people like me,          so-called 14 enemies,        and I get to interact with my politicians and 15 the media          and the          environment        around me,        and stuff 16 like that.
17                      And we giVe feedback to the NRC and to the 18 government          itself,        and that's      --    and everybody makes 19 mid-course          corrections,              and stuff        like that.          It    is 20 vital      for a person like me to know what is                        going on at 21 Vermont Yankee and a lot of these plants,                                  and stuff 22 like      that,      because          that's      how    I    interact      with      my 23 community and that's                  how I interact with my government 24 and stuff.
25                      And when everybody is                playing these games NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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17 1 or      Rosies,              you        know,    and    we    use      rules      to      be 2 undemocratic,                  and that type of thing,                I think it's          --
3 I think it's                a tragedy.          I think it's          --  I think it's 4 just a tragedy.                    It's    not who we are.            That's --      we're 5 the greatest                democracy,        actually republic,              but we --
6 the ideals of a democracy and open government,                                      an open 7 society,            is    who we are.
8                          And,      unfortunately,          a lot    of things        --    a 9 lot of the way the world works now,                                  we've all      gotten 10 to the        --      you know,            this privacy          thing,    and we are 11 afraid of              giving          information out,            we are      afraid of 12 letting          people            see our humanity,            our human mistakes 13 and errors, and also some of the --                                a lot of times our 14  --    things          that        we    catch    that    are      astonishing,          you 15 know.
16                            It's      almost like we think the world is                      an 17 enemy in          front of us,            and we've got to hide in                corners 18 and darkened corners and not let                              people --      not let        the 19 world see how beautiful we are.
20                          And so, you know,              an example is,            well,    in 21 the recent LERs what I have been dealing with with the 22 SRVs,      it's        just not complete                information.            From the 23 get-go,          it    is      --  I know it        is  information        that    is    --
24 the      first          LER        with    the      SRVs    was    incomplete          and 25 inaccurate mostly.
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18 1                          And it's      astonishing.              If  that's          what the 2 world        is,      and  that's        what        Entergy        and      the        NRC      is 3 seeing,          that's      such a poor state of engineering                                  and 4 professionalism,                that      there        shouldn't          be any plant 5 running in            the United States.                  If  that's        --    Vermont's 6 first      LER is        what is      --  is    the best of us,              is    the best 7 of engineering,              we can allow that plant to operate and 8 not    know what          the    --    not      know the          condition            of    the 9 components that they are operating,                                who are we?              It's 10 terrible,          you know?
11                          And    didn't        the      Commissioner              just      talk 12 about,        who are we,          you know,          and prod us to be -- prod 13 us to be bigger and better than we are?                                          And so the 14 LERs --        then, the second rendition of the LER came out 15 and it      was still        inaccurate,            and they didn't know what 16 was the cause of that thing,                            or at least that's                    what 17 they say.
18                          And  I    think      that's      like      most        --    what's 19 happening is              you are following the rules,                          but      --  and 20 you      don't          realize        you      are      giving        incomplete              and 21 inaccurate            information out to the public,                            out to the 22 nation in          general,        and stuff.            I worry about that.
23                          Pilgrim      --  Pilgrim plant              with        their      SRV 24 problems,            they have brand-new                  SRVs.        Within a year, 25 one      failed          and    started          leaking        and      they          had      to NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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19 1 shutdown,      and a host of different                  --  the NRC let            it 2 get by.        Entergy said that there was no problem with 3 those new SRVs.
4                    Southern Company              said  that      --  they were 5 brought in      as the backstop of everybody else, and they 6 said that there was nothing wrong with the SRVs and 7 that type of thing, perfectly good and nothing wrong 8 with them.          And then,          they started up and within a 9 year they had another leak, and then they had another 10 leak, and then they had another leak.                          We have yet to 11 see any of        these other LERs on the SRVs,                        and stuff 12 like that.
13                    So it's      the sense that we don't get the 14 information,        the    immediacy of what is                going on.            We 15 don't      have the ability            to,    you know,      put      it  in    our 16 heads,        mull    it      around        and    interact          with        the 17 politicians in        the agency,          and, you know, went on with 18 a participatory democracy type of thing.                              That's what 19 we're worried about.
20                    And we've got issues of --                let's      see,    the 21 grid in New England is                becoming unstable itself.                    Our 22 sources of energy,            I call    it  a --  becoming a --          as far 23 as our electric grid and our industry sources,                              a Third 24 World-style Guatemala oligarchy as far as all                                of the 25 different      players        and each        --  everybody        sabotaging NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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20 1 each other,            and new sources are coming in,                              and people 2 are,      like I said,              sabotaging each other.
3                        And then there is                    this    --    these secretly 4 expensive            sources of electricity                      that is        undermining 5 us all.          And the whole thing is                        a sense of --            who is 6 controlling            all      of these          things?          Is    it    the United 7 States Government?                      Are we setting the codes and rules 8 and stuff like that?
9                        Or is        it  a    --  there is        a group of people, 10 an oligarchy,              a special people that have the controls 11 of what is            going on with our grid,                      and where one time 12 we've got astonishing expensive electricity,                                          and a few 13 months          later        it's        --      the    cost      of    electricity            is 14 crashing through the floor,                              and nobody can afford to 15 make electricity.
16                        You know,              it  sounds like Guatemala.                      You 17 know,        it    sounds          like      a  South American                Third      World 18 government --            country operating their                      electric        system, 19 and the sources                    that      --    sources        of the        energy that 20 support our electric system.
21                        And          so      --      and      we've        got        financial 22 qualification problems                          at Entergy.            The NRC has got 23 concerns that they are financially capable,                                            but they 24 got good grades,                  you know,          from --      Yankee's got good 25 grades,          green        grades          this      year,      and    everything            is NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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21 1  forgotten in          the past.
2                      We have issues at Vermont Yankee with the 3  silts.        They have        taken the silt            out of the surface 4 water base and they deposited it                        somewhere,      and it        --
5  the      rainwater        --    this    caused      the    rainwater        to    go 6  through        a  drain      cover,    whatever,        and    go    into      the 7  switch rooms,          stuff like that.
8                      And,      you know,      in  the back of my head I 9  can say,      you know,        we had --      since my days at Vermont 10  Yankee,        we've had        issues with cable            --  cable        water 11  seals and fire            seals and other kind of seals in                        that 12  switch room.            I mean,        what is    the periodic nature of 13  --    they can't maintain the seals in                    general.
14                      I    mean,      if  you    look      over    a  long      time, 15  there's a lot of problems with seals.                            You know,        how 16  about      the testing?            How come they didn't have post-17  installation          testing?          How come        they didn't          --    how 18  come they haven't, you know,                    put water in        there?        Hey, 19  what are the results?                  Can we see water in          that switch 20  room drain type of thing?
21                      You      know,      just    since      that,      you      know, 22  testing, you know,              we put in new stuff and we test                    it, 23  and that          type of      thing,    did they put the              silt,      you 24  know?          They    --    how    come    the    silt    --    you    know,        it 25  sounds like the silt                wasn't --      two years ago,            or when NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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22 1 they have done it                in    the past,        they put it    someplace 2 else.        And this time they put the silt                      in  a different 3 place that caused this problem.                            You know,    it    sounds 4 kind of unprofessional                    and stuff.
5                      The ventilation              system --    the  fans,      they 6 were doing maintenance on them or something like that, 7 and they started                the system up and one of the                      fans 8 didn't work.            I think it          was the supply --        the exhaust 9 fan didn't work and the supply fan worked.
10                      And      then      they    talked    about,    well,      the 11 panels are for --                that's      what    the panels are for as 12 far as misoperation of the ventilation system.                                  Well, 13  I seem to remember it                    was more or less those panels 14 were      --  you know,        it's    technically        accurate.
15                      They were for, you know,                the hydrogen leak 16 in    an accident,          and certainly all              of them --      I don't 17 know,        what  is  it,      nine panels          there  and stuff        like 18 that,      and certainly if              you have a type of a --              break 19 of a steam pipe and stuff like that,                          those are the --
20 you know,        I kind of thought it                  was  --  those kind of 21 things were the reason why the panels were there.
22                      And,      again,      it's      kind of the essence            of 23 everybody is          framing the information to sound pleasing 24 to minimize the impact and not tell                            the whole truth, 25 and stuff like that.                    And if      you know the whole --            if NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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23 1 we    see    the      problem,        and    our    enemies      even      see      the 2 problem,          then we would fix them,                type of deal.
3                        And, you know,          that's      the sense of what I 4 have as far as the NRC and utilities.                              They have been 5 withholding information.                      They have been structuring 6 it    --  intentionally structuring the disclosure of the 7 information            to  us.      And    they have          been      protecting 8 everybody,            you know.          Everybody      is  protecting            their 9 buddies        and --      type of thing.
10                        And,    you      know,    we    get    in  more      trouble 11 doing good and acting in                    a group than we do when we, 12 you know,          intentionally          do bad and stuff              like that.
13  It  kind of --          when we think we're doing good,                        and we 14 justify        it    under    --  for    good    reasons,        that    --    you 15 know,      that bypasses a lot of our protection circuits 16 in    our brains and that type of thing.
17                        So,  you know,        and what is          going on with 18 Entergy          --    Arkansas        I.      I    remember        Palisades            --
19 Palisades            I  talked      about    in    one    of    my    2.206s.            I 20 remember          talking about          their crane          up there        in    the 21 Reactor Building,              and I remember making a joke about, 22 what would happen if                --    you know,      you guys are taking 23  --  you're not taking the protective interlocks of the 24 crane      and      the    general        operation,        the    --      doing      the 25 safety checks before                  you operate          the machinery,              the NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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24 1 skills      needed to operate that piece of equipment,                                and 2 stuff,        you know,        it    seemed like there wasn't enough 3 training and enough paying attention to procedures and 4 stuff.
5                        The    NRC      wrote    about        these      things        and 6 stuff,      and I joked about,              you know,        what happens if              a 7 cable snaps and a reactor head goes --                                crashes        down 8 through        numerous        levels      of  floors,        and    stuff      like 9 that.        That would be the most amazing two seconds in 10 your life,          actually listening to that.
11                        And so since that,            you know,        all  of us --
12 as far as with Palisades,                  Vermont Yankee,          Pilgrim, and 13 stuff        like      that,      I  mean,    I    worry      that      there        is 14 underlying indications with Entergy as a whole that we 15  --  that a lot of problems are submerged and we can't 16 see it,        and we can't interact with Entergy.                          We can't 17 find a way to control                    those  --    this corporation and 18 stuff.
19                        And    I    --    you  know,        since      --    I    feel 20 powerless.              I  have      tried    writing,          in    my    limited 21 skills,        about the problem with these plants, and stuff 22 like that,            trying to say that --              it's    really not one 23 plant.          It's      not    Palisades      or    it's      not    Pilgrim.
24 There's a system behind it.                        It's      not even Entergy.
25 You know,        it's    the system, it's          the organizations,                the NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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25 1 interacting                organizations,            our      legislature,            our 2 President,            the regulatory rules.                The whole system --
3 it's      not working.
4                          And if      you study all          of  these documents 5 and stuff,              from my point of view,                you can see that.
6 You      can      see      that      the    thing    is    not    working,        and 7 everybody knows they are not working,                              but most of the 8 officialdom                sits      there      and,    you    know,      talks        in 9 happyland,            everything          is  pretty well        much going on, 10 and that          --    going good.
11                          And Vermont Yankee got green grades this 12 marking --            this marking period and stuff, and yet here 13 we are at another plant at --                        with Entergy,          and where 14 there        is      a    pretty      big    event    is    what      I'm  hearing.
15 Unfortunately,                  a  death      has  occurred          and    numerous 16 injuries and stuff, and most of us outside are getting 17 the idea that,                  you know,      you're kind of withholding 18 information from us.
19                          You're        kind    of    --      you're      kind        of 20 structuring the disclosure information, like the LERs, 21 you    know,        to    in  a  pleasing      way    --  you're      not      just 22 giving        us      the      cold,    hard    facts,      and    that    type      of 23 thing.          And I feel as though that,                    you know,        if    you 24 were --        if    the NRC was listening to me,                  if  the NRC had 25 restructured                  their      2.206,      if      you      gave      me      an NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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26 1 opportunity,              a    structured          opportunity            to    demand 2 information,            and everybody was required to be truthful 3 and honest,            not    --    just follow the rules,                  because the 4 rules are meant              --    the way they are written nowadays, 5 you      know,      it's,      hey,    the    utilities            basically        made 6 those        rules      and they are          interacting            with our U.S.
7 legislators,              Congress,      and stuff like that.
8                        They are not written by the people outside 9 the plant.            They are written by the companies and the 10 money they have with Congress and stuff like that.                                          If 11 the rules would have allowed me to --                                and the NRC and 12 the      utilities,          we    all  act    --      interacted        together, 13 committee,          and everybody was forced to be honest with 14 each other,            and stuff like that,                  I think a life          could 15 have been saved.
16                        I think there is          injuries that could have 17 been prevented with Entergy over there                                  in  Arkansas.
18 We    would        have    seen      the  system        that      Entergy      --    the 19 dysfunction            of    the    system of        Entergy,        and we would 20 have fixed it.                I believe that if                we were honest,              if 21 everybody was honest with each other and open,                                      and we 22 acted          in    the      national        interest            and    the    greater 23 interest,          I think we could have prevented Arkansas                                I.
24                        And,      you know,      I    still        say to myself,              I 25 think I said, well,                  the next two years,                what is      going NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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27 1 to happen in          the next two years?                What kind of mind-2 boggling problems are going to erupt from Entergy in 3 the next two years,                you know?
4                      They dropped this spatter a couple of days 5 ago.        What else        is  going to pop up?                They've got            a 6 plant      that    is  in  a --    in  the national        --  it's    all    over 7 the media as far as Palisades,                      wondering what is              going 8 on with them.              You know,        the NRC seems to think they 9 are cured,          and that type of thing.                    Right?        And they 10 think Vermont Yankee is                  cured.      They think Pilgrim is 11 doing well and stuff.
12                      And then this other problem pops up that 13 is    a magnitude that is              astonishing,        is    what we can see 14 and stuff.            And so we think the system doesn't work.
15 We      think    the    whole      system    doesn't        work,      from      the 16 legislature          to    the    --  the mechanisms            of    government 17 doesn't work here.                  The disclosure of information to 18 each      other      and    how      we  are    supposed        to    work      as    a 19 country doesn't work,                  and it's    a big problem we see.
20                      And like I said, there's noise at Vermont 21 Yankee.          There's      the ventilation            system,        the switch 22 gear problem.              You know,        I tell    everybody,          you know, 23 T don't        care how insignificant                a problem is.                Every 24 little        insignificant problem is                a golden opportunity 25 to understand the system behind it.
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28 1                      If you sit      and look at these insignificant 2 problems,        and you ponder and ask the questions,                              where 3 did it      come from,        how can I catch it                the next time,            I 4 will catch it          the next time,          I guarantee I'll              catch it 5 the next        time      or  --  and stuff.              And a    lot    of    times 6 little      problems,      you know,      you sit          and ponder it,            and 7 how all        of a      sudden    you    look        around      and there's            a 8 monster        sitting        next    to    it,        and    you    say,      "Holy 9 Christ."
10                      And the only reason why I got attention --
11 the only reason that brought --                          drew my attention was 12 that      this    --    talk about        this        little      system,      little 13 problem that            nobody --      nobody knew.
14                      So,    you    know    --      just      looking      over      my 15 notes.        So,    you know,      like      I    said before,          we think 16 that what we can see is                the NRC and the utilities,                        you 17 know,      are    systematically          managing            the    information, 18 systemically              and      systematically                  managing            the 19 information to project                an incorrect image to us.
20                      And that's      a big problem, if              they're doing 21 that.        That's a huge problem,                if    they can't be honest 22 to us,      and if    the agency,      you know,          is  --  according to 23 them they're            following the rules to be dishonest                              to 24 us,    you    know.        There's      something            wrong      there,        you 25 know,      and    I've    seen how,        you        know,    we    gain      rules NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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29 1 between        us  and    groups      and    I have      --    I    have    --    you 2 know,      looking back at some of my own behavior,                              it    is 3 just horrendous what I have done in                        the past a lot of 4 times as far as sometimes being in                            a group and,            you 5 know,      acting in      that group thing and letting                      them --
6 and me not being under full control of my capabilities 7 and stuff like that.
8                      I have been in          places that          --    when I was 9 younger,          I have done things that were pretty bad and 10 stuff,        and I    see how groups of people                  --    I know how 11 groups of people              --    I've been involved                in  a lot        of 12 things        in  the    community        and  groups        of      people        and 13 organizations            that are wonderful.
14                      We    wouldn't        be  where        we      are    without 15 organizations.                Most      of  our  troubles            emerge        from 16 organizational and group thinking and stuff like that, 17 and,      you know,        we should be above that in                    this stage 18 of the game.            But we are going backwards.
19                      So I    think the grid is              in  trouble.            Our 20 electric system is                in  trouble.      You know,          as a whole, 21 it    questions,        you know,        the reliability            of supplying 22 emergency power to a lot of these nuke plants in                                      New 23 England.          We sense        that a lot of the              rules are not 24 fair.        And,    furthermore,        they don't --            they are not 25 fair,      they are        corrupt,      they give us            too expensive NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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30 1 electricity,          and they are all                driving the          system to 2 being unstable.                  And we worry about              that,      what that 3 does.
4                      The price of electricity,                    as already            --
5 which the utilities                  depend upon has been spiking and 6 crashing,          and stuff like that.                  It's  out of control, 7 and it's        an enormous system, and we worry about not as 8 a nation being in                control of these attributes,                    and the 9 whole thing spinning out of control.
10                      We have seen in New England,                    you know,          in 11 this time of --              there is          supposed to be an excess of 12 natural        gas and you have deflationary prices                              there.
13 We've seen how the system has created a bottleneck and 14 created          a  crisis          with        expensive    electricity              and 15 threatening not to have                        --  not being able to support 16 the transmission system or electricity                              to our homes, 17 and stuff like that.                      It's      a grave concern as far as 18 what I can see.
19                      And      so    --    just      two  seconds      here.          Oh.
20 And,      you know,        like I        --    like I said earlier,            the --
21 we got to          --  to      the process,            you know.          Like,      you 22 know,      I wonder        if    it    would have been different                    if    I 23 would have had access to more information,                                  if  I would 24 have created a discussion, instead of people shunning 25 me,    in    the agency at times shunning me,                          instead of, NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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31 1 you know,          they kind of drew me into it                    or drew people 2 like me          into  it,      into the problems,              and we created 3 some of our own different perspectives,                                and we all, 4 you      know,      have        seen    more    of      the      world,        would 5 Arkansas          I have happened?
6                      Would          Entergy      have      been      a  lot      more 7 stronger          of a company?            Would the          agency have          been 8 different?            I think it        would have been,              you know,        if 9 we    were      more      the      ideals    of    our      country      and      our 10 constitution instead of these --                        an oligarchy type of 11 thing with our              little      groups,      exclusive        groups        and 12 stuff like that.
13                      I think we could have stopped it,                          and it 14 worries me what kind of problems we are going to see 15  in  the next two years.                And I'm --        and,    you know,        what 16 kind of flows in                the head --        you know,        two years ago 17 and now we've got dropped spatter,                            and will the next 18 one be a dropped head in                    the Reactor Building?                    Will 19 a regular crane fail?                    because it        was aging,        type of 20 thing?          What  other things?              What      does    the  next two 21 years have in            store for us?
22                      I'm telling        you,    the last        two years we've 23 had some pretty big problems,                      and our capacity factor 24 shows        it,    and    a    lot    of  these      utilities        are      under 25 increasing stress in                  a lot of different ways.                    We've NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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32 1 got a lot of bad actors out there,                              San Onofre,            Fort 2 Calhoun,          TVA.
3                        I    talked        a    lot    in    the        past      about 4 counterfeit parts and stuff like that,                              and fraudulent 5 parts and stuff like that.                        And TVA is          talking about 6 exactly          the stuff          I talked about            a couple        of years 7 ago,      or a year ago,              and that type of thing,                a lot of 8 what      I  have      talked      about      with    the    SRVs      at  Vermont 9 Yankee,        and going to talk about at Pilgrim and stuff 10 like that.
11                        So what have we got in                front of us?                We 12 think        this      is    going      to    be  good    as    far      as  how      the 13 public thinks about the NRC and the nuclear industry.
14  In    two    years,        will    we be      more    insecure?            Will      the 15 public be more                --  have a sense of,            well,        these guys 16 aren't        straight-shooters.                They are all          --  we --      will 17 the nation wake up and say,                      you know,        we can't trust 18 these guys to tell                  us the truth.
19                        An example was Pilgrim and the casks,                            and 20 the    Pilgrim --            took pictures,          and then,          again,        the 21 sense        that      the NRC        Public Relations            Department            and 22 inspectors,            they were giving incomplete information.
23 Since that,            they caught          the agency with their                  pants 24 down,        and the utility,                and  it    has    taken        months        to 25 straighten            the mess        out,    instead      of    it    should have NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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33 1 taken just being honest,                and, you know,        not playing by 2 the rules and using the rules to hide information and 3 not use --          making the rules to disclose information, 4 making it          mandatory to disclose information.
5                      Is  that what        is  going      to  happen    in    the 6 next two years,          where many in New England have --                    lose 7 faith in        the NRC,    and certainly Entergy?              Is  this --
8 is    this where it          is  all    heading    as far as        the LERs 9 being more incomplete                and more inaccurate,            and that 10 type of thing?
11                      And we get        in  our heads      that the NRC is 12 not successful,          and 25 percent of our electricity                      is 13 not ethical and honest,                and we as a collective group 14 do something crazy as far as maybe wanting to shut a 15 bunch of          them down to our detriment,                  is that      where 16 we're heading?            Will we see more Arkansas                  I  type of 17 events        to make us be more insecure with the nuclear 18 industry and stuff?
19                      You know,    I see a lot of problems that are 20 bubbling under the surface.                  And if    an event shows up, 21 a    lot      of  dishonesty      everybody      gets      away    with    and 22 stuff.        And if    an event shows up and everybody does 23 what they are trained --                been trained to do, and being 24 complete        and dishonest        in  what they have allowed to 25 have gotten away with in                the past,      and an event shows NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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34 1 up    that    creates        --      that    shows    this    system      that's 2 there,        we    are    going          to  lose      faith,    besides          in 3 government or a segment of government.
4                      We  are going to            lose more        faith in        the 5 nuclear industry and the integrity of the nuclear --
6 we are going to all                think that they all            stick together 7 and just --          like they don't even belong in                      the United 8 States.        And we are going to collectively think they 9 are untrustworthy,                you know?        Back to 1979 again type 10 of thing, you know,                I don't think we're far away from 11 that.        We  are    just      --      we are  a  nation    that    doesn't 12 have a lot of faith in                      government already,            and stuff 13 like that.
14                      I worry about the trends of the industry, 15 you know.            Is  it    declining?          Is    more people        losing 16 faith?        Has the system responded with happy tunes and 17 la la la la, you know,                    like a three-year-old kid whose 18 parents are trying to explain something and they go 19  "la la la la,"            like they don't want to hear it?                            Is 20 that what is            happening with a lot of the NRC and the 21 utilities?
22                      Do  you      think      that    kind    of  making        that 23 noise to not hear what is                      going on,      do you think that 24 is    going    to work for very                long?      I don't      think so.
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35 1 come out of this pretty quickly,                    if  everybody became 2 more honest.          But changing behavior is                tough.
3                    You know,      like I can see it          in  the eyes of 4 Palisades in        2011,    and stuff like that.              I can see how 5 unresponsive        the system is.            It's    huge.      They don't 6 listen,        and stuff like that.              And they can't --            they 7 can't see themselves what they're doing and stuff, and 8 I worry about that in              the next two years.              What will 9 they --        what will    the next two years bring?
10                    We    have    a    terrible      accident,        terrible 11 accident like Fukushima or something like it,                          or would 12 it    be    a much    lesser    accident        but  be  in    the United 13 States and more open,              it  would be --        be in    our minds 14 deeper and stuff.
15                    So    anyways,        I    thank      you      for      this 16 opportunity for letting                me talk.
17                    CHAIR MUESSLE:            Thank you,      Mr. Mulligan.
18                    At    this    time,      does    the    staff      here      at 19 headquarters have any questions for Mr.                          Mulligan?
20                    (No response.)
21                    What about questions from the region?
22                    MR. DeBOER:      We have no questions at this 23 time.
24                    CHAIR MUESSLE:          Okay. Mr. Mulligan, thank 25 you      for    taking time        to provide        the    NRC    staff      with NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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36 1  clarifying        information        on    the    petition    that        you 2  submitted.
3                    Before we close,          does the Court Reporter 4  need      any    additional      information        for  the    meeting 5  transcript?
6                      (Whereupon,      some      name    spellings        were 7                    provided to the Court Reporter.)
8                    CHAIR MUESSLE:          Okay.      Thank you.          With 9 that,        this  meeting    is    concluded        and  we  will        be 10  terminating the phone connection.
11                    Thank you.
12                      (Whereupon,      at 9:49 a.m.,        the proceedings 13                    in  the foregoing matter were concluded.)
14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
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CERTIFICATE This is        to certify that the attached proceedings before the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission Proceeding:          10 CFR 2.206 Petition-Vermont Yankee by Michael Mulligan Docket Number: n/a Location:            teleconference were held as herein appears,                    and that this is        the original transcript thereof for the file of the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission taken and thereafter reduced to typewriting under my direction and that said transcript                        is a true and accurate record of the proceedings.
4- -------
Official Reporter Neal R. Gross & Co.,            Inc.
NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.
(202) 234-4433              WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701            www.nealrgross.com}}

Latest revision as of 13:37, 5 December 2019

Transcript of 10 CFR 2.206 Petition Review Board Vermont Yankee Teleconference Meeting, April 2, 2013, Pages 1-36
ML13099A311
Person / Time
Site: Vermont Yankee File:NorthStar Vermont Yankee icon.png
Issue date: 04/02/2013
From:
Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation
To:
References
2.206, NRC-4101
Download: ML13099A311 (38)


Text

Official Transcript of Proceedings NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION

Title:

10 CFR 2.206 Petition Review Board Docket Number: (n/a)

Location: (teleconference)

Date: Tuesday, April 2, 2013 Work Order No.: NRC-41 01 Pages 1-36 CORIGINAL NEAL R. GROSS AND CO., INC.

Court Reporters and Transcribers 1323 Rhode Island Avenue, N.W.

Washington, D.C. 20005 (202) 234-4433

1 1 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 2 NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION 4 10 CFR 2.206 PETITION REVIEW BOARD (PRB) 5 CONFERENCE CALL 6 RE 7 VERMONT YANKEE 8 . . . . .

9 TUESDAY 10 APRIL 2, 2013 11 12 13 The conference call was held, Mary 14 Muessle, Chair of the Petition Review Board, 15 presiding.

16 17 PETITIONER: MICHAEL MULLIGAN 18 19 PETITION REVIEW BOARD MEMBERS PRESENT:

20 MARY MUESSLE, Deputy Director, Office of 21 Nuclear Materials Safety and Safeguards 22 JAMES KIM, Petition Manager for 2.206 petition 23 ANDREA RUSSELL, Petition Coordinator, Office of 24 Nuclear Materials Safety and Safeguards 25 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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2 1 NRC TECHNICAL STAFF PRESENT:

2 JOHN BILLERBECK, Mechanical Engineer, NRR 3 JOSEPH DeBOER, Project Engineer, Region I 4 SEAN MEIGHAN, Acting Branch Chief, Division of 5 Operating Reactor Licensing 6 MUHAMMAD RAZZAQUE, Reactor Systems Branch 7 SCOTT RUTENKROGER, Senior Resident Inspector 8 Vermont Yankee 9

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3 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS 2 PAGE 3 I. Opening Remarks by Mr. Kim 4 4 II. Introductions 5 5 III. Remarks by Chair Muessle 7 6 IV. Presentation by Petitioner Mulligan 12 7

8 9

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4 1 P-R-O-C-E-E-D-I-N-G-S 2 (9:00 a.m.)

3 MR. KIM: Okay. Good morning. I'd like 4 to thank everybody for attending this meeting.

5 My name is James Kim, and I am a Project 6 Manager in NRR.

7 We are here today to allow the Petitioner, 8 Mr. Michael Mulligan, to address the Petition Review 9 Board regarding 2.206 petition dated December 5, 2012.

10 I am the Petition Manager for the 11 petition. The Petition Review Board Chairman is Mary 12 Muessle.

13 As part of the Petition Review Board's 14 review of this petition, Mr. Michael Mulligan has 15 requested this opportunity to address the PRB. This 16 meeting is scheduled from 9:00 to 10:00 a.m.

17 The meeting is being recorded by the NRC 18 Operations Center and will be transcribed by a Court 19 Reporter. The transcript will become a supplement to 20 the petition. The transcript will also be made 21 publicly available.

22 I would like to open this meeting with 23 introductions. As we go around the room, please be 24 sure to clearly state your name, your position, and 25 the office that you work for within the NRC for the NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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5 1 record. I will start off.

2 This is James Kim. I am a Project Manager 3 in the Division of Operating Reactor Licensing in NRR.

4 CHAIR MUESSLE: My name is Mary Muessle.

5 I am the Petition Review Board Chairman. I'm the 6 Office of NRR. I'm an SES manager there in the 7 Division of Policy and Rulemaking.

8 MR. BILLERBECK: I'm John Billerbeck. I'm 9 a Mechanical Engineer with NRR in the Division of 10 Engineering.

11 MR. RAZZAQUE: This is Muhammad Razzaque 12 from Reactor Systems Branch, NRR.

13 MR. MEIGHAN: Sean Meighan, Acting Branch 14 Chief, Division of Operating Reactor Licensing, 15 Branch 11.

16 MS. RUSSELL: Andrea Russell, 2.206 17 Coordinator.

18 MR. KIM: At this time, are there any NRC 19 participants from headquarters on the phone?

20 (No response.)

21 Are there any NRC participants from the 22 regional office on the phone?

23 MR. DeBOER: Yes. My name is Joe DeBoer.

24 I'm a Project Engineer in Region I.

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6 1 representatives for the licensee on the phone?

2 (No response.)

3 Mr. Mulligan, would you please introduce 4 yourself for the record?

5 PETITIONER MULLIGAN: Mike Mulligan. I'm 6 a whistleblower. I worked at Vermont Yankee for 13 7 years. I was in the Navy on a fast-track submarine.

8 I have been working on -- ever since then, I've been 9 -- and I got fired from Vermont Yankee for raising 10 safety issues.

11 And I've been working on Vermont Yankee, 12 Palisades, Pilgrim, and a bunch of plants. I've been 13 keeping close track of all of the correspondence and 14 the inspection reports and the LERs and all of that 15 sort of stuff. I've spent an enormous amount of time 16 on their website.

17 Thank you.

18 MR. KIM: Okay. Thanks.

19 It is not required for the members of the 20 public to introduce themselves for this call.

21 However, if there are any members of the public on the 22 phone that wish to do so at this time, please state 23 your name for the record.

24 (No response.)

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7 1 that we each need to speak clearly and loudly to make 2 sure that the Court Reporter can accurately transcribe 3 this meeting. If you have something that you'd like 4 to say, please first state your name for the record.

5 For those dialing into the meeting, please 6 remember to mute your phones to minimize any 7 background noise or distractions. If you do not have 8 a mute button, this can be done by pressing the keys 9 star six. To unmute, press the star six keys again.

10 Thank you.

11 At this time, I will turn it over to the 12 PRB Chairman, Mary Muessle.

13 CHAIR MUESSLE: Good morning. Welcome to 14 our meeting regarding the 2.206 petition submitted by 15 Mr. Mulligan. First, I'd like to share some 16 background on our process. Section 2.206 of Title X 17 of the Code of Federal Regulations describes the 18 petition process, the primary mechanism for the public 19 to request enforcement action by the NRC in a public 20 process.

21 This process permits anyone to pet-ition 22 NRC to take enforcement-type action related to NRC 23 licensees or licensed activities. Depending on the 24 results of this evaluation, NRC could modify, suspend, 25 or revoke an NRC-issued license, or take any other NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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8 1 appropriate enforcement action to resolve a problem.

2 The NRC staff guidance for the disposition 3 of 2.206 petition's request is Management 4 Directive 8.11, which is publicly available.

5 The purpose of today's meeting is to give 6 the Petitioner an opportunity to comment on the PRB's 7 initial recommendation to not accept the petition and 8 a second opportunity to provide any additional 9 explanation or support for the petition. The 10 Petitioner will have 45 minutes to address the PRB.

11 This meeting is not a hearing, nor is it 12 an opportunity for the Petitioner to request or 13 examine the PRB on the merits or the issues presented 14 in the petition request. No decisions regarding the 15 merits of the petition will be made at this meeting.

16 The PRB typically consists of a Chairman, 17 usually a manager at the SES level at the NRC, the 18 Senior Executive Service. It has a Petition Manager 19 and a PRB Coordinator. Other members of the Board are 20 determined by the NRC staff based on the content of 21 the information and the petition request.

22 At this time, I would like to introduce 23 the Board. I am Mary Muessle; I am the PRB Chairman.

24 James Kim is the Petition Manager for the petition 25 under discussion today. And Andrea Russell is the NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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9 1 office's PRB Coordinator.

2 Our technical staff includes Muhammad 3 Razzaque from the Reactor Systems Branch, John 4 Billerbeck from the Component Performance and Testing 5 Branch, Dave DeBoer from the NRC's Region I's Division 6 of Reactor Programs. We also expect a representative 7 from our Office of General Counsel to join us today on 8 the call, but she has not -- she has not dialed in 9 yet.

10 MR. RUTENKROGER: Excuse me, Mary. This 11 is Scott Rutenkroger. I just want to let you know 12 that I did dial in, about a minute late, but --

13 CHAIR MUESSLE: Okay. Thank you. And 14 Scott is the Senior Resident Inspector at Vermont 15 Yankee Nuclear Power Station.

16 As described in our process, the NRC staff 17 may ask clarifying questions in order to better under 18 the Petitioner's presentation and to reach a reasoned 19 decision whether to accept or reject the Petitioner's 20 request for a review under the 2.206 process.

21 I would like to describe the scope of the 22 petition under consideration and the NRC activities to 23 date. On December 5, 2012, Mr. Mulligan submitted to 24 the NRC a petition under 2.206 regarding the Vermont 25 Yankee Nuclear Power Station. Mr. Mulligan requested NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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10 1 an immediate shutdown of Vermont Yankee because, in 2 Mr. Mulligan's words, "the NRC and Entergy can't keep 3 their nuclear safety paperwork and documents accurate 4 and up to date."

5 He also requested 10 additional actions, 6 which I will not state now unless someone would like 7 me to on the call.

8 (No response.)

9 Okay. So now to discuss the NRC's 10 activities to date. On December 20, 2012, the PRB met 11 internally to discuss the request for immediate action 12 of emergency shutdown of Vermont Yankee. The PRB 13 denied the request for immediate action because there 14 was no immediate safety concern to the plant or to the 15 health and safety of the public.

16 On December 21, 2012, Mr. Mulligan was 17 informed of the PRB's decision on the immediate action 18 request. On January 9, 2012, Mr. Mulligan addressed 19 the PRB via teleconference to provide supplemental 20 information for the Board's consideration prior to the 21 PRB's internal meeting to make an initial 22 recommendation.

23 On January 23, 2013, the PRB met 24 internally to discuss the petition and to make an 25 initial recommendation. The PRB determined that some NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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11 1 of the petition requests do not meet the criteria for 2 review because the petition failed to meet -- to 3 provide sufficient facts to warrant further inquiry.

4 The remaining requests within the petition 5 meet the requirements -- sorry. The remaining 6 requests within the petition meet the criteria for 7 rejection because they were not enforcement-related 8 actions.

9 We also confirmed at that time that there 10 were no safety concerns at the plant. Therefore, the 11 PRB's initial recommendation was to not accept the 12 petition.

13 On March 21, 2013, Mr. Mulligan was 14 informed of the PRB's initial recommendation and 15 requested another opportunity to address the PRB, 16 which is the purpose of today's call. Following this 17 meeting, the PRB will meet internally to determine 18 whether a modification or a change to its initial 19 recommendation is warranted. The outcome of this 20 internal meeting will be discussed with the 21 Petitioner.

22 As a reminder for the phone participants, 23 please identify yourself if you make any remarks, as 24 this will help in the preparation of the meeting 25 transcript that will be made publicly available.

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12 1 Thank you for that.

2 Mr. Mulligan, I will now turn it over to 3 you to allow you to provide any information that you 4 believe the PRB should consider as part of the 5 petition.

6 It is now 9:10, so you will have until 7 9:55 for your remarks.

8 Thank you.

9 PETITIONER MULLIGAN: Well, thank you very 10 much for this opportunity. I can remember -- I can 11 remember when Entergy first came onto the scene over 12 here at Vermont Yankee. I remember, you know, 13 employees coming up to me on the streets and they are 14 talking to me about Entergy. And, you know, I asked, 15 "Well, how are they?" This was probably, you know, 16 2007. No, 2008, and stuff.

17 And they basically said, you know, "Mike, 18 they are all business. Everything about them is 19 business. It's all money and stuff, and they're 20 arrogant." And so, you know, of course I had issues 21 with Vermont Yankee before that, and stuff like that.

22 And so -- and then I remember -- I 23 remember reading the Palisades inspection reports and 24 documents. These guys are -- these guys are out of 25 control and the agencies can't figure out a way to NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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13 1 interact with them and put a stop to it.

2 And, you know -- and I remember saying to 3 myself, well, what -- you know, what are your 4 expectations? I said, well, I'll just get something 5 on paper anyways.

6 And I pondered, I says, you know, can you 7 imagine this -- in 2011, I can remember thinking --

8 I've got it on paper and I says, "Can you imagine all 9 of the problems that are going to happen in the next 10 year, next two years, or so? Can you imagine the 11 mind-boggling number of problems?"

12 Even though you've talked about it and 13 you've identified there's a pretty big problem, and 14 stuff like that, and -- you know, and then Palisades 15 showed up with all of their unimaginable problems that 16 showed up, and then they have continued to be a leaky 17 plant over and over again, and stuff like that.

18 And I can remember, you know, Vermont 19 Yankee was before that with their tritium problem, and 20 the essence of Entergy not being honest and truthful.

21 And the whole thing was kind of revolving around plant 22 disclosures and being honest and truthful and 23 immediate disclosures and thorough documentation, you 24 know, because everybody reads documents later on, and 25 it's critical that we know the history to interact NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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14 1 with the future and stuff, and, you know, the essence 2 of -- of accurate documents and stuff.

3 And Entergy had problems being truthful, 4 playing word games up there in Montpelier, and that 5 type of stuff. They just -- they showed arrogance in 6 a lot of their communications and stuff to the state, 7 and we are seeing the results of that today.

8 You know, repeated arrogance, you know, I 9 tell everybody it's a cold-hearted ideology, really, 10 that propels a lot of this sort of stuff, this sense 11 of entitlement of -- they work for themselves and 12 their profits and the company, and they don't work for 13 us as an entity for our nation and our national 14 interest and our greatest interest.

15 And so those are the things that I have 16 been concerned about, and I really haven't seen much 17 of a change. You know, I understand everybody is 18 following the rules and that type of thing, but, you 19 know, rules are very -- they carry very little 20 information. They carry zero intelligence. And, you 21 know, we've all got to follow the rules, but we've all 22 got to -- rules are the basics, the very basics of how 23 we control our behavior.

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15 1 and keep attention to what you're doing and interact 2 and create a voice, and those types of things, you 3 know, is what our great nation is built on, is the 4 ability to be -- it's not to say -- to equate this 5 system that all we are concerned about is the rules 6 and following the rules.

7 We have enormous capabilities to act above 8 the rules, to interact -- you know, a rule doesn't 9 tell us when to interact with a problem. It's our 10 intelligence and stuff and the ability to interact 11 with our world and to assess it and to anticipate 12 problems and change the world. I think we all have 13 those kind of -- these kind of gifts, and they are all 14 in us, and we just have to develop them.

15 You know, I was just thinking with the --

16 a lot of documents and the inspection reports and the 17 public declarations of the utilities, they are 18 structured to not communicate. They are structured to 19 give limited information out there, you know, to not 20 be held accountable and that type of thing.

21 I see it in the LERs, their -- you know, 22 the rules say you have to -- you have to give the 23 minimum amount of information, because, you know, your 24 enemies are out there and they will take advantage of 25 it and stuff like that.

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16 1 So the whole thing is the essence of 2 giving very little information, and it has gotten 3 worse in the last two decades, both under the 4 Republicans and the Democrats. The Democrats are just 5 as bad as the Republicans, unfortunately, with this.

6 They don't seem to understand how important 7 information is to people like me and my community and 8 the idea that it's part of our constitutional ideals.

9 We are an open government. We are one of 10 the most open governments on the face of the planet, 11 and we strive to take into consideration how important 12 an open government and an open society is, and we give 13 information. We give it to people like me, so-called 14 enemies, and I get to interact with my politicians and 15 the media and the environment around me, and stuff 16 like that.

17 And we giVe feedback to the NRC and to the 18 government itself, and that's -- and everybody makes 19 mid-course corrections, and stuff like that. It is 20 vital for a person like me to know what is going on at 21 Vermont Yankee and a lot of these plants, and stuff 22 like that, because that's how I interact with my 23 community and that's how I interact with my government 24 and stuff.

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17 1 or Rosies, you know, and we use rules to be 2 undemocratic, and that type of thing, I think it's --

3 I think it's a tragedy. I think it's -- I think it's 4 just a tragedy. It's not who we are. That's -- we're 5 the greatest democracy, actually republic, but we --

6 the ideals of a democracy and open government, an open 7 society, is who we are.

8 And, unfortunately, a lot of things -- a 9 lot of the way the world works now, we've all gotten 10 to the -- you know, this privacy thing, and we are 11 afraid of giving information out, we are afraid of 12 letting people see our humanity, our human mistakes 13 and errors, and also some of the -- a lot of times our 14 -- things that we catch that are astonishing, you 15 know.

16 It's almost like we think the world is an 17 enemy in front of us, and we've got to hide in corners 18 and darkened corners and not let people -- not let the 19 world see how beautiful we are.

20 And so, you know, an example is, well, in 21 the recent LERs what I have been dealing with with the 22 SRVs, it's just not complete information. From the 23 get-go, it is -- I know it is information that is --

24 the first LER with the SRVs was incomplete and 25 inaccurate mostly.

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18 1 And it's astonishing. If that's what the 2 world is, and that's what Entergy and the NRC is 3 seeing, that's such a poor state of engineering and 4 professionalism, that there shouldn't be any plant 5 running in the United States. If that's -- Vermont's 6 first LER is what is -- is the best of us, is the best 7 of engineering, we can allow that plant to operate and 8 not know what the -- not know the condition of the 9 components that they are operating, who are we? It's 10 terrible, you know?

11 And didn't the Commissioner just talk 12 about, who are we, you know, and prod us to be -- prod 13 us to be bigger and better than we are? And so the 14 LERs -- then, the second rendition of the LER came out 15 and it was still inaccurate, and they didn't know what 16 was the cause of that thing, or at least that's what 17 they say.

18 And I think that's like most -- what's 19 happening is you are following the rules, but -- and 20 you don't realize you are giving incomplete and 21 inaccurate information out to the public, out to the 22 nation in general, and stuff. I worry about that.

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19 1 shutdown, and a host of different -- the NRC let it 2 get by. Entergy said that there was no problem with 3 those new SRVs.

4 Southern Company said that -- they were 5 brought in as the backstop of everybody else, and they 6 said that there was nothing wrong with the SRVs and 7 that type of thing, perfectly good and nothing wrong 8 with them. And then, they started up and within a 9 year they had another leak, and then they had another 10 leak, and then they had another leak. We have yet to 11 see any of these other LERs on the SRVs, and stuff 12 like that.

13 So it's the sense that we don't get the 14 information, the immediacy of what is going on. We 15 don't have the ability to, you know, put it in our 16 heads, mull it around and interact with the 17 politicians in the agency, and, you know, went on with 18 a participatory democracy type of thing. That's what 19 we're worried about.

20 And we've got issues of -- let's see, the 21 grid in New England is becoming unstable itself. Our 22 sources of energy, I call it a -- becoming a -- as far 23 as our electric grid and our industry sources, a Third 24 World-style Guatemala oligarchy as far as all of the 25 different players and each -- everybody sabotaging NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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20 1 each other, and new sources are coming in, and people 2 are, like I said, sabotaging each other.

3 And then there is this -- these secretly 4 expensive sources of electricity that is undermining 5 us all. And the whole thing is a sense of -- who is 6 controlling all of these things? Is it the United 7 States Government? Are we setting the codes and rules 8 and stuff like that?

9 Or is it a -- there is a group of people, 10 an oligarchy, a special people that have the controls 11 of what is going on with our grid, and where one time 12 we've got astonishing expensive electricity, and a few 13 months later it's -- the cost of electricity is 14 crashing through the floor, and nobody can afford to 15 make electricity.

16 You know, it sounds like Guatemala. You 17 know, it sounds like a South American Third World 18 government -- country operating their electric system, 19 and the sources that -- sources of the energy that 20 support our electric system.

21 And so -- and we've got financial 22 qualification problems at Entergy. The NRC has got 23 concerns that they are financially capable, but they 24 got good grades, you know, from -- Yankee's got good 25 grades, green grades this year, and everything is NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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21 1 forgotten in the past.

2 We have issues at Vermont Yankee with the 3 silts. They have taken the silt out of the surface 4 water base and they deposited it somewhere, and it --

5 the rainwater -- this caused the rainwater to go 6 through a drain cover, whatever, and go into the 7 switch rooms, stuff like that.

8 And, you know, in the back of my head I 9 can say, you know, we had -- since my days at Vermont 10 Yankee, we've had issues with cable -- cable water 11 seals and fire seals and other kind of seals in that 12 switch room. I mean, what is the periodic nature of 13 -- they can't maintain the seals in general.

14 I mean, if you look over a long time, 15 there's a lot of problems with seals. You know, how 16 about the testing? How come they didn't have post-17 installation testing? How come they didn't -- how 18 come they haven't, you know, put water in there? Hey, 19 what are the results? Can we see water in that switch 20 room drain type of thing?

21 You know, just since that, you know, 22 testing, you know, we put in new stuff and we test it, 23 and that type of thing, did they put the silt, you 24 know? They -- how come the silt -- you know, it 25 sounds like the silt wasn't -- two years ago, or when NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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22 1 they have done it in the past, they put it someplace 2 else. And this time they put the silt in a different 3 place that caused this problem. You know, it sounds 4 kind of unprofessional and stuff.

5 The ventilation system -- the fans, they 6 were doing maintenance on them or something like that, 7 and they started the system up and one of the fans 8 didn't work. I think it was the supply -- the exhaust 9 fan didn't work and the supply fan worked.

10 And then they talked about, well, the 11 panels are for -- that's what the panels are for as 12 far as misoperation of the ventilation system. Well, 13 I seem to remember it was more or less those panels 14 were -- you know, it's technically accurate.

15 They were for, you know, the hydrogen leak 16 in an accident, and certainly all of them -- I don't 17 know, what is it, nine panels there and stuff like 18 that, and certainly if you have a type of a -- break 19 of a steam pipe and stuff like that, those are the --

20 you know, I kind of thought it was -- those kind of 21 things were the reason why the panels were there.

22 And, again, it's kind of the essence of 23 everybody is framing the information to sound pleasing 24 to minimize the impact and not tell the whole truth, 25 and stuff like that. And if you know the whole -- if NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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23 1 we see the problem, and our enemies even see the 2 problem, then we would fix them, type of deal.

3 And, you know, that's the sense of what I 4 have as far as the NRC and utilities. They have been 5 withholding information. They have been structuring 6 it -- intentionally structuring the disclosure of the 7 information to us. And they have been protecting 8 everybody, you know. Everybody is protecting their 9 buddies and -- type of thing.

10 And, you know, we get in more trouble 11 doing good and acting in a group than we do when we, 12 you know, intentionally do bad and stuff like that.

13 It kind of -- when we think we're doing good, and we 14 justify it under -- for good reasons, that -- you 15 know, that bypasses a lot of our protection circuits 16 in our brains and that type of thing.

17 So, you know, and what is going on with 18 Entergy -- Arkansas I. I remember Palisades --

19 Palisades I talked about in one of my 2.206s. I 20 remember talking about their crane up there in the 21 Reactor Building, and I remember making a joke about, 22 what would happen if -- you know, you guys are taking 23 -- you're not taking the protective interlocks of the 24 crane and the general operation, the -- doing the 25 safety checks before you operate the machinery, the NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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24 1 skills needed to operate that piece of equipment, and 2 stuff, you know, it seemed like there wasn't enough 3 training and enough paying attention to procedures and 4 stuff.

5 The NRC wrote about these things and 6 stuff, and I joked about, you know, what happens if a 7 cable snaps and a reactor head goes -- crashes down 8 through numerous levels of floors, and stuff like 9 that. That would be the most amazing two seconds in 10 your life, actually listening to that.

11 And so since that, you know, all of us --

12 as far as with Palisades, Vermont Yankee, Pilgrim, and 13 stuff like that, I mean, I worry that there is 14 underlying indications with Entergy as a whole that we 15 -- that a lot of problems are submerged and we can't 16 see it, and we can't interact with Entergy. We can't 17 find a way to control those -- this corporation and 18 stuff.

19 And I -- you know, since -- I feel 20 powerless. I have tried writing, in my limited 21 skills, about the problem with these plants, and stuff 22 like that, trying to say that -- it's really not one 23 plant. It's not Palisades or it's not Pilgrim.

24 There's a system behind it. It's not even Entergy.

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25 1 interacting organizations, our legislature, our 2 President, the regulatory rules. The whole system --

3 it's not working.

4 And if you study all of these documents 5 and stuff, from my point of view, you can see that.

6 You can see that the thing is not working, and 7 everybody knows they are not working, but most of the 8 officialdom sits there and, you know, talks in 9 happyland, everything is pretty well much going on, 10 and that -- going good.

11 And Vermont Yankee got green grades this 12 marking -- this marking period and stuff, and yet here 13 we are at another plant at -- with Entergy, and where 14 there is a pretty big event is what I'm hearing.

15 Unfortunately, a death has occurred and numerous 16 injuries and stuff, and most of us outside are getting 17 the idea that, you know, you're kind of withholding 18 information from us.

19 You're kind of -- you're kind of 20 structuring the disclosure information, like the LERs, 21 you know, to in a pleasing way -- you're not just 22 giving us the cold, hard facts, and that type of 23 thing. And I feel as though that, you know, if you 24 were -- if the NRC was listening to me, if the NRC had 25 restructured their 2.206, if you gave me an NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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26 1 opportunity, a structured opportunity to demand 2 information, and everybody was required to be truthful 3 and honest, not -- just follow the rules, because the 4 rules are meant -- the way they are written nowadays, 5 you know, it's, hey, the utilities basically made 6 those rules and they are interacting with our U.S.

7 legislators, Congress, and stuff like that.

8 They are not written by the people outside 9 the plant. They are written by the companies and the 10 money they have with Congress and stuff like that. If 11 the rules would have allowed me to -- and the NRC and 12 the utilities, we all act -- interacted together, 13 committee, and everybody was forced to be honest with 14 each other, and stuff like that, I think a life could 15 have been saved.

16 I think there is injuries that could have 17 been prevented with Entergy over there in Arkansas.

18 We would have seen the system that Entergy -- the 19 dysfunction of the system of Entergy, and we would 20 have fixed it. I believe that if we were honest, if 21 everybody was honest with each other and open, and we 22 acted in the national interest and the greater 23 interest, I think we could have prevented Arkansas I.

24 And, you know, I still say to myself, I 25 think I said, well, the next two years, what is going NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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27 1 to happen in the next two years? What kind of mind-2 boggling problems are going to erupt from Entergy in 3 the next two years, you know?

4 They dropped this spatter a couple of days 5 ago. What else is going to pop up? They've got a 6 plant that is in a -- in the national -- it's all over 7 the media as far as Palisades, wondering what is going 8 on with them. You know, the NRC seems to think they 9 are cured, and that type of thing. Right? And they 10 think Vermont Yankee is cured. They think Pilgrim is 11 doing well and stuff.

12 And then this other problem pops up that 13 is a magnitude that is astonishing, is what we can see 14 and stuff. And so we think the system doesn't work.

15 We think the whole system doesn't work, from the 16 legislature to the -- the mechanisms of government 17 doesn't work here. The disclosure of information to 18 each other and how we are supposed to work as a 19 country doesn't work, and it's a big problem we see.

20 And like I said, there's noise at Vermont 21 Yankee. There's the ventilation system, the switch 22 gear problem. You know, I tell everybody, you know, 23 T don't care how insignificant a problem is. Every 24 little insignificant problem is a golden opportunity 25 to understand the system behind it.

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28 1 If you sit and look at these insignificant 2 problems, and you ponder and ask the questions, where 3 did it come from, how can I catch it the next time, I 4 will catch it the next time, I guarantee I'll catch it 5 the next time or -- and stuff. And a lot of times 6 little problems, you know, you sit and ponder it, and 7 how all of a sudden you look around and there's a 8 monster sitting next to it, and you say, "Holy 9 Christ."

10 And the only reason why I got attention --

11 the only reason that brought -- drew my attention was 12 that this -- talk about this little system, little 13 problem that nobody -- nobody knew.

14 So, you know -- just looking over my 15 notes. So, you know, like I said before, we think 16 that what we can see is the NRC and the utilities, you 17 know, are systematically managing the information, 18 systemically and systematically managing the 19 information to project an incorrect image to us.

20 And that's a big problem, if they're doing 21 that. That's a huge problem, if they can't be honest 22 to us, and if the agency, you know, is -- according to 23 them they're following the rules to be dishonest to 24 us, you know. There's something wrong there, you 25 know, and I've seen how, you know, we gain rules NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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29 1 between us and groups and I have -- I have -- you 2 know, looking back at some of my own behavior, it is 3 just horrendous what I have done in the past a lot of 4 times as far as sometimes being in a group and, you 5 know, acting in that group thing and letting them --

6 and me not being under full control of my capabilities 7 and stuff like that.

8 I have been in places that -- when I was 9 younger, I have done things that were pretty bad and 10 stuff, and I see how groups of people -- I know how 11 groups of people -- I've been involved in a lot of 12 things in the community and groups of people and 13 organizations that are wonderful.

14 We wouldn't be where we are without 15 organizations. Most of our troubles emerge from 16 organizational and group thinking and stuff like that, 17 and, you know, we should be above that in this stage 18 of the game. But we are going backwards.

19 So I think the grid is in trouble. Our 20 electric system is in trouble. You know, as a whole, 21 it questions, you know, the reliability of supplying 22 emergency power to a lot of these nuke plants in New 23 England. We sense that a lot of the rules are not 24 fair. And, furthermore, they don't -- they are not 25 fair, they are corrupt, they give us too expensive NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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30 1 electricity, and they are all driving the system to 2 being unstable. And we worry about that, what that 3 does.

4 The price of electricity, as already --

5 which the utilities depend upon has been spiking and 6 crashing, and stuff like that. It's out of control, 7 and it's an enormous system, and we worry about not as 8 a nation being in control of these attributes, and the 9 whole thing spinning out of control.

10 We have seen in New England, you know, in 11 this time of -- there is supposed to be an excess of 12 natural gas and you have deflationary prices there.

13 We've seen how the system has created a bottleneck and 14 created a crisis with expensive electricity and 15 threatening not to have -- not being able to support 16 the transmission system or electricity to our homes, 17 and stuff like that. It's a grave concern as far as 18 what I can see.

19 And so -- just two seconds here. Oh.

20 And, you know, like I -- like I said earlier, the --

21 we got to -- to the process, you know. Like, you 22 know, I wonder if it would have been different if I 23 would have had access to more information, if I would 24 have created a discussion, instead of people shunning 25 me, in the agency at times shunning me, instead of, NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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31 1 you know, they kind of drew me into it or drew people 2 like me into it, into the problems, and we created 3 some of our own different perspectives, and we all, 4 you know, have seen more of the world, would 5 Arkansas I have happened?

6 Would Entergy have been a lot more 7 stronger of a company? Would the agency have been 8 different? I think it would have been, you know, if 9 we were more the ideals of our country and our 10 constitution instead of these -- an oligarchy type of 11 thing with our little groups, exclusive groups and 12 stuff like that.

13 I think we could have stopped it, and it 14 worries me what kind of problems we are going to see 15 in the next two years. And I'm -- and, you know, what 16 kind of flows in the head -- you know, two years ago 17 and now we've got dropped spatter, and will the next 18 one be a dropped head in the Reactor Building? Will 19 a regular crane fail? because it was aging, type of 20 thing? What other things? What does the next two 21 years have in store for us?

22 I'm telling you, the last two years we've 23 had some pretty big problems, and our capacity factor 24 shows it, and a lot of these utilities are under 25 increasing stress in a lot of different ways. We've NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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32 1 got a lot of bad actors out there, San Onofre, Fort 2 Calhoun, TVA.

3 I talked a lot in the past about 4 counterfeit parts and stuff like that, and fraudulent 5 parts and stuff like that. And TVA is talking about 6 exactly the stuff I talked about a couple of years 7 ago, or a year ago, and that type of thing, a lot of 8 what I have talked about with the SRVs at Vermont 9 Yankee, and going to talk about at Pilgrim and stuff 10 like that.

11 So what have we got in front of us? We 12 think this is going to be good as far as how the 13 public thinks about the NRC and the nuclear industry.

14 In two years, will we be more insecure? Will the 15 public be more -- have a sense of, well, these guys 16 aren't straight-shooters. They are all -- we -- will 17 the nation wake up and say, you know, we can't trust 18 these guys to tell us the truth.

19 An example was Pilgrim and the casks, and 20 the Pilgrim -- took pictures, and then, again, the 21 sense that the NRC Public Relations Department and 22 inspectors, they were giving incomplete information.

23 Since that, they caught the agency with their pants 24 down, and the utility, and it has taken months to 25 straighten the mess out, instead of it should have NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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33 1 taken just being honest, and, you know, not playing by 2 the rules and using the rules to hide information and 3 not use -- making the rules to disclose information, 4 making it mandatory to disclose information.

5 Is that what is going to happen in the 6 next two years, where many in New England have -- lose 7 faith in the NRC, and certainly Entergy? Is this --

8 is this where it is all heading as far as the LERs 9 being more incomplete and more inaccurate, and that 10 type of thing?

11 And we get in our heads that the NRC is 12 not successful, and 25 percent of our electricity is 13 not ethical and honest, and we as a collective group 14 do something crazy as far as maybe wanting to shut a 15 bunch of them down to our detriment, is that where 16 we're heading? Will we see more Arkansas I type of 17 events to make us be more insecure with the nuclear 18 industry and stuff?

19 You know, I see a lot of problems that are 20 bubbling under the surface. And if an event shows up, 21 a lot of dishonesty everybody gets away with and 22 stuff. And if an event shows up and everybody does 23 what they are trained -- been trained to do, and being 24 complete and dishonest in what they have allowed to 25 have gotten away with in the past, and an event shows NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W.

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34 1 up that creates -- that shows this system that's 2 there, we are going to lose faith, besides in 3 government or a segment of government.

4 We are going to lose more faith in the 5 nuclear industry and the integrity of the nuclear --

6 we are going to all think that they all stick together 7 and just -- like they don't even belong in the United 8 States. And we are going to collectively think they 9 are untrustworthy, you know? Back to 1979 again type 10 of thing, you know, I don't think we're far away from 11 that. We are just -- we are a nation that doesn't 12 have a lot of faith in government already, and stuff 13 like that.

14 I worry about the trends of the industry, 15 you know. Is it declining? Is more people losing 16 faith? Has the system responded with happy tunes and 17 la la la la, you know, like a three-year-old kid whose 18 parents are trying to explain something and they go 19 "la la la la," like they don't want to hear it? Is 20 that what is happening with a lot of the NRC and the 21 utilities?

22 Do you think that kind of making that 23 noise to not hear what is going on, do you think that 24 is going to work for very long? I don't think so.

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35 1 come out of this pretty quickly, if everybody became 2 more honest. But changing behavior is tough.

3 You know, like I can see it in the eyes of 4 Palisades in 2011, and stuff like that. I can see how 5 unresponsive the system is. It's huge. They don't 6 listen, and stuff like that. And they can't -- they 7 can't see themselves what they're doing and stuff, and 8 I worry about that in the next two years. What will 9 they -- what will the next two years bring?

10 We have a terrible accident, terrible 11 accident like Fukushima or something like it, or would 12 it be a much lesser accident but be in the United 13 States and more open, it would be -- be in our minds 14 deeper and stuff.

15 So anyways, I thank you for this 16 opportunity for letting me talk.

17 CHAIR MUESSLE: Thank you, Mr. Mulligan.

18 At this time, does the staff here at 19 headquarters have any questions for Mr. Mulligan?

20 (No response.)

21 What about questions from the region?

22 MR. DeBOER: We have no questions at this 23 time.

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36 1 clarifying information on the petition that you 2 submitted.

3 Before we close, does the Court Reporter 4 need any additional information for the meeting 5 transcript?

6 (Whereupon, some name spellings were 7 provided to the Court Reporter.)

8 CHAIR MUESSLE: Okay. Thank you. With 9 that, this meeting is concluded and we will be 10 terminating the phone connection.

11 Thank you.

12 (Whereupon, at 9:49 a.m., the proceedings 13 in the foregoing matter were concluded.)

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CERTIFICATE This is to certify that the attached proceedings before the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission Proceeding: 10 CFR 2.206 Petition-Vermont Yankee by Michael Mulligan Docket Number: n/a Location: teleconference were held as herein appears, and that this is the original transcript thereof for the file of the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission taken and thereafter reduced to typewriting under my direction and that said transcript is a true and accurate record of the proceedings.

4- -------

Official Reporter Neal R. Gross & Co., Inc.

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