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short question-and-answer session, if there is some  
short question-and-answer session, if there is some  


questions you had on the process overall. And then,  
questions you had on the process overall. And then, after that, we'll move to having and receiving comments  
 
after that, we'll move to having and receiving comments  


on the draft environmental impact statement for Fermi 5    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433  
on the draft environmental impact statement for Fermi 5    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433  
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evening. So, for that reason, I would like to limit  
evening. So, for that reason, I would like to limit  


your remarks, if we can, to about three to five minutes,  
your remarks, if we can, to about three to five minutes, and I'll give you cues when you're getting up on five minutes. To be able to cover that many people, that's quite a bit of time for each one of you. And if that's  
 
and I'll give you cues when you're getting up on five minutes. To be able to cover that many people, that's quite a bit of time for each one of you. And if that's  


too short a time for any of you, please come see me and  
too short a time for any of you, please come see me and  
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MS. MELENDEZ-COLON:  Good afternoon. My name is Daneira Melendez-Colon and I'm the safety  
MS. MELENDEZ-COLON:  Good afternoon. My name is Daneira Melendez-Colon and I'm the safety  


project manager with the Division of License Renewal,  
project manager with the Division of License Renewal, and I'm coordinating the staff's review associated with the Fermi 2 license renewal application. Thank you all 6    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 for taking the time to come to this meeting. Today, we will provide an overview of the license renewal and  
 
and I'm coordinating the staff's review associated with the Fermi 2 license renewal application. Thank you all 6    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 for taking the time to come to this meeting. Today, we will provide an overview of the license renewal and  


review process, which includes both a  safety review  
review process, which includes both a  safety review  
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The first principle is that the current regulatory process is adequate. The interrelationship between  
The first principle is that the current regulatory process is adequate. The interrelationship between  


our regulations, licensing, and oversight activities,  
our regulations, licensing, and oversight activities, provide for adequate protection of public health and  
 
provide for adequate protection of public health and  


safety at any point during the plant's life.
safety at any point during the plant's life.
The second license renewal principle describes maintaining the current licensing basis for the plant. Operating experience, research results,  
The second license renewal principle describes maintaining the current licensing basis for the plant. Operating experience, research results, and other information that support our decision-making 13    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 also fit into the Agi ng Management Program. This information is also used in our licensing activities and as a basis for changes to regulations and guidance. As a consequence of applicants  receiving their renewed license, the Aging Management  Program is necessary to ensure continued safe  operation of passive, long-lived structures and  components, are added to the existing plant's  licensing basis. To be clear, aging of structures  and components does not start at year 40, it starts  on day one, and it's managed by the applicants since  the first day of operation; thus, many of the aging  management  
 
and other information that support our decision-making 13    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 also fit into the Agi ng Management Program. This information is also used in our licensing activities and as a basis for changes to regulations and guidance. As a consequence of applicants  receiving their renewed license, the Aging Management  Program is necessary to ensure continued safe  operation of passive, long-lived structures and  components, are added to the existing plant's  licensing basis. To be clear, aging of structures  and components does not start at year 40, it starts  on day one, and it's managed by the applicants since  the first day of operation; thus, many of the aging  management  


programs are existing programs that applicants credit  
programs are existing programs that applicants credit  
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The safety review focuses on the aging of classes and long-lived structures and components and systems that the NRC deems important to plant safety.   
The safety review focuses on the aging of classes and long-lived structures and components and systems that the NRC deems important to plant safety.   


We consider, first: safety-related systems,  
We consider, first: safety-related systems, structures, and components; for example, the reactor  
 
structures, and components; for example, the reactor  


containment; second, non-safety-related systems, 14    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 structures, and components which, if they fail, could affect safety-related systems, structures, and  
containment; second, non-safety-related systems, 14    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 structures, and components which, if they fail, could affect safety-related systems, structures, and  
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the safety review are documented in a Safety Evaluation  
the safety review are documented in a Safety Evaluation  


Report.
Report. Now that you know what it is subject to review, I will talk about how the NRC looks at all the information. The safety review is comprised of numerous, vigorous aspects. The technical staff  
Now that you know what it is subject to review, I will talk about how the NRC looks at all the information. The safety review is comprised of numerous, vigorous aspects. The technical staff  


reviews the applicant's license renewal application  
reviews the applicant's license renewal application  
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and supporting documentation to determine the  
and supporting documentation to determine the  


applicant's methodology, to identify the systems,  
applicant's methodology, to identify the systems, structures, and components within the scope of license  
 
structures, and components within the scope of license  


renewal, and subject to an aging management review; to  
renewal, and subject to an aging management review; to  


determine if the methodology has been properly 15    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 implemented, and to determine with reasonable assurance if the effects of aging for certain systems,  
determine if the methodology has been properly 15    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 implemented, and to determine with reasonable assurance if the effects of aging for certain systems, structures, and components will be adequately managed or monitored by new and existing  programs and surveillance activities. The staff uses  site audits or visits to verify the technical basis  of the license renewal application and to confirm  that the applicant's aging management programs and  activities conform with how they are described in the   
 
structures, and components will be adequately managed or monitored by new and existing  programs and surveillance activities. The staff uses  site audits or visits to verify the technical basis  of the license renewal application and to confirm  that the applicant's aging management programs and  activities conform with how they are described in the   


application. The staff documents the basis and conclusions of its review in a Safety Evaluation  Report which is publicly available. In addition, a  
application. The staff documents the basis and conclusions of its review in a Safety Evaluation  Report which is publicly available. In addition, a  
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Finally, as I have mentioned, the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards performs an  
Finally, as I have mentioned, the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards performs an  


independent review of the license renewal application,  
independent review of the license renewal application, the staff's Safety Evaluation Report, and inspection  
 
the staff's Safety Evaluation Report, and inspection  


findings, makes a recommendation to the Commission regarding the proposed action to issue a renewed  
findings, makes a recommendation to the Commission regarding the proposed action to issue a renewed  
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your comments today will help to facilitate a thorough  
your comments today will help to facilitate a thorough  


review.
review. Public comments are an important part of the environmental review process. All your comments  
Public comments are an important part of the environmental review process. All your comments  
 
to us, whether provided verbally during this meeting,


or in a written letter or email, are considered and addressed. We respond to each comment as a part of the EIS. The -- the EIS is one of the factors, as well as  
to us, whether provided verbally during this meeting, or in a written letter or email, are considered and addressed. We respond to each comment as a part of the EIS. The -- the EIS is one of the factors, as well as  


several others shown here, that influences the 21    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Commission's decision to renew the license or not.
several others shown here, that influences the 21    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Commission's decision to renew the license or not.
In addition to providing verbal and written comments at this meeting, there are other ways that you can submit comments. You can submit comments online using the federal rule-making  website,  
In addition to providing verbal and written comments at this meeting, there are other ways that you can submit comments. You can submit comments online using the federal rule-making  website, Regulations.gov. Just enter in the NRC  Docket I.D.
 
Regulations.gov. Just enter in the NRC  Docket I.D.
listed on the slide. Please note that  comments will not be edited to remove any identifying  or contact information. Do not include any  information and comments -- in your comments that you  do not want publicly disclosed. As I mentioned, the  deadline for  
listed on the slide. Please note that  comments will not be edited to remove any identifying  or contact information. Do not include any  information and comments -- in your comments that you  do not want publicly disclosed. As I mentioned, the  deadline for  


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presentation, if they had some confusion over any  
presentation, if they had some confusion over any  


aspect of how this process works. Okay, if there is 23    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 none, then what I'll do is move us right into the comment period.
aspect of how this process works. Okay, if there is 23    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 none, then what I'll do is move us right into the comment period. As again I mentioned, there's no shy people in this -- sorry -- there's no shy people in this group.
As again I mentioned, there's no shy people in this -- sorry -- there's no shy people in this group.
I woke you up, though, if you were asleep. But I have 33 people who want to speak and  there's only I think 63 people in the audience, so  that's a pretty high percentage. What I would like  to do, again, is call you up to the microphone here  to speak. I would ask you to try to limit your  remarks to three to five  
I woke you up, though, if you were asleep. But I have 33 people who want to speak and  there's only I think 63 people in the audience, so  that's a pretty high percentage. What I would like  to do, again, is call you up to the microphone here  to speak. I would ask you to try to limit your  remarks to three to five  


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throughout the district, and Monroe County is now part  
throughout the district, and Monroe County is now part  


of the 7th Congressional  
of the 7th Congressional District, and it's interesting to note that the 7th Congressional District actually  
: District, and it's interesting to note that the 7th Congressional District actually  


has -- is the biggest producer of energy from any 25    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Congressional District this side of the Mississippi, so it's very important in this district for -- for our jobs, for our local economy. And as we move this  
has -- is the biggest producer of energy from any 25    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Congressional District this side of the Mississippi, so it's very important in this district for -- for our jobs, for our local economy. And as we move this  
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district in our state forward, it's important to create  
district in our state forward, it's important to create  


efficient, low-cost energy for our manufacturers,  
efficient, low-cost energy for our manufacturers, families, and small businesses as we get Michigan moving again. So, we'll continue to work on that, and  
 
families, and small businesses as we get Michigan moving again. So, we'll continue to work on that, and  


the congressman in the next few weeks will be submitting a letter of  support for this renewal process. So, I  
the congressman in the next few weeks will be submitting a letter of  support for this renewal process. So, I  
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continue to stable the base of the economic  
continue to stable the base of the economic  


avail -- activity and all of the benefits associated with more  than 800 very good jobs here in our region,  
avail -- activity and all of the benefits associated with more  than 800 very good jobs here in our region, but also  the tax base associated with the plant and the local  purchasing engaged in and by the plant.
 
but also  the tax base associated with the plant and the local  purchasing engaged in and by the plant.
There is  also, of course, the spinoff benefits associated with  hundreds of contractors engaged in various projects  of the plant. I can't overstate Fermi's vital  importance to our city, our county, and  
There is  also, of course, the spinoff benefits associated with  hundreds of contractors engaged in various projects  of the plant. I can't overstate Fermi's vital  importance to our city, our county, and  


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The City of Monroe is fortunate to have that kind of relationship with DTE Energy, and DTE  
The City of Monroe is fortunate to have that kind of relationship with DTE Energy, and DTE  


Energy has demonstrated that it is proactive in 27    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 addressing issues. They communicate with elect officials and community leaders and they are true to their word. I can find that any issue or any item,  
Energy has demonstrated that it is proactive in 27    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 addressing issues. They communicate with elect officials and community leaders and they are true to their word. I can find that any issue or any item, either before, during, or as things are occurring, that  
 
either before, during, or as things are occurring, that  


I have contact and receive phone calls and can really  
I have contact and receive phone calls and can really  
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have generated.
have generated.
Thank you, again, for this opportunity to speak. MR. BARKLEY:  Okay, thank you. The next three people I would like to call is: Barry Buschmann,  
Thank you, again, for this opportunity to speak. MR. BARKLEY:  Okay, thank you. The next three people I would like to call is: Barry Buschmann, Carol Izant, and Richard McDevitt. So, Barry?  MR. BUSCHMANN:  Good afternoon. My  name is Barry Buschmann, and I'm the senior vice   
 
Carol Izant, and Richard McDevitt. So, Barry?  MR. BUSCHMANN:  Good afternoon. My  name is Barry Buschmann, and I'm the senior vice   


president of the Mannik & Smith Group, which is a  local civil engineering, surveying, and environmental  firm in Monroe, Michigan. I am also a licensed   
president of the Mannik & Smith Group, which is a  local civil engineering, surveying, and environmental  firm in Monroe, Michigan. I am also a licensed   
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Mechanical Maintenance Department. Really, the nuts  
Mechanical Maintenance Department. Really, the nuts  


and bolts of this power plant to keep us safe, reliable,  
and bolts of this power plant to keep us safe, reliable, organization-capable of supplying you, our community, 35    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 with electricity.
 
organization-capable of supplying you, our community, 35    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 with electricity.
Not only have I been a lifelong resident of Fermi and of Monroe County, here at Fermi, I have  
Not only have I been a lifelong resident of Fermi and of Monroe County, here at Fermi, I have  


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the tubing to manufacture and house our uranium that we use for fuel. And it's very important that in all  
the tubing to manufacture and house our uranium that we use for fuel. And it's very important that in all  


aspects of this, that we do produce and keep a safe operating power plant. It has been my pleasure to work in such an organization  that does this at all steps. We do have for you entire sets of  safety standards that every man and woman that works  there abide by. We pay attention to each and every  one of these steps because this is not only our  occupation,  
aspects of this, that we do produce and keep a safe operating power plant. It has been my pleasure to work in such an organization  that does this at all steps. We do have for you entire sets of  safety standards that every man and woman that works  there abide by. We pay attention to each and every  one of these steps because this is not only our  occupation, this is our environment. This is our  home; this is where we're raising our families. I am  fortunate enough to have a new generation in my  family who are


this is our environment. This is our  home; this is where we're raising our families. I am  fortunate enough to have a new generation in my  family who are
building a home within three miles of the power block, because we believe this is a safe, good way to  
 
building a home within three miles of the power block,  
 
because we believe this is a safe, good way to  


manufacture electricity.
manufacture electricity.
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operational safety, personal safety, and safety of the  
operational safety, personal safety, and safety of the  


public. Nothing comes before our responsibility for safety. And I know I speak for every Fermi employee,  
public. Nothing comes before our responsibility for safety. And I know I speak for every Fermi employee, that we take this responsibility seriously. Now, every company has a purpose. The DTE Energy purpose is: we serve with our energy the life  
 
that we take this responsibility seriously. Now, every company has a purpose. The DTE Energy purpose is: we serve with our energy the life  


blood of communities and the engine of progress. Fermi has an important role in the company in  fulfilling that purpose. The benefits of more than  25 years of safe operation are many:  More than 190  million megawatt hours of electricity for DTE Energy   
blood of communities and the engine of progress. Fermi has an important role in the company in  fulfilling that purpose. The benefits of more than  25 years of safe operation are many:  More than 190  million megawatt hours of electricity for DTE Energy   
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of good, well-paying jobs, at a tax base that supports  
of good, well-paying jobs, at a tax base that supports  


the local community and the state of Michigan,  
the local community and the state of Michigan, economically, and; finally, license renewal supports  
 
economically, and; finally, license renewal supports  


our employees and their families, who are a vital part  
our employees and their families, who are a vital part  
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didn't question, I didn't know what a nuclear plant was, but I joined with the others and we did.
didn't question, I didn't know what a nuclear plant was, but I joined with the others and we did.
The first NRC meeting I went to, it was all white men; that was in '85. Over the years it changed,  
The first NRC meeting I went to, it was all white men; that was in '85. Over the years it changed, then we got men of color, and now we have women, and women of color. I'm glad to see this progress. This 40    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 is all progress toward a sustainable world: equal rights, equal voices. And now we have a thing of energy. It has -- Fukushima has brought to life everybody's worst fears. Over three years, still  
 
then we got men of color, and now we have women, and women of color. I'm glad to see this progress. This 40    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 is all progress toward a sustainable world: equal rights, equal voices. And now we have a thing of energy. It has -- Fukushima has brought to life everybody's worst fears. Over three years, still  


contaminating. Yes, Fermi has run without that kind  
contaminating. Yes, Fermi has run without that kind  
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For our next three speakers, I would like to call up  
For our next three speakers, I would like to call up  


Angela Rudolph, followed by Richard Micka, and then,  
Angela Rudolph, followed by Richard Micka, and then, finally, Bill Ded (sic), I believe his name is. MS. RUDOLPH:  Good afternoon, everyone. Monroe County is where I live, is where I work. I live  
 
finally, Bill Ded (sic), I believe his name is. MS. RUDOLPH:  Good afternoon, everyone. Monroe County is where I live, is where I work. I live  


just seven miles north of the plant and  I feel safe living there. I am proud to say I do  work at Fermi.
just seven miles north of the plant and  I feel safe living there. I am proud to say I do  work at Fermi.
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community should rest assured knowing the plant is safe  
community should rest assured knowing the plant is safe  


in our hands. Thank you. MR. BARKLEY:  Okay. Thanks, Bill. The next three people I would like to call are: Sean Honell,  
in our hands. Thank you. MR. BARKLEY:  Okay. Thanks, Bill. The next three people I would like to call are: Sean Honell, Michael Keegan, and then Eric Dover. Sean?  MR. HONELL:  Hello. My name is Sean  Honell; I'm a Monroe County resident and a mechanical engineer at Fermi 2. I was born and raised in Monroe   
 
Michael Keegan, and then Eric Dover. Sean?  MR. HONELL:  Hello. My name is Sean  Honell; I'm a Monroe County resident and a mechanical engineer at Fermi 2. I was born and raised in Monroe   


County and am proud to say it's my home, today. As a Bedford High School graduate in  2006, the economy in Michigan and throughout the country was at a point of economic downturn. The   
County and am proud to say it's my home, today. As a Bedford High School graduate in  2006, the economy in Michigan and throughout the country was at a point of economic downturn. The   
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they still don't know what to do with it, but yet they'll make more. They'll make promises: we'll figure it out  
they still don't know what to do with it, but yet they'll make more. They'll make promises: we'll figure it out  


later. We'll adhere to a human and senseless  
later. We'll adhere to a human and senseless paradigm, that we are so smart today in this room that: well, we  
: paradigm, that we are so smart today in this room that: well, we  


don't know what to do just yet, but we'll figure it out  
don't know what to do just yet, but we'll figure it out  
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economy.
economy.
Fermi 2, we have a strong environmental storage shed; we do great things for the environment in my opinion, I see it firsthand. I am motivated,  
Fermi 2, we have a strong environmental storage shed; we do great things for the environment in my opinion, I see it firsthand. I am motivated, because of my family, to make sure we care for our  
 
because of my family, to make sure we care for our  


environment. I'm a boater, I love the  Great Lakes;  
environment. I'm a boater, I love the  Great Lakes;  
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Manpower to the Monroe County Sheriff's area has been  
Manpower to the Monroe County Sheriff's area has been  


cut to three patrolmen for the whole county on afternoon shift. The State Police Post we used to have in Erie,  
cut to three patrolmen for the whole county on afternoon shift. The State Police Post we used to have in Erie, Michigan and Flat Rock have been either eliminated or relocated to Taylor. So, just who would Fermi call in  
 
Michigan and Flat Rock have been either eliminated or relocated to Taylor. So, just who would Fermi call in  


the event they needed  officers out there?
the event they needed  officers out there?
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Fermi 2 Nuclear Power Plant. When I'm talking to friends and neighbors, they are proud to live by a nuclear power   
Fermi 2 Nuclear Power Plant. When I'm talking to friends and neighbors, they are proud to live by a nuclear power   


plant and they realize that Fermi 2 is an economic  rock 61    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 for Monroe County and all Southeast  
plant and they realize that Fermi 2 is an economic  rock 61    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 for Monroe County and all Southeast Michigan, providing well-paying jobs for thousands of employees, contributing millions of dollars in tax revenue, and  
: Michigan, providing well-paying jobs for thousands of employees,  
 
contributing millions of dollars in tax revenue, and  


donating millions of dollars to nonprofit  
donating millions of dollars to nonprofit  
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are proud of, too.
are proud of, too.
Although I work in Human Resources, I'm the president of the North American Young Generation  
Although I work in Human Resources, I'm the president of the North American Young Generation  
: Nuclear, also known as NAYGN. NAYGN is a group of young workers who will be the ones operating the Fermi 2 and  
 
Nuclear, also known as NAYGN. NAYGN is a group of young workers who will be the ones operating the Fermi 2 and  


other nuclear power plants a cross the nation for decades to come. And let me tell you all, your nuclear power plants are in good hands. Our young  
other nuclear power plants a cross the nation for decades to come. And let me tell you all, your nuclear power plants are in good hands. Our young  
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providing countless volunteer hours for local community organizations. License renewal is critical  
providing countless volunteer hours for local community organizations. License renewal is critical  


to the future success of Monroe County and the surrounding areas. That is why every day at Fermi 2,  
to the future success of Monroe County and the surrounding areas. That is why every day at Fermi 2, we maintain the safety of the public and the environment as our top priorities.
 
we maintain the safety of the public and the environment as our top priorities.
Through my recruiting efforts, I have seen firsthand what closing a nuclear facility does to the community and surrounding areas: economic devastation.   
Through my recruiting efforts, I have seen firsthand what closing a nuclear facility does to the community and surrounding areas: economic devastation.   


Businesses are forced to close and people are forced to leave the area and relocate. I never expect or want this to happen in the area I call home. I am thankful  
Businesses are forced to close and people are forced to leave the area and relocate. I never expect or want this to happen in the area I call home. I am thankful  


to know that Fermi will continue to operate and support Monroe County and Southeast Michigan. My passion for clean energy starts and ends with nuclear power. I look forward  to the future of Fermi 2 as a safe, clean,  
to know that Fermi will continue to operate and support Monroe County and Southeast Michigan. My passion for clean energy starts and ends with nuclear power. I look forward  to the future of Fermi 2 as a safe, clean, and  reliable source for base load power generation.   
 
and  reliable source for base load power generation.   


Thanks again for your time and have a wonderful day. MR. BARKLEY:  Okay. Thank you, Emily.
Thanks again for your time and have a wonderful day. MR. BARKLEY:  Okay. Thank you, Emily.
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Fermi 1; a wondrous, brand-new technological marvel that was going to help pave the way for inexhaustible, clean energy for all humanity. Needless to say, after  
Fermi 1; a wondrous, brand-new technological marvel that was going to help pave the way for inexhaustible, clean energy for all humanity. Needless to say, after  


48 years, quite a lot has changed. On March the 11th, 2011, early in the morning, my phone rang at home; it was my brother, Paul,  
48 years, quite a lot has changed. On March the 11th, 2011, early in the morning, my phone rang at home; it was my brother, Paul, who is the director, reactor watchdog project director  
 
who is the director, reactor watchdog project director  


at D.C. area, Beyond Nuclear, and my brother told me that there had been a terrible earthquake in  -- in  
at D.C. area, Beyond Nuclear, and my brother told me that there had been a terrible earthquake in  -- in  
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literally blow the roof off of this reactor."
literally blow the roof off of this reactor."
Now, right after his snippet of film was used, a spokesperson for the Nuclear Energy Institute,  
Now, right after his snippet of film was used, a spokesperson for the Nuclear Energy Institute, whose name I'm not recalling at the moment, said that  
 
whose name I'm not recalling at the moment, said that  
 
the probability of that happening was extremely remote.
The next morning, when I turned on CNN, the first thing,


I saw the first Fukushima reactor building exploding  
the probability of that happening was extremely remote. The next morning, when I turned on CNN, the first thing, I saw the first Fukushima reactor building exploding  


and I thought to myself: you know, brother, you called  
and I thought to myself: you know, brother, you called  
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of the disaster, all exploded before the eyes of the  
of the disaster, all exploded before the eyes of the  


world.
world. So, I certainly -- I certainly appreciate the arguments, as my colleague, Carol Izant, said earlier; I certainly appreciate the -- the need  
So, I certainly -- I certainly appreciate the arguments, as my colleague, Carol Izant, said earlier; I certainly appreciate the -- the need  


for -- for jobs and economic security and certainly appreciate the need for safe production and distribution of electricity, but as we have seen in over the last few decades, nuclear power is failing   
for -- for jobs and economic security and certainly appreciate the need for safe production and distribution of electricity, but as we have seen in over the last few decades, nuclear power is failing   
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deindustrialization that's taking place, in my  
deindustrialization that's taking place, in my  
: opinion, because of the high cost of electricity in this state. The issue of nuclear energy, you have to consider the company General Electric. General  
 
opinion, because of the high cost of electricity in this state. The issue of nuclear energy, you have to consider the company General Electric. General  


Electric is one of the -- I think they're the number  
Electric is one of the -- I think they're the number  
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turbines. What a shame they're built in Germany and Holland. We've got a tower factory here in Monroe, it employs quite a few people at good paying jobs. I  
turbines. What a shame they're built in Germany and Holland. We've got a tower factory here in Monroe, it employs quite a few people at good paying jobs. I  


suspect that maybe if some of  our politicians would demand General Electric bring  these jobs back to America, we could create some jobs  in this community,  
suspect that maybe if some of  our politicians would demand General Electric bring  these jobs back to America, we could create some jobs  in this community, in this country.
 
in this country.
70    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 And one issue I wanted to bring up momentarily, is that 2,500 gallons of diesel fuel  that leaked here recently at the Fermi Plant, was  this a large line or just a long-term leak that  nobody paid  
70    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 And one issue I wanted to bring up momentarily, is that 2,500 gallons of diesel fuel  that leaked here recently at the Fermi Plant, was  this a large line or just a long-term leak that  nobody paid  


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72    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 You know, the American lotus is North  America's largest native aquatic wildflower; it grows   
72    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 You know, the American lotus is North  America's largest native aquatic wildflower; it grows   


about this high in the water -- waters along the  shores of Lake Erie and other lakes. It's a  prehistoric plant; it's been here a long time. Believe it or not,  
about this high in the water -- waters along the  shores of Lake Erie and other lakes. It's a  prehistoric plant; it's been here a long time. Believe it or not, it's related to the sycamore tree  -- you talk about  
 
it's related to the sycamore tree  -- you talk about  


an interesting family history -- and the lotus is rather like a canary in the cave. If you see lotus, they're  
an interesting family history -- and the lotus is rather like a canary in the cave. If you see lotus, they're  
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So, we went to see the people out at Edison and said, "Do you know you've got lotus?"  They said, "No, we  
So, we went to see the people out at Edison and said, "Do you know you've got lotus?"  They said, "No, we  


don't."   
don't."  "Yeah, you do."  And, so this started  a partnership that was unbelievable. It tied in with 73    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 the Port of Monroe, Consumers Energy, DTE Energy,  Fermi, Ford, the entire Lake Erie western shore. And what's really strange: these corporate bodies weren't really talking with one another, and one very   
"Yeah, you do."  And, so this started  a partnership that was unbelievable. It tied in with 73    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 the Port of Monroe, Consumers Energy, DTE Energy,  Fermi, Ford, the entire Lake Erie western shore. And what's really strange: these corporate bodies weren't really talking with one another, and one very   


important gentleman out at the port said to me, when I was young and skinny a long time ago, before life  has  
important gentleman out at the port said to me, when I was young and skinny a long time ago, before life  has  
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so much poorer without the jobs provided by Fermi and  
so much poorer without the jobs provided by Fermi and  


our other industrial leaders and corporate leaders,  
our other industrial leaders and corporate leaders, without the community leadership of DTE Energy plant  
 
without the community leadership of DTE Energy plant  


management, without the community  
management, without the community  
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radioactive waste specialist at Beyond Nuclear, based  
radioactive waste specialist at Beyond Nuclear, based  


in Tacoma Park, Maryland, right outside of Washington,  
in Tacoma Park, Maryland, right outside of Washington, D.C., but I'm from Kalamazoo, Michigan, and did this  
 
D.C., but I'm from Kalamazoo, Michigan, and did this  


environmental work in Michigan as a volunteer for the  
environmental work in Michigan as a volunteer for the  
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because of problems at Palisades on Lake Michigan. And I guess the theme of what I would like to address with  
because of problems at Palisades on Lake Michigan. And I guess the theme of what I would like to address with  


these short five minutes is Fukushima lessons learned,  
these short five minutes is Fukushima lessons learned, or not learned, as the case may be.
 
or not learned, as the case may be.
I have the odd experience, I guess, of having visited Fukushima Daiichi seven months before  
I have the odd experience, I guess, of having visited Fukushima Daiichi seven months before  


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And, so Unit 3 experienced the largest of the explosions during the catastrophe.
And, so Unit 3 experienced the largest of the explosions during the catastrophe.
So, it's just an odd experience because a lot of the things that have been said by employees here,  
So, it's just an odd experience because a lot of the things that have been said by employees here, today, by local elected officials, Chamber of Commerce folks, I've heard the same thing in Futaba and Okuma.   
 
today, by local elected officials, Chamber of Commerce folks, I've heard the same thing in Futaba and Okuma.   


Fukushima Daiichi is so big, six reactors, that it straddles two towns; it has two host towns. I met with  
Fukushima Daiichi is so big, six reactors, that it straddles two towns; it has two host towns. I met with  
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deficiencies in the reactor building. And even when they bring it down, it's planned to be put into whole tech (ph) casks and an industry whistleblower named Oscar Suranyi from Hominoff (ph) Edison, an NRC   
deficiencies in the reactor building. And even when they bring it down, it's planned to be put into whole tech (ph) casks and an industry whistleblower named Oscar Suranyi from Hominoff (ph) Edison, an NRC   


whistleblower, Dr. Ross Landsman from Region 3,  
whistleblower, Dr. Ross Landsman from Region 3, questioned the structural integrity of the whole tech  
 
questioned the structural integrity of the whole tech  


casks sitting still, on-site storage, because of major  
casks sitting still, on-site storage, because of major  
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community. Once upon a time, that was at a moderate  
community. Once upon a time, that was at a moderate  


rate of only 50 percent working outside the community,  
rate of only 50 percent working outside the community, but with the increase in Monroe County's residents  
 
but with the increase in Monroe County's residents  


leaving the county for work each and every day, it  
leaving the county for work each and every day, it  
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of Monroe County. Over the past 30 years, corporate  
of Monroe County. Over the past 30 years, corporate  


contributions to charities in the United States have fallen swiftly. Against this backdrop, DTE Energy,  
contributions to charities in the United States have fallen swiftly. Against this backdrop, DTE Energy, the DTE Energy Foundation, and the company's employees, are a continuing resource and support system for the economic growth and stability needed in Monroe County.
 
the DTE Energy Foundation, and the company's employees, are a continuing resource and support system for the economic growth and stability needed in Monroe County.
DTE Energy remains the  largest single employer in Monroe County. The  company and its employees are 85    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 also the single largest  charitable contributors we have. Not only do they  contribute monetarily to the United Way of Monroe  County and many other nonprofit organizations, but  they give freely of their volunteer time and  services; everything from holding  
DTE Energy remains the  largest single employer in Monroe County. The  company and its employees are 85    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 also the single largest  charitable contributors we have. Not only do they  contribute monetarily to the United Way of Monroe  County and many other nonprofit organizations, but  they give freely of their volunteer time and  services; everything from holding  


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Recently, they partnered with a great project in the City of Monroe, partnered with Michigan  
Recently, they partnered with a great project in the City of Monroe, partnered with Michigan  


Gas Utility employees on a beautification project,  
Gas Utility employees on a beautification project, planting flowers and bringing growth to a very ugly, for lack of a better term, little corner in Monroe.
 
planting flowers and bringing growth to a very ugly,  
 
for lack of a better term, little corner in Monroe.
Fermi 2 and DTE Energy have over the years given tens of thousands and tens of millions of dollars  
Fermi 2 and DTE Energy have over the years given tens of thousands and tens of millions of dollars  


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Excuse me. I am certain that this renewal will have  
Excuse me. I am certain that this renewal will have  


a positive impact on the local philanthropic community as well. As a representative of the nonprofit sector,  
a positive impact on the local philanthropic community as well. As a representative of the nonprofit sector, I endorse the renewal of the license for Fermi 2. Thank you very much.
 
I endorse the renewal of the license for Fermi 2. Thank you very much.
MR. BARKLEY:  Thanks, Connie. Phil?
MR. BARKLEY:  Thanks, Connie. Phil?
MR. SKARBEK:  Thank you. Good afternoon.
MR. SKARBEK:  Thank you. Good afternoon.
My name is Phillip Skarbek and I've been a resident of Monroe since 1993 with my wife. I am also a shift manager of Fermi 2. What that means, most people  
My name is Phillip Skarbek and I've been a resident of Monroe since 1993 with my wife. I am also a shift manager of Fermi 2. What that means, most people  


probably don't know, is that during my operating shift,  
probably don't know, is that during my operating shift, whether it's dayshift or nightshift, I'm in charge of  
 
whether it's dayshift or nightshift, I'm in charge of  


all plant operations and the operating crew in the main  
all plant operations and the operating crew in the main  
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committed every day I step foot on the  Fermi 2 property to protect it and the health and  safety of everyone who lives here. I thank you for the opportunity to  
committed every day I step foot on the  Fermi 2 property to protect it and the health and  safety of everyone who lives here. I thank you for the opportunity to  


speak. MR. BARKLEY:  Thanks, Bill. The next three people I would like to have speak are: Floreine Mentel, Sandy Pierce, and Martha Gruelle. So,  
speak. MR. BARKLEY:  Thanks, Bill. The next three people I would like to have speak are: Floreine Mentel, Sandy Pierce, and Martha Gruelle. So, Floreine, thanks for making such an effort to come see  
 
Floreine, thanks for making such an effort to come see  


us and talk.
us and talk.
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MR. BARKLEY:  Welcome, Sandy.
MR. BARKLEY:  Welcome, Sandy.
MS. PIERCE:  Thank you for the opportunity to be here. My name is Sandy Pierce and I am the director of the Monroe Senior Citizens  Center and a lifelong resident of Monroe County. I am here,  
MS. PIERCE:  Thank you for the opportunity to be here. My name is Sandy Pierce and I am the director of the Monroe Senior Citizens  Center and a lifelong resident of Monroe County. I am here, today, to offer my wholehearted support of the license  
 
today, to offer my wholehearted support of the license  


renewal for Fermi 2.
renewal for Fermi 2.
DTE and its employees are to be commended for its commitment to safety. I know people who work  
DTE and its employees are to be commended for its commitment to safety. I know people who work  


out there and they really -- that's what they talk,  
out there and they really -- that's what they talk, safety. In addition, DTE is a long supporter of the Monroe Center. Every year we have volunteers come out  
 
safety. In addition, DTE is a long supporter of the Monroe Center. Every year we have volunteers come out  


and serve our Thanksgiving dinner to the older folks of our community; it's something they do on their own  
and serve our Thanksgiving dinner to the older folks of our community; it's something they do on their own  
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Engineering Technology Program, what's commonly known  
Engineering Technology Program, what's commonly known  


as the NET program. Fermi provides  
as the NET program. Fermi provides reliable, safe, and clean electricity that helps power the lives, businesses, and communities in Southeast Michigan. I  
: reliable, safe, and clean electricity that helps power the lives, businesses, and communities in Southeast Michigan. I  


am proud that in my role I help ensure we operate with 97    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 the health and safety of our public as our top most priority. I appreciate  this opportunity. Thank  
am proud that in my role I help ensure we operate with 97    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 the health and safety of our public as our top most priority. I appreciate  this opportunity. Thank  
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you. MR. BARKLEY:  Thank you. Tracy?   
you. MR. BARKLEY:  Thank you. Tracy?   


MR. OBERLEITER:  At this point, I  think it's probably more appropriate to say good  early evening. I'm Tracy Oberleiter, chairman of the Monroe County Economic Development Corporation. I thank you for having the opportunity to have me  before you this afternoon, or this early evening. My comments are going to be in two perspectives:  One,  
MR. OBERLEITER:  At this point, I  think it's probably more appropriate to say good  early evening. I'm Tracy Oberleiter, chairman of the Monroe County Economic Development Corporation. I thank you for having the opportunity to have me  before you this afternoon, or this early evening. My comments are going to be in two perspectives:  One, professional, and the other, very personal.
 
professional, and the other, very personal.
Professionally, Monroe County Economic Development Corporation is dedicated to promoting the  
Professionally, Monroe County Economic Development Corporation is dedicated to promoting the  


county-wide economic growth, and employment stability,  
county-wide economic growth, and employment stability, and to improve the quality of life for all people living and working here in Monroe County. We do this by  
 
and to improve the quality of life for all people living and working here in Monroe County. We do this by  


attracting and retaining business development through  
attracting and retaining business development through  
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You have heard this time and time again; I am here to reinforce that. The efforts of DTE Energy's officers  
You have heard this time and time again; I am here to reinforce that. The efforts of DTE Energy's officers  


and employees have been leveraged in the ongoing effort to improve the quality of life here in Monroe County.
and employees have been leveraged in the ongoing effort to improve the quality of life here in Monroe County.
: Finally, on a personal level, I'm an active and dedicated outdoorsman. I have long been deeply  
Finally, on a personal level, I'm an active and dedicated outdoorsman. I have long been deeply  


involved with Ducks Unlimited organization in this  
involved with Ducks Unlimited organization in this  
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adverse impacts.
adverse impacts.
If this meeting were about jobs, you lose the argument, but this meeting is actually about NEPA,  
If this meeting were about jobs, you lose the argument, but this meeting is actually about NEPA, and there are many issues of contention. And today, I would like to spend my five minutes focusing on a  
 
and there are many issues of contention. And today,  
 
I would like to spend my five minutes focusing on a  


fundamental and egregious failure of safety- related  
fundamental and egregious failure of safety- related  
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their actions, for 20 years fundamental process  
their actions, for 20 years fundamental process  


flaws -- fundamental process flaws went undetected,  
flaws -- fundamental process flaws went undetected, uncorrected, creating new problems and sustaining old  
 
uncorrected, creating new problems and sustaining old  


ones. Ominously, the root cause of this fiasco remains unresolved and continues to constitute a systemic  
ones. Ominously, the root cause of this fiasco remains unresolved and continues to constitute a systemic  
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Todd Conner, Mr. Joseph H. Plona, and Mr. Peter W.  
Todd Conner, Mr. Joseph H. Plona, and Mr. Peter W.  


Smith, DTE Electric Company will surely shirk corporate responsibility and not initiate such a review,  
Smith, DTE Electric Company will surely shirk corporate responsibility and not initiate such a review, therefore the NRC lead project manager overseeing the 102    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 safety review of the Fermi 2 LRA -- and I believe  that would be Ms. Colon, as well as her boss's boss's boss -- must take the lead as the regulator and  demand  
 
therefore the NRC lead project manager overseeing the 102    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 safety review of the Fermi 2 LRA -- and I believe  that would be Ms. Colon, as well as her boss's boss's boss -- must take the lead as the regulator and  demand  


a revisiting of that issue. Thank you. MR. BARKLEY:  David, you made a fairly serious accusation. I need to have the staff review that, and I would like to have them get back to you  on the details of the matter. Since it's 2006 or earlier, it predates some of the staff who work on  the  
a revisiting of that issue. Thank you. MR. BARKLEY:  David, you made a fairly serious accusation. I need to have the staff review that, and I would like to have them get back to you  on the details of the matter. Since it's 2006 or earlier, it predates some of the staff who work on  the  
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this. Thank you.
this. Thank you.
We have four other speakers who want to speak this evening. The four are: Taiya Himebauch,  
We have four other speakers who want to speak this evening. The four are: Taiya Himebauch, Greg Brede, Nancy Dover, and finally, Michael Smith.   
 
Greg Brede, Nancy Dover, and finally, Michael Smith.   


So, is it "Tai-ya"?
So, is it "Tai-ya"?
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then rewards that effort, as employees to the  
then rewards that effort, as employees to the  


organization, with a grant that the organization can use to then further serve the community. And I just,  
organization, with a grant that the organization can use to then further serve the community. And I just, I am proud of that effort.
 
I am proud of that effort.
Personally, I have been involved in grants that have been given to Meadow Montessori, which is just across the street; Airport Community Schools; the March 104    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 of Dimes, and other organizations  that  
Personally, I have been involved in grants that have been given to Meadow Montessori, which is just across the street; Airport Community Schools; the March 104    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 of Dimes, and other organizations  that  
-- and I am just one of 800 employees that is at  the Fermi 2 site that  
-- and I am just one of 800 employees that is at  the Fermi 2 site that  
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20-year license renewal of Fermi 2 generating clean, reliable, and safe energy. If I was not completely  
20-year license renewal of Fermi 2 generating clean, reliable, and safe energy. If I was not completely  


confident of the safety and no adverse environmental impact, I would not live here with my family. This is understanding what occurred in Fukushima. Thank you. MS. DOVER:  Hello, my name is Nancy Dover, and I am a member of the general public. I came here,  
confident of the safety and no adverse environmental impact, I would not live here with my family. This is understanding what occurred in Fukushima. Thank you. MS. DOVER:  Hello, my name is Nancy Dover, and I am a member of the general public. I came here, today, because I was interested in seeing what the process was. There has been a lot in the paper, I was  
 
today, because I was interested in seeing what the process was. There has been a lot in the paper, I was  


curious, so I came here, today, to see what the process  
curious, so I came here, today, to see what the process  
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There were some emergency preparedness concerns raised  
There were some emergency preparedness concerns raised  


here and we need to handle those with staff afterwards and discuss that. And, again, there was an issue with 106    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 emergency diesel generator testing, and  I do need to do some follow-up on that for you. But  at this point,  
here and we need to handle those with staff afterwards and discuss that. And, again, there was an issue with 106    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 emergency diesel generator testing, and  I do need to do some follow-up on that for you. But  at this point, I would like to wrap up the meeting. We had I think 34 speakers, you  averaged about four minutes a person; that was great,  I did not have to really cut off anyone for time. There were a few people that had some lengthy  remarks, but they were very well-supported, very  professionally presented, so I gave you the latitude  of the time. I  
 
I would like to wrap up the meeting. We had I think 34 speakers, you  averaged about four minutes a person; that was great,  I did not have to really cut off anyone for time. There were a few people that had some lengthy  remarks, but they were very well-supported, very  professionally presented, so I gave you the latitude  of the time. I  


do greatly appreciate the professionalism and the civility of this audience. There are some strong  
do greatly appreciate the professionalism and the civility of this audience. There are some strong  
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we're doing in license renewal. As Leslie mentioned  
we're doing in license renewal. As Leslie mentioned  
: earlier, the -- the waste confidence rule, back in 2012, was remanded and this staff has been working on the waste confidence rule now for two years. On this past  
 
earlier, the -- the waste confidence rule, back in 2012, was remanded and this staff has been working on the waste confidence rule now for two years. On this past  


Monday, the staff presented the draft final rule and  
Monday, the staff presented the draft final rule and  
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August is the -- the deadline for Petitions for Hearing; the 29th of August is deadlines for submitting comments  
August is the -- the deadline for Petitions for Hearing; the 29th of August is deadlines for submitting comments  


associated with the scoping meeting and the scoping process. And if there's any follow-up questions,  
associated with the scoping meeting and the scoping process. And if there's any follow-up questions, please feel free to contact the project manager, point  
 
please feel free to contact the project manager, point  


of contact that's listed -- listed up here on the  
of contact that's listed -- listed up here on the  


screen.
screen. Lastly, as Rich mentioned, several of the 109    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 staff will be available after this meeting for  further discussion, if you so desire. And with that,  I would  
Lastly, as Rich mentioned, several of the 109    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 staff will be available after this meeting for  further discussion, if you so desire. And with that,  I would  


like to adjourn the meeting. Thank you. UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER:  The deadline, you had mentioned the 19th; it's the 18th. MR. WITTICK:  Oh, I'm sorry. Okay, thank you. Thank you for that correction. That the   
like to adjourn the meeting. Thank you. UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER:  The deadline, you had mentioned the 19th; it's the 18th. MR. WITTICK:  Oh, I'm sorry. Okay, thank you. Thank you for that correction. That the   
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MR. WITTICK:  Thank you.   
MR. WITTICK:  Thank you.   
(WHEREUPON, the Public Meeting was adjourned at 4:50 p.m.)   
(WHEREUPON, the Public Meeting was adjourned at 4:50 p.m.)   


110    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433}}
110    NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS  1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433}}

Revision as of 12:55, 9 July 2018

Fermi 2 Scoping Meeting Afternoon Trancript
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Issue date: 07/24/2014
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Official Transcript of Proceedings NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION

Title: Public Meeting for Fermi 2 License Renewal

Docket Number: (n/a)

Location: Monroe, Michigan

Date: July 24, 2014

Work Order No.: NRC-934 Pages 1-106

NEAL R. GROSS AND CO., INC. Court Reporters and Transcribers 1323 Rhode Island Avenue, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20005 (202) 234-4433

1 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Public Meeting

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LICENSE RENEWAL PROCESS AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCOPING FOR FERMI, UNIT 2

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Monroe County Community College 1555 South Raisinville Road, Monroe, MI

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Thursday, July 24, 2014 2:00 p.m.

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APPEARANCES:

RICHARD S. BARKLEY, PE NUCLEAR AND

ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEER

BRIAN WITTICK, BRANCH CHIEF LICENSE RENEWAL DIVISION

DANEIRA MELENDEZ-COLON, SAFETY PROJECT MANAGER,

FERMI 2

LESLIE PERKINS, ENVIRONMENTAL PROJECT MANAGER,

FERMI 2

MALLECIA SUTTON, ENVIRONMENTAL PROJECT MANAGER,

FERMI 3

JENNIFER DIXON-HERRITY, BRANCH CHIEF NEW 2 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 REACTOR DIVISION RUSSELL CHAZELL, ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENTIST

PREMA CHANDRATHIL, PUBLIC AFFAIRS OFFICER

ALLAN BARKER, STATE LIAISON OFFICER

MICHAEL KUNOWSKI, BRANCH CHIEF NEW REACTOR DIVISION

PHILLIP SMAGACZ, RESIDENT INSPECTOR

3 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433

P-R-O-C-E-E-D-I-N-G-S 2:07 p.m. MR. BARKLEY: I would like to welcome you to the Fermi 2 license renewal and environmental scoping public meeting. One of the first things I would like to ask you to do is, if you could put your phone onto vibrate or airplane mode along the way, so

we don't have too many interruptions during the

meeting. Welcome. My name is Richard Barkley, I'm a meeting facilitator for the Nuclear Regulatory

Commission, and the first thing I wanted to do is try

to introduce the NRC staff that will be in attendance

here this evening, and available to answer questions

at one stage during the meeting, and then at the end

of the meeting, a number of them, you've already met

them. The first person I would like to introduce is Brian Wittick; he's a branch chief with the License

Renewal Division. Next, Daneira Melendez-Colon, who is the safety project manager for Fermi 2. And Leslie

Perkins; she's the environmental project manager for 4 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Fermi 2. Mallecia Sutton; she's an environmental project manager for, actually, Fermi 3. She is back there, in the back. Okay, Jennifer Dixon-Herrity; she's a branch chief with the New Reactor Division.

And Russell Chazell; he's an environmental scientist.

Russell, is he here? Okay, he was helping sign people

in. From our Region 3 staff, we have Prema Chandrathil, who is over here, one of our Public Affairs officers. Allan Barker; he is a state liaison officer. Michael Kunowski; he's a branch

chief and he oversees the resident inspectors for

Fermi. Then, I believe we have Phil Smagacz; he's a

resident inspector. Okay, thanks, Phillip. All right. With that, I would like to go over a couple of ground rules for this meeting and then

I'll turn it over to the staff, to actually have their presentation. Again, the staff is going to make a

short presentation to describe the license renewal

process for you and then, after that, we will have a

short question-and-answer session, if there is some

questions you had on the process overall. And then, after that, we'll move to having and receiving comments

on the draft environmental impact statement for Fermi 5 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433

2. And if you wish to speak, you need to sign up on one of these yellow cards. Hopefully, you saw that at the door. If you still want to sign up, you're welcome to see me. I'll sit actually over on this side of the stage when the staff is making their presentations.

This apparently is not a shy group because more than

half of you have signed up to speak tonight -- or this

afternoon, and I'm sure I'll have an equal number this

evening. So, for that reason, I would like to limit

your remarks, if we can, to about three to five minutes, and I'll give you cues when you're getting up on five minutes. To be able to cover that many people, that's quite a bit of time for each one of you. And if that's

too short a time for any of you, please come see me and

we'll talk for a minute. Okay. With that, what I would like to do is turn the microphone over then to the staff to make their presentation. And thanks very much for

attending this afternoon.

MS. MELENDEZ-COLON: Good afternoon. My name is Daneira Melendez-Colon and I'm the safety

project manager with the Division of License Renewal, and I'm coordinating the staff's review associated with the Fermi 2 license renewal application. Thank you all 6 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 for taking the time to come to this meeting. Today, we will provide an overview of the license renewal and

review process, which includes both a safety review

and an environmental review. We will describe ways in which the public can participate in the Fermi 2

license renewal process. I would like to reiterate that the most important part of today's meeting is to

receive any comments that you may have on the scope

of the environmental review. We also will give you some information about how you can submit comments if you prefer not to speak at this meeting. I hope the

information we provide will help you to understand the

license renewal and review process and the roles you

all can have in the process.

Before I get into the discussion of the license renewal process, I would like to take a minute

to talk about the NRC in terms of what we do and what our mission is. The NRC is a federal agency that

regulates the civilian use of nuclear material. The

Atomic Energy Act of 1954 authorizes the NRC to grant

a 40-year operating license for nuclear power reactors.

I would like to highlight that this 40- year term was

based primarily on economic considerations and

antitrust factors, not on safety or technical 7 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 limitations. The Atomic Energy Act also allows for license renewal. The National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, or NEPA, established a national policy for

considering the impact of federal decision-making on the environment. Leslie, we will discuss NEPA in

greater detail. The NRC's mission is three-fold: To ensure adequate protection of public health and safety; to promote the common defense and security; and to protect the environment. The NRC accomplishes

its mission through a combination of regulatory

programs and processes, such as: establishing rules and regulations, conducting inspections, issuing

enforcement actions, and assessing licensee performance. We also evaluate operating experience

for nuclear plants across the country and

internationally as well.

The NRC has resident inspectors at all operating nuclear plants. These inspectors are

considered the eyes and ears of the NRC. They carry

out our safety mission on a daily basis and are on the

front lines of ensuring acceptable safety performance

and compliance with regulatory requirements.

8 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 I would like to mention a few very important areas of the NRC oversight does routinely come up during our interactions with members of the public. NRC staff addresses these areas of performance every day as part of the ongoing regulatory oversight provided for all currently operating power reactors. They include: current safety performance as defined by NRC inspection findings, violations, and general assessments of plant performance; emergency planning and security.

For specific information on current performance for Fermi 2, use the link provided on this slide. This is

also on your handout. The NRC monitors and provides

regulatory oversight of activities in these areas on

an ongoing basis under the current operating license, thus we do not re-evaluate them in license renewal.

That's not to say that they are not important; we just

do not duplicate the regulatory process in these areas

for license renewal.

The NRC received Fermi 2's license renewal application on April 30th, 2014, requesting an additional 20 years of operation. The current

operating license for Fermi 2 expires on March 20th, 2025. Licensees can submit an application for license 9 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 renewal after 20 years of operation. The NRC has determined that 20 years of operation provides enough

information for the staff to make an informed decision

on license renewal. The first step of the license renewal process is to perform an acceptance and sufficiency review of the application. The purpose of this

review is to determine if the applicant has provided the required information. Required information includes technical information about plant structures and components and how the applicant proposes to manage the aging of the structures and components.

Technical specifications define the operating parameters of the plant. The application indicates if

any changes or additions to technical specifications

are necessary to manage the effects of aging during the period of extended operation. The application also

includes an environmental report, which is the

applicant's assessment of the environmental impacts of

continued operation.

If the application has the required information, then it is considered acceptable and it

is put on the NRC's formal docket and the staff will

perform a full review.

10 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 This flow chart highlights that the license renewal process has two separate, parallel review tracks. The environmental review shown at the

bottom of the flow chart perform under the regulations of Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations, Part 51, and the safety review shown at the top of the flow chart perform under the regulations of Title 10 of the

Code of Federal Regulations, Part 54. The focus of the environmental review stems from the NRC's obligation to protect the environment from the use of

nuclear materials. The NRC performs plant-specific reviews of environmental impacts of operating life extension in accordance with the National

Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), and the requirements

of 10 CFR, Part 51, environmental protection

regulations for domestic licensing and related

regulatory functions.

As part of the environmental review, the staff consults with local, state, federal, and tribal officials. In addition, the staff holds public

meetings to receive comments on the draft environmental impact statement. The focus of the safety review stems from the NRC's obligation under the Atomic Energy Act

of 1954. The purpose of this review is to make sure 11 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 and verify that each applicant has fully analyzed the management of aging effects in sufficient detail to

conclude that the plant can be operated safely during

the period of extended operation. The license renewal application must contain technical information and evaluations about the different types of plant aging that might be

encountered in the specific plant and how the licensee will manage or mitigate those aging effects. This

information must be sufficiently detailed to permit the NRC staff to determine whether the effects of aging will be managed such that the plant can be operated during the period of extended operation without undo risk to health and safety of the public.

After completing the evaluation, the staff's review is documented in the final Safety Evaluation Report, or SER. In addition, a Regional

Inspection Report and a regional administrator's

recommendation are issued to document the results of

inspections conducted on the overall regional oversight performed. Subsequently, the results of the

evaluation are reviewed by the Advisory Committee on

Reactor Safeguards, or ACRS, and based on their review

of the information presented, the ACRS makes the 12 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 decision to issue a recommendation letter to grant the renewed license. This step is very valuable since it

provides an independent third-party assessment of the review performed. The dotted lines show that hearings

may also be conducted if interested stakeholders submit concerns or contentions and the request for a hearing

is granted. The Atomic Safety and Licensing Board will conduct the hearings. The Commission considers the outcome of the hearing process in its decision on whether or not to issue a renewed operating license. Now, I'm going to describe the license renewal and review processes in a little more detail, starting with the safety review. To better

understand the license renewal process, it is good to

know the safety principles that guides license renewal.

The first principle is that the current regulatory process is adequate. The interrelationship between

our regulations, licensing, and oversight activities, provide for adequate protection of public health and

safety at any point during the plant's life.

The second license renewal principle describes maintaining the current licensing basis for the plant. Operating experience, research results, and other information that support our decision-making 13 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 also fit into the Agi ng Management Program. This information is also used in our licensing activities and as a basis for changes to regulations and guidance. As a consequence of applicants receiving their renewed license, the Aging Management Program is necessary to ensure continued safe operation of passive, long-lived structures and components, are added to the existing plant's licensing basis. To be clear, aging of structures and components does not start at year 40, it starts on day one, and it's managed by the applicants since the first day of operation; thus, many of the aging management

programs are existing programs that applicants credit

in their license renewal application.

Applicants also identify enhancement to these existing programs based on operating experience or develop new programs, because new aging mechanisms

have been identified at their plants.

The safety review focuses on the aging of classes and long-lived structures and components and systems that the NRC deems important to plant safety.

We consider, first: safety-related systems, structures, and components; for example, the reactor

containment; second, non-safety-related systems, 14 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 structures, and components which, if they fail, could affect safety-related systems, structures, and

component functions; for example, a piece of equipment directly above a safety-related component. And third:

system structures and components relied upon for

compliance with regulation -- regulations, such as:

fire protection, environmental qualifications, pressurized thermal shock, anticipated transient

without a scram, and station blackout. The staff's main objective in this review is to determine if the effects of aging will be effectively managed by the applicant. The results of

the safety review are documented in a Safety Evaluation

Report. Now that you know what it is subject to review, I will talk about how the NRC looks at all the information. The safety review is comprised of numerous, vigorous aspects. The technical staff

reviews the applicant's license renewal application

and supporting documentation to determine the

applicant's methodology, to identify the systems, structures, and components within the scope of license

renewal, and subject to an aging management review; to

determine if the methodology has been properly 15 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 implemented, and to determine with reasonable assurance if the effects of aging for certain systems, structures, and components will be adequately managed or monitored by new and existing programs and surveillance activities. The staff uses site audits or visits to verify the technical basis of the license renewal application and to confirm that the applicant's aging management programs and activities conform with how they are described in the

application. The staff documents the basis and conclusions of its review in a Safety Evaluation Report which is publicly available. In addition, a

team of specialized inspectors travels to the reactor

site to verify that aging management programs are being

implemented, modified, or planned, consistent with the

license renewal application.

Finally, as I have mentioned, the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards performs an

independent review of the license renewal application, the staff's Safety Evaluation Report, and inspection

findings, makes a recommendation to the Commission regarding the proposed action to issue a renewed

operating license.

16 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 This slide shows important milestones for the safety review process. It is important to note

that the dates in blue are subject to change based on the progress of the review. Scheduled changes may result from a host of reasons. If significant issues are identified, the license renewal review may be

suspended indefinitely or terminated. That concludes the description of the safety review. The environmental review will be discussed by the environmental project manager,

Leslie Perkins.

MS. PERKINS: Okay. And I will go over the environmental review process. This review is

performed in accordance with the National

Pol -- National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, commonly referred to as "NEPA." NEPA established a

national policy for considering environmental impacts

and provides the basic architecture for federal environmental reviews. All federal agencies must

follow a systematic approach in evaluating potential

impacts and also to assess alternatives to the

actions -- to those actions. The NEPA process involves public participation and public disclosure. The NRC

environmental regulations implementing the 17 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 requirements of NEPA are contained in 10 CFR, Part 51.

Our environmental review considers the impact of

license renewal and any mitigation for those impacts

considered significant. We also consider the impacts of alternatives to license renewal, including the impacts of not issuing a renewed license. We document the review in an environmental impact

statement, which is publicly available. Ultimately, the purpose of the environmental review is to determine whether environmental impacts of license renewal are reasonable, and in combination with other reviews, to make a recommendation to the -- to the

Commission whether to renew the license or not.

This slide -- this slide gives you an idea of some of the areas evaluated. Some of these areas

are terrestrial and aquatic ecology, environmental

justice, hydrology, and radiation protection.

The license -- for a license renewal review, the NRC environmental staff looks at a wide range of potential impacts. Additionally, we consult

with various federal, state, and local

official -- officials, as well as leaders of Indian nations. Examples include: U.S. Fish and Wildlife 18 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Service, the Environmental Protection Agency, Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, Michigan State

Historic Preservation Office, Michigan tribal

nation -- nations with historic ties to the area around the plant. We gather pertinent information from these

sources to ensure it's considered in our analysis.

The environmental review begins with -- with a scoping process, which is an assessment

of the specific impacts and significant issues that the statute consider in preparing a Fermi 2

environmental impact statement. Currently, this is

where we are in the process. Information we gather from you today and in the next few weeks will be considered and included

in the environmental impact statement. We recognize

that some impacts are similar, if not identical, to all

nuclear power plants, so to improve efficiency we

develop a generic environmental impact statement that

addresses a number of impacts common to all nuclear

power plants. The staff supplements the generic EIS

with a site-specific EIS in which we will address issues that are specific to Fermi 2. The staff also re-examines the conclusions reached in the generic EIS

to determine if there is any new and significant 19 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 information that would change those conclusions.

For the term beyond the 20-year license period of extended operation, the NRC has historically

addressed the environmental impacts associated with the management of spent nuclear fuel and the waste confidence decision and rule, 10 CFR 51.23. In June 2012, the U.S. Court of Appeals vacated the NRC's waste confidence decision and rule. In response, the

Commission directed the NRC staff to proceed with a

rule-making in a generic EIS to address the court's findings. The Commission also directed that no licenses will be issued if the issues related to waste

confidence aren't appropriately addressed. A draft

proposed rule in EIS were issued for public comment in

the fall of 2013. Based on public comments, the NRC staff revised the rule and EIS. The final rule and EIS are currently with the Commission for review. Subject

to Commission approval, the final rule and EIS are expected to be issued in fall -- in the fall of 2014.

Additional information on the waste confidence

rule- making and EIS can be found on the NRC public

website on the link listed on the slide.

The scoping period started June 30th, 2014, when the Notice of Intent to prepare an EIS and 20 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 conduct scoping was published in the Federal Register.

The NRC will accept comments on the scope of the environmental review until August 29, 2014. In

general, we are looking for information about environmental impacts from the continued operation of Fermi 2. You can assist in this process by telling us, for example, what aspects of your local community we should focus on; what environmental and socioeconomic issues NRC should examine during our review; what other major project -- projects are in

progress or planned in the area, and what reasonable alternatives are most appropriate for this region.

These are just some examples of input -- of the input we seek through the environmental scoping process.

We're not familiar with your community as you are, so

your comments today will help to facilitate a thorough

review. Public comments are an important part of the environmental review process. All your comments

to us, whether provided verbally during this meeting, or in a written letter or email, are considered and addressed. We respond to each comment as a part of the EIS. The -- the EIS is one of the factors, as well as

several others shown here, that influences the 21 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Commission's decision to renew the license or not.

In addition to providing verbal and written comments at this meeting, there are other ways that you can submit comments. You can submit comments online using the federal rule-making website, Regulations.gov. Just enter in the NRC Docket I.D.

listed on the slide. Please note that comments will not be edited to remove any identifying or contact information. Do not include any information and comments -- in your comments that you do not want publicly disclosed. As I mentioned, the deadline for

comments is August 29th. This slide shows important milestones for the environmental review process. The dates for publishing the draft EIS and the final EIS may change based on the progress of the review. Petitions to

request for a hearing are due August 28th, 2000 -- excuse me -- August 18, 2014. Also, the

opportunity to submit environmental comments, once again, closes August 29th, 2014. Please note that the

draft EIS is currently scheduled to be issued for public comment in June 2015 with an associate

public -- associated public meeting to receive your

comments on this preliminary document.

22 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Daneira and I are the primary points of contact at the NRC for license renewal issues for Fermi. Our contact information is provided on this slide and also in the handout. Copies of the license renewal

application and the Environmental Report are available

on CD in the entryway. In addition, a hard copy of the license renewal application and Environmental Report may be found at the Ellis Library and Conference Center. The draft EIS will also be available at this library when it's published for

public comment. These documents will also be on the NRC's public website at the web address shown at the bottom of the slide. As you came in, you were asked to fill out a registration card at our reception table. If you

included your mailing address on that card, we will mail a CD of the draft and final EIS to you.

This concludes my presentation; I'll now turn it back over to Richard. MR. BARKLEY: All right. Thank you, Leslie. At this time, I wanted to see if there was

anyone who had a question regarding the staff's

presentation, if they had some confusion over any

aspect of how this process works. Okay, if there is 23 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 none, then what I'll do is move us right into the comment period. As again I mentioned, there's no shy people in this -- sorry -- there's no shy people in this group.

I woke you up, though, if you were asleep. But I have 33 people who want to speak and there's only I think 63 people in the audience, so that's a pretty high percentage. What I would like to do, again, is call you up to the microphone here to speak. I would ask you to try to limit your remarks to three to five

minutes. I would ask you to speak into the microphone very carefully, because we have a transcription

person back here in the corner, you cannot see, but she is transcribing your remarks, and so the clearer

you are, the more accurate the transcription as we go through it. I would ask that you not interrupt the

speaker when they're at the podium, if you could, or

try to speak from the audience; the transcriber just

cannot hear that as remarks.

Now, if you have a lengthy remark, you're welcome to turn them in, in a written form and there

will be -- you can provide them to Leslie after the

meeting, so this is not the only opportunity to provide

comments, as Leslie had mentioned.

24 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 The way I typically do this and call people up is I'll announce, say three names, so you know the

first person who is coming up and then the next two

people kind of have a cue that, "Hey, I'm going to be up next as soon as they leave the podium," so that helps

make the process go smoother, okay?

What I would like to do is start out by introducing and inviting up two, either representatives of your elected officials or actually

an elected official here. So, Dustin Krasny, who is a representative of Congressman Tim Walberg, I'll have you come up to the podium first, followed by Bob Clark, the mayor of Monroe, and then, finally, I'll have Sandy Mull come up and speak, okay? So, Dustin?

MR. KRASNY: Well, sorry about that, but I'll remind myself: blessed are the brief, because

they'll be asked to speak again, but I wanted to just

stop by today. Obviously, Congressman Walberg is in Washington. The congressman and I have toured all the

energy-producing facilities here in Monroe County and

throughout the district, and Monroe County is now part

of the 7th Congressional District, and it's interesting to note that the 7th Congressional District actually

has -- is the biggest producer of energy from any 25 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Congressional District this side of the Mississippi, so it's very important in this district for -- for our jobs, for our local economy. And as we move this

district in our state forward, it's important to create

efficient, low-cost energy for our manufacturers, families, and small businesses as we get Michigan moving again. So, we'll continue to work on that, and

the congressman in the next few weeks will be submitting a letter of support for this renewal process. So, I

want to thank you for having this open forum for everybody to speak, and have a great day here in Monroe. MR. CLARK: Well, thank you. I'll try not to touch the microphone. But, good afternoon, everyone. My name is Bob Clark and I am the mayor with the City of Monroe. I'm here with some comments that

I've prepared, but it also comes from some personal information as well. But thanks for this opportunity

to offer my comments about DTE Energy's application for

the 20-year extension of the operating license for

Fermi 2.

I, in the City of Monroe, have long been vocal about our support for Fermi complex, most

recently in public hearings concerning the proposed new unit and complex, as well as the related NRC 26 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 environmental impact statements. And now, today, in support of DTE's license renewal application.

An additional two decades of operation of a well-maintained, productive Fermi 2, it would

continue to stable the base of the economic

avail -- activity and all of the benefits associated with more than 800 very good jobs here in our region, but also the tax base associated with the plant and the local purchasing engaged in and by the plant.

There is also, of course, the spinoff benefits associated with hundreds of contractors engaged in various projects of the plant. I can't overstate Fermi's vital importance to our city, our county, and

our region. You know, being a good neighbor requires trust, it requires communication, it requires keeping one's commitment. I promised to be so during my seven

years in city government, but also during my previous

30-year career with the Michigan State Police. DTE has and continues to be a valuable partner of our community

in many respects.

The City of Monroe is fortunate to have that kind of relationship with DTE Energy, and DTE

Energy has demonstrated that it is proactive in 27 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 addressing issues. They communicate with elect officials and community leaders and they are true to their word. I can find that any issue or any item, either before, during, or as things are occurring, that

I have contact and receive phone calls and can really

make those calls myself if I have questions or if questions come to me. I believe it's because DTE isn't

just a company doing business in our community, but they are also part of our community. Many of the employees live in the city of Monroe or surrounding townships and villages; they are involved in our community on a day-to-day basis as residents, patrons of our local businesses, volunteers in our community, and involved with charitable activities. And I regularly see the men and women who work at Fermi and DTE's other Monroe facilities, Monroe County

facilities, and have personal connections with them as

friends and neighbors. This personal commitment and

engagement at all levels within DTE, to me it inspires

great confidence.

As far as support, that DTE wants to extend the life of Fermi 2, so this license renewal application, and I see it as one of those instances where it wins for everybody. Our community benefits, 28 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 electric customers benefit from cost-effective source and reliable, affordable carbon-free electricity. I

want to thank you again for the opportunity to make some

brief comments. Thank you.

MR. BARKLEY: Thank you, Bob. Sandy?

MS. MULL: I'll stand on tiptoes so I don't have to touch the microphone. Good afternoon. I'm

Sandy Mull; I'm the president and executive director

of the Southern Wayne County Regional Chamber. Our organization is made up of rough -- roughly 1,000

business members who are in 21 communities that are north of Monroe County, east of Washtenaw County, and south of Dearborn. The vast majority of our members can be classified as small businesses with

approximately 85 percent of them having fewer than 100 employees and fully half of them having fewer than 25

employees.

The Chamber's mission is to improve the overall business climate for our members through action that stimulates economic growth, inter- business

communication, and member education.

The requested 20-year extension of Fermi 2's operating license is nothing if not a continued

platform for energy and economic growth in our region 29 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 and stability. It represents an opportunity for both economic growth and improved business climate, and

that's why the Chamber is supporting DTE's application

for a renewed license.

The south -- southern -- I'm sorry -- the Southeast Michigan Council of Government, which is

SEMCOG -- that's why I stumbled over the whole

name -- estimates that our region lost 210,000

manufacturing jobs in the first decade of the new millennium. And worse, those losses were -- had a ripple effect by three jobs lost for every manufacturing job that disappeared. During that dark

economic period, Fermi 2 was one of the few places that remained stable.

In my perspective, our region, which is Southeast Michigan, we felt the recession first and we felt it the longer -- the longest, and we are just now beginning to get a sense that the economy is turning the corner in our region. The assurance of 20

additional years of operation at Fermi 2 would be a very positive development. First, in terms of economic

stability, and it would also provide a cost- effective energy that we've come to expect from DTE. It's my

understanding that Fermi 2 represents about one-fifth 30 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 of the electricity produced by DTE Energy. If the license extension was not granted, it's my belief that

we would pay significantly higher fees for the

necessary power to replace what Fermi 2 otherwise would

have generated.

Thank you, again, for this opportunity to speak. MR. BARKLEY: Okay, thank you. The next three people I would like to call is: Barry Buschmann, Carol Izant, and Richard McDevitt. So, Barry? MR. BUSCHMANN: Good afternoon. My name is Barry Buschmann, and I'm the senior vice

president of the Mannik & Smith Group, which is a local civil engineering, surveying, and environmental firm in Monroe, Michigan. I am also a licensed

professional engineer in the state of Michigan since 1981 and a resident of Monroe County. I also wear some other hats which include: I'm the current

chairman of the Monroe County Chamber of Commerce; a

board member for the Monroe County United Way; vice

chair of the Monroe County Economic Development

Corporation; and I also am the township engineer for

Frenchtown Charter Township, where the Fermi 2 Power

Plant is located; and I am also the engineer for the 31 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Frenchtown Charter Township Resort District Authority, which obtains approximately 60 percent of its revenue

from the DTE Energy and Fermi 2 Power Plant, and it is

situated in close proximity to the facility itself.

DTE provides a strong tax base for Monroe County, for Frenchtown Township, and the Resort

Authority. They provide excellent corporate support

to the Chamber of Commerce and numerous other agencies

throughout Monroe County. Without their funding tax base and support, most of these agencies and municipalities would suffer. DTE provides approximately 800 jobs in our community, and we would like to see those jobs continued for another 20 years.

In addition, during refueling outages, another 1,000 temporary workers are employed. This not only provides additional regional employment, but it provides a strong financial benefit to local

businesses during the time period in which the workers are in town.

Fermi 2 Power Plant has provided a safe, efficient, and environmentally friendly facility since

its start of operation in Frenchtown Township many

years ago.

DTE is also a strong supporter of the 32 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Monroe County Community College, working with them to provide a workforce pipeline, by establishing programs

and hiring local community for college students.

As chairman of the Chamber of Commerce, a representative of the Monroe County EDC, and an owner

of a local engineering firm in Monroe County, I strongly support the Fermi 2 license renewal application.

Renewing the license of Fermi 2 will provide the

continuation of reliable power source with affordable electricity to our county for the next 20 years.

Thank you. MR. BARKLEY: Okay. Thank you, Barry.

Carol, welcome. MS. IZANT: My name is Carol Izant; I co-chair the Alliance to Halt Fermi 3 and I'm here,

today, I will be submitting some written comments on

behalf of our organization. But, today, I just want

to say that given the decision that was handed down two years ago regarding the waste confidence ruling, I

don't see how it's possible for the NRC to grant a

renewal of Fermi 2.

As it stands right now, there's some 700-plus tons of eradiated spent fuel, a much more dangerous substance than when it first went in. When 33 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 it comes out, it is a material that is just deadly and the -- the dangers associated with this cannot be, you

know, underestimated over -- anyway, you get my point. So, and my understanding is that the welds that are in place up there, on top of the reactor and

the pools that contain this spent fuel, those welds are

not -- don't have enough integrity, that allow removal of the spent fuel. Even if -- even if DTE was willing

to commit to a dry cask storage on site there, it's my

understanding that they can't even get the material safely down, out of the existing pools, so it's

just -- you know, so to continue to extend the license, continue to pile up material that has no place to go, is not logical, it's not rational; it's extremely dangerous. You know, you built a mansion, you forgot to put in the toilet. You know, I mean I'll tell you, if -- if word got out that, you know, I was -- I had built, you know, a house and an inspector came through

and rubberstamped, you know, the fact that I was

building something without a way to safely remove the

waste and contain it, you know, my reputation would be

seriously in the toilet. But, you know, when you're

doing business with the Godfather, you know, you get away with a lot. And while I -- believe me, I -- I 34 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 understand how vitally important it is to this community in terms of jobs and income and economy.

And, certainly, you know, I -- I am not unrealistic when

it comes to the -- the economic impacts; however, there is a far greater impact that we must consider. And to

that end, you know, I'll save the details of that for

my written comments, but thank you. MR. BARKLEY: Okay. Thank you, Carol.

Rich, come on up.

MR. McDEVITT: Good afternoon. Welcome, Commission; we appreciate you coming here and giving us this opportunity to speak. My name is Rich McDevitt. I am a lifelong resident of Monroe County.

I have been working with DTE Energy for over 34-35 years now, since 1988, when we went commercial, producing electricity for our communities. I have

been working here, at the Fermi Powerhouse. I am also the vice chair of the Fermi Division of the Utility

Workers Local 223.

During this entire period of time that I have been working at Fermi, I have been working in the

Mechanical Maintenance Department. Really, the nuts

and bolts of this power plant to keep us safe, reliable, organization-capable of supplying you, our community, 35 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 with electricity.

Not only have I been a lifelong resident of Fermi and of Monroe County, here at Fermi, I have

been involved in the nuclear industry since the early

70s, when I was working at a tool and die shop making

the tubing to manufacture and house our uranium that we use for fuel. And it's very important that in all

aspects of this, that we do produce and keep a safe operating power plant. It has been my pleasure to work in such an organization that does this at all steps. We do have for you entire sets of safety standards that every man and woman that works there abide by. We pay attention to each and every one of these steps because this is not only our occupation, this is our environment. This is our home; this is where we're raising our families. I am fortunate enough to have a new generation in my family who are

building a home within three miles of the power block, because we believe this is a safe, good way to

manufacture electricity.

In fact, it is probably even more amazing that when I first came to Fermi, we had a tremendous

set of rules in place. We abrogated those rules to even better each and every year. Literally every month, we 36 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 are trying our best to improve -- to improve what is best for our community in the manufacturing of a safe

and reliable product.

I have the opportunity to represent more than 200 members of the workforce out there on a daily

basis; each and every one dedicated to our community's environment, and taking care of it in such a safe way.

This is our home. This power plant is something that

is good for our community; it helps each and every one of us. Many of our members and our workers are volunteers in our community, serving on many different boards. And Commission, we do look forward to having our contract license renewed, so that we can continue for many, many more, providing this

community with a safe and reliable resource to keep us generating in such a way that we are moving forward

in our world. Thank you. MR. BARKLEY: The next three people I would like to call up is: Joseph Plona, Jessie Pauline

Collins, and then Paul Braunlich. MR. PLONA: Good afternoon. My name is Joseph Plona and I'm a DTE Energy employee and I've

worked at the Fermi Nuclear Plant for over 30 years.

I have a very close connection with the plant; I was 37 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 present at initial startup. And I can say that in all of my years of experience here, we have no higher

commitment in this facility than to safety, and that's

operational safety, personal safety, and safety of the

public. Nothing comes before our responsibility for safety. And I know I speak for every Fermi employee, that we take this responsibility seriously. Now, every company has a purpose. The DTE Energy purpose is: we serve with our energy the life

blood of communities and the engine of progress. Fermi has an important role in the company in fulfilling that purpose. The benefits of more than 25 years of safe operation are many: More than 190 million megawatt hours of electricity for DTE Energy

customers in that time frame, and all that electricity with no carbon emissions; clean energy; a positive role in the local community, supporting local institutions, charitable organizations, and countless volunteer hours on the part of our employees.

Our commitment to safety also carries over to environmental responsibility as well. Our goal is

to be stewards of the environmental where we work and live. More than 600 pristine acres of property on the

Fermi site are part of the Detroit River International 38 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Wildlife Refuge. That land has oversight by the U.S.

Fish and Wildlife Service and is teaming with

undisturbed wildlife.

Fermi has also maintained our -- our Wildlife Habitat Council certification since 2000.

The council is a nonprofit organization focused on healthy ecosystems. We have provided an exhaustive

environmental impact study that shows no environmental

changes related to license renewal, the plant -- the plant footprint, and the operation remained the same. Renewing Fermi 2's operating license for another 20 years provides significant future benefit:

a continued supply of clean, safe energy for our

customers in Southeast Michigan, providing the life blood to power our economy; an important part of the DTE balanced portfolio of energy sources -- nuclear, wind, coal, natural gas, and solar -- which all make

up a generation assortment that is diverse, not

dependent on one or two energy sources; a steady supply

of good, well-paying jobs, at a tax base that supports

the local community and the state of Michigan, economically, and; finally, license renewal supports

our employees and their families, who are a vital part

of this community through their efforts at the plant, 39 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 as well as in the community, in the schools, civic institutions, churches and charitable organizations, working to improve the quality of life in the area.

That is where we all want to be for another 20 years.

Thank you. MR. BARKLEY: Thank you, Joseph. Jessie, you're up. MS. COLLINS: Hello. My name is Jessie Pauline Collins and I'm a nuclear abolitionist. I want to say, I'll speak tonight about issues, but right now I just want to say I'm glad we live in a country where we can have opposing views and bring them out and

discuss them, so that we can have better knowledge. I became a nuclear abolitionist as a young woman in Oklahoma when I attended sweat lodges and the medicine man told us they were trying to build

a nuclear facility in Oklahoma, and that it was our duty as warriors to do what we could to stop it. I

didn't question, I didn't know what a nuclear plant was, but I joined with the others and we did.

The first NRC meeting I went to, it was all white men; that was in '85. Over the years it changed, then we got men of color, and now we have women, and women of color. I'm glad to see this progress. This 40 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 is all progress toward a sustainable world: equal rights, equal voices. And now we have a thing of energy. It has -- Fukushima has brought to life everybody's worst fears. Over three years, still

contaminating. Yes, Fermi has run without that kind

of danger; it doesn't mean it always will. It means

it has so far.

DTE Electric -- and I must say, they are a very respectable organization, I have never been threatened by them or my personal life interfered with, as Kermagee used to do to us. As I passed and went to the cafeteria, I saw all the solar panels put up there by DTE -- yay, they are on the right track.

They have to go sustainable eventually; they might as well do it now. Now is the time to put aside the dangers that we face, do not make us live in the shadow

of a Fukushima-like accident for another 31 years, not even the Fukushima-like accident. In the 19 -- 2009

study that they did on the cooling water intake, it

showed the cooling water intake sucked up, in an

eight-month period, 3,102 live fish, over 63 million fish eggs and fish larva in normal operations. The world depends on the fish. And the water they put out

is hot, inviting in invasive species.

41 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 At the time, it was a new technology and it seemed to be great. Now we know it's not. Let's not extend it another 20 years. Let's end it now and

go on to the sustainable energy sources that are

inevitable to come. Thank you. MR. BRAUNLICH: Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. My name is Paul E. Braunlich, and I am

the attorney for Frenchtown Charter Township Resort

District Authority, and I'm here this afternoon speaking on behalf of Larry Smith, the director of the Resort District Authority. I just came off of the lake with the good mayor; we were boating on the lake with many prosecutors throughout the state of Michigan, but I got elected to come here to talk this afternoon about a very important subject to all of us. The Resort District Authority is a special tax assessment district created by Frenchtown

Charter Township in 1986 and allowed by Michigan Public

Act 59 of 1986. Through the vision of local leaders

and championed by our local state representative, this

Act permitted the establishment of a defined assessment district in order to rehabilitate a special area. The

boundaries of the Resort District Authority encompass

a contiguous area within the township, which includes 42 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 private homeowner associations established in the 40s and in the 50s, locally known as the "beach

communities," Fermi 2 and other businesses that opted

in. The beach communities, under their outdated organizational structures, were unable to

provide for adequate municipal infrastructure and

services, and were in a state of rapid decline. The

Resort District Authority has a population of approximately 6,250 people representing 30 percent of the township, with approximately 2,321 housing units.

Since the creation of the Resort District Authority, 42 miles of roads have been paved; over 80 miles of storm drains were installed, including six large

pumping stations capable of pumping 3,469 gallons of water per minute, equipped with diesel engine power generators for backup in the possibility of a power interruption during floods. Clay berm/dikes were

also built to supplement existing flood protection

devices.

Currently, the Resort District Authority has launched a major project to rehabilitate the flood

protection seawalls along Lake Erie shoreline. This

is a 32 million dollar project funded on a pay-as-you-go 43 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 basis and not the federal government. With approximately 1 million annually being set aside for

construction, the project will complete -- will be

completed sometime around 2046. The Resort District

Authority provides municipal services, such as: road

maintenance, street lighting, snow removal, and etcetera. None of this would have been possible

without Detroit Edison, Fermi 2, being an active and

good corporate citizen of the Resort District

Authority. In closing, the Resort District Authority is a unique governmental entity in the state of Michigan -- there is only one of us -- and collects taxes from the district to provide municipal services

and to provide flood protection and improvements to

the community. DTE, Fermi 2, has been an excellent corporate citizen, but more specifically, by its local president -- presence, improving the quality of life for all of the citizens of the township, and

especially the Resort District Authority.

I urge the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to renew the license of Fermi 2 Nuclear Power Plant for

the requested 20 years, thereby keeping them a valuable

citizen of the Resort District Authority and a 44 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 district, a representative, the place to live and raise a family. Thank you for this opportunity to address the Commission and for your attention. Thank you very

much. MR. BARKLEY: Okay. Thank you, Paul.

For our next three speakers, I would like to call up

Angela Rudolph, followed by Richard Micka, and then, finally, Bill Ded (sic), I believe his name is. MS. RUDOLPH: Good afternoon, everyone. Monroe County is where I live, is where I work. I live

just seven miles north of the plant and I feel safe living there. I am proud to say I do work at Fermi.

Both of my children have worked at Fermi during their

college years. My coworkers and I are a vital part of this community. We supply the energy to power the economy and to make all of our lives more comfortable.

We do that 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br /> a day, 300 -- or 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br /> a day, 365 days a year, and we would like to see that plant

produce energy for another 20 years. There will be

no environmental impact changes related to the license renewal application. The plant footprint and

operation will remain the same. I, like every Fermi

employee, are committed to protecting the environment;

it's a commitment that we live in every day. Thank you.

45 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 MR. BARKLEY: Okay. Thank you, Angela.

Richard? MR. MICKA: Good afternoon. My name is Dick Micka; my wife and I live in the city of Monroe

and have for many years. I am also what is somewhat

called a "civic booster." I am a former hunter and avid conservationist, but not former conservationist -- still an active one. I have the

great honor to serve as the chairman of the Detroit

River International Wildlife Refuge Alliance, a friend's organization that helps the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to deliver on the mission of the refuge. I am here this afternoon offering my

personal perspective. As a resident, I believe that when it comes to electricity, we can't put all our eggs in one

basket. We need something more than coal, and I don't think wind or hydro are going to be a significant help, certainly not here in the southeast corner of

Michigan.

While I firmly believe that more nuclear energy needs to be added to Michigan's electricity

portfolio, I believe even more firmly that the life of

a well-functioning plant like Fermi 2 needs to be 46 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 extended. I welcome your efforts in the process of reviewing DTE Energy's application for a 20-year license extension. As a civic booster, I have long

observed and admired DTE Energy's involvement in Monroe County. I've had the pleasure to work

shoulder-to-shoulder with many men and women from the

company and to a person, they are great examples of what

good neighbors should be.

As a conservationist, I have worked over the years with what I term the "Big 4" of local

environmental stewardship of: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Michigan Department of Natural

Resources, the Huron Clinton Metropolitan -- Metropolitan Parks Authority and the

utilities. DTE Energy and its involvement with the Wildlife Habitat Council is a great example of environmental stewardship. Of course, DTE Energy was the first business partner with Wildlife Refuge, entering into a cooperative management agreement with

the Fish and Wildlife Service, enabling the service

to protect and manage wildlife and fish populations

on 656 acres at Fermi.

In closing, know that the environmental community also includes many individuals like me, avid 47 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 or once avid anglers and hunters, many like me see nuclear energy, especially an existing plant like Fermi 2, as critical to meeting Michigan's long-term energy -- energy needs. As an added benefit, Fermi 2

omits virtually no greenhouse gases.

MR. BARKLEY: Okay. Thank you, Richard.

Bill, are you still there?

I wondered how that -- D-y-e-r?

MR. DYER: Yeah, that's it.

MR. BARKLEY: It didn't look like it on my card. MR. DYER: I'm a little nervous here, so -- I'll put my glasses on. Hello, everyone. I'm Bill Dyer, by the way. I'm the chairman of

local -- the Fermi Division, Local 223. Fermi 2 is quite, literally in the hands of Local 223, and I am the chairman of the division of Local 223. We are the men and women who operate and maintain the plant. We take our work very seriously; our workers are highly trained professionals -- professional nuclear

workers, and we are honored to serve our friends and

families and neighbors by powering the community.

Local 223 represents hundreds of members and we all know the responsibility we have at Fermi 2.

48 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 We accept the responsibility and honor it by keeping safe -- safety our top priority. Safety isn't an abstract thing for us; we live it. We live here, our

families live here, our friends live here, and our neighbors depend on us keeping them safe. I, and the

rest of Local 223, look forward to operating Fermi 2 for the next three decades and should -- and the

community should rest assured knowing the plant is safe

in our hands. Thank you. MR. BARKLEY: Okay. Thanks, Bill. The next three people I would like to call are: Sean Honell, Michael Keegan, and then Eric Dover. Sean? MR. HONELL: Hello. My name is Sean Honell; I'm a Monroe County resident and a mechanical engineer at Fermi 2. I was born and raised in Monroe

County and am proud to say it's my home, today. As a Bedford High School graduate in 2006, the economy in Michigan and throughout the country was at a point of economic downturn. The

automotive industry was struggling and the prospects for career-level jobs were dwindling. I started my

college education right here at Monroe County Community College, taking general engineering credits. Now I

was intrigued when the colle ge offered a Nuclear 49 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Engineering Technology Program. I had long known that Fermi was a single place of employment and I enrolled

and graduated at the first class of nuclear engineering technology students. As a result, I earned a coop position at Fermi 2 in 2008. I have since gone on to

get my bachelor's of science in mechanical engineering at the University of Toledo. I am now working at a job

that I love at DTE Energy.

The one principle that has been so clear from the beginning is that more than anything, Fermi is committed to safety. Every single day, the work that I perform reflects the core values of safety. It is my personal duty, and every employee's duty, to ensure that we perform our work to the highest standards of safety in protecting the environment around us. I can proudly say that I go home at night

to my wife and eight-month-old son feeling safe and secure, even with an operational nuclear facility

just three miles from my home. My coworkers and I are a vital part of this community. We supply -- we supply clean energy

to power the economy and to make all of our lives more

comfortable. We do that every day, 365 days a year, and I want to continue to do that for the next 20 years.

50 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Thank you.

MR. BARKLEY: Thanks, Sean. Michael?

MR. KEEGAN: My name is Michael Keegan, I reside in Monroe, Michigan; I have lived here all my

life. I have been tracking nuclear power since 1980

when I attended a public meeting before the County

Commissioners where there were promises about an evacuation plan, an exercise that could be conducted.

The more they presented, it occurred to me it was -- that these were falsehoods; there really is not an operable

evacuation plan in Monroe County. If you were asked to evacuate, it would be a permanent relocation. I'm

troubled by the fact that in this community, it's the largest MARC 1 reactor in the world, nearly identical to the Fukushima reactors. And what's more disturbing is it was known in 1972, by the Atomic Energy Commission, that this reactor design was faulty. There were hearings, congressional hearings in 1976, where three General Electric engineers came forward and spoke about the fault of this reactor

design. The containment is simply too small.

Yes, indeed, we all love the tax revenue from Detroit Edison; we appreciate the jobs and the

trickle down and so on, but in a heart beat, literally 51 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 a heart beat, in a super prompt criticality of 1.6 seconds, that reactor can go through the roof, and that

means that we will not be just evacuating, we will be

permanently relocating, the size of the state of

Pennsylvania.

In 1982, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission commissioned a study from Sandia Labs called the "CRAC-II." This was the severe consequences of reactor accidents. At the Fermi 2, a reactor would be

136 billion dollars in property damage -- these are 1980 dollars -- 340,000 -- 341,000 injuries; 13,000 deaths from cancer; 8,000 immediate deaths. Yes, we like the

tax revenue, we like the jobs, but in a heart beat this reactor could be gone. And there has been no mitigation, Detroit Edison refuses to put in place hardened vent which would allow for the venting of the reactor if it over-pressurized. Meanwhile, the

product out there that they are really producing, that lasts forever, is high-level nuclear waste. If you refine it a bit, you could turn it into a nuclear weapon. This is the most volatile material in the

world and yet this is what they produce and this is what they don't know what to do with to this day. They

have been authorized since 2010 to remove that fuel from 52 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 the fuel pool, they have not been able to do so.

Because when they looked at the blueprints, they found

that we're missing welds on the fifth floor, 768 missing welds on -- on the fifth floor. The crane would not

support the load to break it down 100 feet, five floors;

they still don't know what to do with it, but yet they'll make more. They'll make promises: we'll figure it out

later. We'll adhere to a human and senseless paradigm, that we are so smart today in this room that: well, we

don't know what to do just yet, but we'll figure it out

later. So, those are the tradeoffs. Lose everything you have, everything you've known, every

family going forward, or just roll the dice one more time. The quality assurance at the Fermi 2 is abysmal, it's been abysmal; I have records demonstrating that. The Fermi 3 quality assurance is abysmal. We're going to go to court. So, I'm here

today to tell you that there will be intervention at the legal front and there will be comments made. It's not going to be a cakewalk; we will be raising those

issues.

I would also like to point out that you have a regulator which is a captured lapdog; they have been 53 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 captured by the industry. In fact, there have been 73 applications for license renewal, all 73 have been

approved, and there have been vehement legal interventions at many of those. It does not matter to

the NRC; nobody really cares at the NRC, they rubberstamp it. They've been captured by the industry

and we play this musical pretense and -- "I come out

here and legitimize this process for you, I get patted

on the head, thanks for coming out, public," but you

live in this community with this threat hanging over your head every day. There are better ways to do it.

If we take the money going forward, if we

renew -- renewable is an alternative, these are labor-intensive technologies, there will be more jobs.

There would be replacement for the jobs that are lost at the Fermi 2. Phase it out, time to go. You don't know what to do with the waste; it's a con game, stop

producing. Thank you. MR. BARKLEY: All right. Thank you, Michael. Welcome, Eric. MR. DOVER: I - don't touch the microphone, right? My name is Eric Dover. I want to

thank the NRC for -- ooh, that moves, too -- I would like to thank the NRC for letting me speak, today. I 54 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 am a proud member of the Fermi 2 family, but that's not the family I want to talk about.

I'm a local boy, I was born and raised just south of here in La Salle. My father was also a local

boy; his love for boating and the water, he passed right on to me. My mother may not have been local; she's been here for over 50 years. My entire family is here, my extended family is here; we all live around this plant.

And being a history buff, we've had to make sacrifices

in the Lake Erie basin, for the environment, for the

economy.

Fermi 2, we have a strong environmental storage shed; we do great things for the environment in my opinion, I see it firsthand. I am motivated, because of my family, to make sure we care for our

environment. I'm a boater, I love the Great Lakes;

I love spending time on the Great Lakes. Fermi not only provides the job and economy for me to enjoy that lifestyle, but also takes care of the environment around it, so the environment will continue to be there, so I can enjoy that lifestyle. That was probably the most proud moment of my professional

career, is to be a part of that. I would like to keep it short. I'm in 55 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 strong support of us extending this another 20 years.

Thank you very much.

MR. BARKLEY: Thank you, Eric. The next three people I would like to call up: Ron Lankford, followed by Emily Wood and then Keith Gunter. Ron, are

you still here? Welcome. Glad we got to talk earlier. MR. LANKFORD: Hello, everybody. My name is Ron Lankford; I'm a graduate of the Lawrence

Institute of Technology, also hold a master's in health

service administration.

I am going to do a little extemporaneous thing. Here, the First Nation people had it right:

live with nature, don't try to change it. I'm also going to have you use your minds. Picture the

Continental United States; all across the nation, the

states have different situations where some are against a foreign country, some of them are surrounded by other states. Michigan, though, is unique, because Lower Peninsula has water on three sides.

This means that the evacuation routes can't be to the west; we have a narrow ribbon across the Mackinaw Bridge to the north and we have a foreign country to

our east. So, all of the evacuation routes would have to go south, which happens to be close to where the 56 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Fermi Nuclear Plant is.

As a consideration for extending the operating license of a nuclear power plant, the ability

to successfully evacuate residents from the area must

be included. Berlin Township clearly resides within the blast area of the Newport Fermi Power Plant. NRC needs to look at the lack of additional escape routes

and the failure of the State of Michigan, Monroe County, and Wayne County, to maintain or improve evacuation

routes in light of population increases in this

township.

On the east end of Berlin Township, a Class A roadway, commonly known as "Jefferson," is supposed to carry traffic across the Huron River. Its bridges

are crumbling and portions of this road have water on

each side. In the past, flooding from Lake Erie has covered this road making it impassable. Flooding from

Lake Erie could also challenge the Newport site, as

it is essentially the same body of water. Population increases are significant. Around 1970, there were 5,510 people in Berlin

Township, 6,488 in 1980, and currently we have 9,600 residents. More importantly, the increase is not due

solely to more people in old homes, but due to increase 57 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 in new houses. As of 2010, four years ago, 693 new homes were added to the township. This may not sound

like a lot, but for us it was a 37 percent increase in dwellings. Some projections to the year 2040 predict another 20 percent increase in population. This would

seem to be very modest, but it also means that you have

a 37 percent increase in traffic because there is no public transportation in Berlin Township. No new

roads have been built and no roads have been widened

to provide a consistent third turn lane, which might be used in an evacuation. Many roads run parallel to

rivers and creeks and they do flood.

The lack of snow removal by the government would have trapped many residents on the roads, that were in their homes this past winter. The area had the

winter of the century -- record snowfall and record sustained cold temperatures impeded movement. Roads

leading to even the Berlin Township offices offered only three-quarter to one- and-a-quarter lanes on

their two-lane surfaces after plowing, and this condition went on for several weeks. These are the roads the evacuation people need to travel. These are the roads emergency service needs to go down.

Yet, the government knows that Fermi Nuclear Plant is 58 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 operating and that people need to use the roads to evacuate. If the NRC had requirements laid out in its

original license regarding evacuation routes, adequate

snow removal machines and manpower should have appeared to ensure the safety of Berlin Township residents.

Now, in business you have internal strengths and weaknesses. I have heard a lot of things

here about what goes on within the fenced area of Detroit Edison, but the other problem we have is what goes on, on the outside: opportunities and threats.

Manpower to the Monroe County Sheriff's area has been

cut to three patrolmen for the whole county on afternoon shift. The State Police Post we used to have in Erie, Michigan and Flat Rock have been either eliminated or relocated to Taylor. So, just who would Fermi call in

the event they needed officers out there?

You have to look at not only the licensing requirement for what's within the perimeter of your plant, but you have obligations to maintain evacuation routes. And you can't just say, like in a failed evacuation, "Oh, I thought you were going to do

it. Oh, isn't it your job to do it?" In a way, we're fortunate that this renewal process has come up right now, because this 59 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 would run through to 2025 without anybody having the opportunity to look at all the budget cuts, all of the

external factors, and see how they might affect the environmental part of nuclear licensing. There could

be conditions in there where organizations are required to maintain manpower and they haven't. So, this is

something that needs to be corrected and I would -- I

would say that's a conditional approval of this license because we can't have this situation continue. Thank

you. MS. WOOD: Good afternoon. My name is Emily Wood and I appreciate the opportunity to share

my viewpoint as an employee of North American Young

Generation Nuclear member, Women in Nuclear member, a

customer of DTE Energy, resident and active member of

the Monroe County community. I was born and raised in Monroe, Michigan. For me, Fermi 2 is a familiar place. My

father has been working at the plant for the past 35 years. In 2008, I graduated summa cum laude. As many of you know, it was the worst economic time to be a recent college graduate. Never in a million years would I have anticipated having such a difficult time finding full-time employment. After countless hours 60 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 of searching, I was forced to leave my hometown of Monroe and relocate for an employment opportunity.

While living and working outside of Monroe County, I met someone who is now my fianc. When we met, he was enrolled in college and I told him about

the field of nuclear power, which he was unfamiliar with at the time. He thought it sounded interesting and I told him to look into it. He graduated from the Monroe

County Community College Nuclear Engineering

Technology Program and was hired into the Fermi 2 Nuclear Power Plant. Shortly thereafter, I was hired

into the Fermi 2 Nuclear Power Plant to work in Human Resources. With both of us being fortunate enough to

have job opportunities in Monroe County, it allowed us to move back to my hometown. The Fermi 2 Nuclear Power Plant brought me back as a resident and acquired him as a new resident to Monroe County. We have truly been blessed by the financial and employment opportunities. Last year, we built a brand -- a brand-new beautiful home just three miles from the

Fermi 2 Nuclear Power Plant. When I'm talking to friends and neighbors, they are proud to live by a nuclear power

plant and they realize that Fermi 2 is an economic rock 61 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 for Monroe County and all Southeast Michigan, providing well-paying jobs for thousands of employees, contributing millions of dollars in tax revenue, and

donating millions of dollars to nonprofit

organizations that nurture our community. These are

all things that I am proud of and I know my neighbors

are proud of, too.

Although I work in Human Resources, I'm the president of the North American Young Generation

Nuclear, also known as NAYGN. NAYGN is a group of young workers who will be the ones operating the Fermi 2 and

other nuclear power plants a cross the nation for decades to come. And let me tell you all, your nuclear power plants are in good hands. Our young

professionals are dedicated and intelligent; we are an

innovative group and we bring many new ideas to help

make nuclear power more efficient and reliable for the customers of Southeast Michigan. In addition to NAYGN, I am also the vice president of Women in Nuclear, also known as WIN.

Each year, the members of WIN participate in a women's

build week for Habitat for Humanity, as an opportunity to give back to other women in the communities in which we live and serve. Fermi 2 employees, myself 62 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 included, are active supporters of the local community, raising funds for local charities and

providing countless volunteer hours for local community organizations. License renewal is critical

to the future success of Monroe County and the surrounding areas. That is why every day at Fermi 2, we maintain the safety of the public and the environment as our top priorities.

Through my recruiting efforts, I have seen firsthand what closing a nuclear facility does to the community and surrounding areas: economic devastation.

Businesses are forced to close and people are forced to leave the area and relocate. I never expect or want this to happen in the area I call home. I am thankful

to know that Fermi will continue to operate and support Monroe County and Southeast Michigan. My passion for clean energy starts and ends with nuclear power. I look forward to the future of Fermi 2 as a safe, clean, and reliable source for base load power generation.

Thanks again for your time and have a wonderful day. MR. BARKLEY: Okay. Thank you, Emily.

Keith? MR. GUNTER: Thank you. My name is Keith Gunter -- careful with that power. My name is 63 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Keith Gunter and I am the other co-chair of Alliance to Halt Fermi 3, which is a union of concerned citizens

in 15 Southeast Michigan organizations that are opposed to the construction of a third Fermi Nuclear Plant near

Monroe, Michigan.

Forty-eight years ago, in September of 1966, I was an 11-year-old sixth grader at

Taylor -- Fairlane Elementary School in Taylor, Michigan, and our teacher took us to a place called

Fermi 1; a wondrous, brand-new technological marvel that was going to help pave the way for inexhaustible, clean energy for all humanity. Needless to say, after

48 years, quite a lot has changed. On March the 11th, 2011, early in the morning, my phone rang at home; it was my brother, Paul, who is the director, reactor watchdog project director

at D.C. area, Beyond Nuclear, and my brother told me that there had been a terrible earthquake in -- in

Tsunami, in Japan, and that it was likely there was

at least one meltdown now underway. And he told me that he had just gotten a call from a cable news

network and was being asked to come directly over to the studio. He didn't have time to go home and throw on a suit, so he went to the studio in street clothes 64 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 and he did a 10-minute interview with Jeanne Meserve who was, at that time, a senior homeland security

correspondent for a cable news network. And of that

10-minute interview, they used approximately eight

seconds of that interview at the very end of Wulf

Flitzer's Situation Room program on March the 11th, 2011. And my brother, Paul, said at the end of

that -- at the end of that story, which spanned about

eight minutes -- the eight seconds they used, he

essentially said, "The concern here is that we could

literally blow the roof off of this reactor."

Now, right after his snippet of film was used, a spokesperson for the Nuclear Energy Institute, whose name I'm not recalling at the moment, said that

the probability of that happening was extremely remote. The next morning, when I turned on CNN, the first thing, I saw the first Fukushima reactor building exploding

and I thought to myself: you know, brother, you called

that one. But my brother was not clairvoyant; such special powers were not needed, because as my friend and colleague, Michael Keegan, indicated a little while ago, the shortcomings, the flaws of the General Electric boiling water reactor MARC 1 containment design had been known for decades. As a matter of 65 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 fact, Harold Benton (ph), a former senior reactor safety specialist at the U.S. NRC, once estimated that the probability of catastrophic failure of the

General Electric MARC 1 boiling water reactor

containment design was 90 percent probability of failure under severe accident conditions. In other

words, with the pressure suppression system that was

already installed at the plant, in addition to the

back- fitting of a special vent stack to relieve excess

pressure under accident conditions, the failure rate

at Fukushima Daiichi was 100 percent, because the three reactors that were operating at the site, at the time

of the disaster, all exploded before the eyes of the

world. So, I certainly -- I certainly appreciate the arguments, as my colleague, Carol Izant, said earlier; I certainly appreciate the -- the need

for -- for jobs and economic security and certainly appreciate the need for safe production and distribution of electricity, but as we have seen in over the last few decades, nuclear power is failing

that test. Because the fact is, that nuclear plants are not insurable. The best risk assessors, inside the insurance companies, will not touch nuclear power 66 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 with a 10-foot pole. And that's the reason that in 1957, the U.S. Congress passed the -- the Price- Anderson Act, which essentially leaves the federal government and U.S. taxpayers on the hook for

the vast, vast, vast majority of potential damages.

And we've also come to realize that you don't need an earthquake or a tsunami to produce a

condition on plant property known as "station

blackout," where you have a failure of the primary

electrical power and -- and a subsequent -- and a

concurrent failure of backup electrical power.

So, given all we know, it is my opinion that to relicense a reactor that has a known flawed

containment design, to say nothing of the issues of the

waste, which we are literally back to square one in

dealing with, it would be utterly reckless and

irresponsible for the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory

Commission to relicense a reactor that we know has a

flawed design. I'll just close with a couple of more comments. In today's New York Times, there -- on the front page of the business page, there is a huge

article about an electrical distribution system that is being constructed in the Texas Panhandle, designed 67 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 to transmit the power from vast wind farms that are being constructed there, and that is where the future is. The future is not with nuclear power; the future is with renewables, energy efficiency, and energy

conservation.

Now, the late Dr. John Gofman, who was the co-discoverer of uranium-233, the winner of the

Stauffer Prize for heart research, and a former member

of the nuclear establishment, who later recanted, once said -- and I'm paraphrasing here -- he said: My

particular combination of scientific credentials are

very handy in the nuclear controversies, but advance

degrees confirm no special expertise in either

commonsense or morality, that's why so many laypeople

are as qualified, if not more so, to judge nuclear power

than the so-called experts.

And by the way, "expert," an interesting term. "Ex" is a has-been and "spurt" is a drip under

pressure. Thank you.

MR. BARKLEY: Okay. Thank you, Keith. the speakers and we're progressing along just fine.

The next three people are: Mark Farris, Jeanne Micka,

and Grace Yackee. So, Mark, welcome.

MR. FARRIS: Hello, everybody. My name 68 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 is Mark Farris, a lifelong resident of Monroe. I did not intend on speaking until the afternoon session;

I'm not really prepared, but no big deal, I'll wing

it. Up front, I think I have to offer some advice that maybe the people in the nuclear industry

might want to take a look at what's happening in

Germany. Once the population in the country realize

what a scam nuclear energy is, you might want to be

looking for another line of work down the road. One

of the reasons for job loss in Michigan, from the auto

industry in particular, was the high cost of electricity. I retired out of the auto industry, and

so if we're going to talk about jobs, we have to look

at that.

Nobody complained when they -- you know, too much, when the Ford factory left Monroe and we were looking at what, 12-1,400 high-paying jobs there. The

nuclear industry, I hate to say it, but it's an

antiquated technology. If you go to some of these TED Talks, you can see the advances being made in alternatives; you can -- you know, you can get

affordable (indecipherable) cells are about as thick

as a piece of paper these days, and this is going to 69 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 continue to advance.

You know, Michigan, it's the only state in the union that's actually losing people, there's a reason for that, and that falls back on the

deindustrialization that's taking place, in my

opinion, because of the high cost of electricity in this state. The issue of nuclear energy, you have to consider the company General Electric. General

Electric is one of the -- I think they're the number

one company in America who does not pay taxes. If we're considered about rebuilding roads and bridges and

spending money on infrastructure, how about if these

corporations start paying taxes?

You know, you've got these wind turbines that are being installed here in Michigan, up in the thumb area. Well, some of these are General Electric

turbines. What a shame they're built in Germany and Holland. We've got a tower factory here in Monroe, it employs quite a few people at good paying jobs. I

suspect that maybe if some of our politicians would demand General Electric bring these jobs back to America, we could create some jobs in this community, in this country.

70 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 And one issue I wanted to bring up momentarily, is that 2,500 gallons of diesel fuel that leaked here recently at the Fermi Plant, was this a large line or just a long-term leak that nobody paid

attention to? Where was the NRC? You know, nobody mentioned, no comments from the NRC on this issue.

That raises questions. And I guess that's about all I have to say.

I'll be speaking again this afternoon and I'll try to

polish it up a little bit better, but nuclear energy is a mistake; there is no doubt in my mind. I, along

with a lot of other people, are going to continue to

stress to the populations that they're the ones that

have to vote politicians out that are supporting this

industry. Thank you very much. MR. BARKLEY: Okay. Thank you, Mark.

I'll try to find somebody who can speak to that diesel

fuel leak after the meeting. Jeanne, welcome. MS. MICKA: Good afternoon, and thank you for the privilege of appearing before all of you. My name is Jeanne Micka. I guess I'm what you could call a "civic booster," I give a hoot. I'm a member of the Lotus Garden Club, the Michigan Garden Clubs, and the National Garden Clubs, and a variety of other 71 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 localiza -- local organizations that care about the community, such as: the Women in Philanthropy through the Community Foundation in Monroe County; Ducks Unlimited, the hen side of it; Monroe County Historical Society; Friends of the Library; Friends of the Museum; Friends of the River Race and National

Battlefield; the Monroe City County Fine Arts Council, and others. It's a privilege to be American. It's

good to give back in whatever way you can.

We've been in a somewhat unique position to witness the level of community devel -- excuse

me -- community engagement and commitment as

demonstrated -- demonstrated by DTE Energy employees

and company. The hundreds of men and women employed

at Fermi enrich our community with the dollars they

spend, but their contributions in time, energy, are

every bit as important to the fabric of our community

as is all of us who volunteer.

The job of generating electricity, including the use of nuclear power, is a very important process. As a member of the Lotus Garden Club, I have personally witnessed what DTE Energy does in protecting the environment and preserving and

enhancing it.

72 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 You know, the American lotus is North America's largest native aquatic wildflower; it grows

about this high in the water -- waters along the shores of Lake Erie and other lakes. It's a prehistoric plant; it's been here a long time. Believe it or not, it's related to the sycamore tree -- you talk about

an interesting family history -- and the lotus is rather like a canary in the cave. If you see lotus, they're

nice, big, yellow blooms of round parasol-shaped leaves and your water quality and your air quality is good.

If the quality of your environment decreases, they die.

So, we have a Lotus Tour on Saturday, come and see them, there's lots of them.

Dick and I were flying over Detroit Edison and Enrico Fermi some years ago in a B-17 World War II

bomber, and it's an interesting site when you look out

the bay, and Dick's camera had a lens on it like this

and I'm looking at the thing with my toes holding onto my shoes like this. My God, there's lotus down there.

So, we went to see the people out at Edison and said, "Do you know you've got lotus?" They said, "No, we

don't." "Yeah, you do." And, so this started a partnership that was unbelievable. It tied in with 73 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 the Port of Monroe, Consumers Energy, DTE Energy, Fermi, Ford, the entire Lake Erie western shore. And what's really strange: these corporate bodies weren't really talking with one another, and one very

important gentleman out at the port said to me, when I was young and skinny a long time ago, before life has

brought me -- "Why don't the little old ladies of the

Lotus Garden Club go home and plant petunias?" while

we were saying, you know, "Your dike out here is leaking, will you please fix it?" They did. And when

I got home I was pretty mad; I to ok the kid and put her in the station wagon, went to Kmart and bought a lady's size 12 pair of sneakers, took them to the local

greenhouse and had the filled with 50 red, white, and

blue petunias, and delivered to somebody very important with a note, "Put your best foot where it fits." And you know what? It worked. A little humor does work.

We have a fine partnership; people really care about the environment. They really care about the economic background of our community and we work together. And we would invite all of you to join us in that regard.

There are lessons to be learned. My dad was a medical officer in the Medical Officer Corps, in the United States Army Air 74 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Corps, and in the Air Force, and as was my husband, and we've lived in a lot of countries. There hasn't been one, that I've had the privilege to visit, that doesn't like to turn on the light. I can remember as a kid when they were talking about, at the end of the World War II -- yeah, I'm a fossil -- blood transfusions were bad. I can remember seeing

emergency situations in Alaska where they took a Coke

bottle and they took the blood from the artery of one

GI, put it in the Coke bottle to give it to the other

GI to save his life -- it did, and much has improved from that time. So again, it's a lesson to be learned.

From the perspective of civic booster, I do endorse the 20-year extension as a continuing process. Our community and our environment would be

so much poorer without the jobs provided by Fermi and

our other industrial leaders and corporate leaders, without the community leadership of DTE Energy plant

management, without the community

involve -- involvement and philanthropic support of the men and women who work there. Of course, we would all benefit from 20 years at low-cost, reliable

electricity in a variety of manners. Thank you for the opportunity to speak 75 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 about Fermi 2. And one additional thought: There is a gentleman named John Ed Croy (ph), that's a friend of ours, and he lives right across Swan Creek from Fermi. He was one of the designing engineers for

Fermi, and he's not here this evening because of his age, but he is so proud of the work that he did at

Fermi -- his house is right across from it, and it's

amazing to watch what he sees. And one other point: I was one of the first people on earth to be treated with nuclear

medicine; I am still here. Thank you very much, and

I thank you all for your opinions. MR. BARKLEY: Okay. Thank you, Jeanne.

Grace, are you still here? There we go.

MS. YACKEE: Good afternoon. My name is Grace Yackee, and I'm the Vice President of Instruction at Monroe County Community College. It is my honor to welcome the NRC to Monroe County and to our campus. I

think it is especially fitting for the Board to host

these public meetings here, because this institution itself has become a hub of nuclear energy-related

educational activity. At Monroe County Community College, a successful candidate for an associate in applied 76 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 science degree, with a specialization in nuclear engineering technology, are prepared for entry-level employment as mechanical technicians, electrical technicians in instrumentation control, or IMC technicians. Those who go for additional training will have opportunities as radiation protection technicians, non-licensed operators, and senior

reactor operators.

DTE Energy personnel were instrumental and invaluable in working with us to develop the program

to the benefit not only of our students, but the entire industry. Today, this relatively new program enlists

17 students annually, and nearly all graduates find

employment in the industry, mostly local.

When MCCC partnered with DTE Energy to offer this selective program, it was decided that we

would rise to a level of national standard by

participating in the Nuclear Energy Institute's Nuclear Uniform Curriculum. This MCCC DTE Energy

partnership facilitates the transitioning of graduates

into the nuclear energy industry utility training

programs in accordance with the requirements of the Uniform Curriculum Guide for nuclear power plant technicians, maintenance, and non-licensed 77 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 operations personnel associate degree program, as developed by NEI. In 2012, we expanded the curriculum to include additional courses: Unit 120, Radiation Protection, and Unit 130, Plant Systems. It should

be no surprise, then, if Monroe County Community College speaks in favor of a 20-year license extension that DTE Energy is seeking. I am also pleased to say that a hub of nuclear energy-related activity, this institution is

proud to be partnering with DTE Energy to preserve the

history of Fermi 1 through displays of artifacts at our

Career Technology Center, an archiving of significant

records.

From a broader perspective, Monroe County Community College sees nuclear energy as a clean energy source. We do not agree that like conventional

renewable energy technologies, like wind solar, should be counted as clean energy sources. We want to see

Fermi to continue to contribute in so many ways to our

institution, our community, and our region's efforts

to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. I commend you, the staff of the NRC, for your contributions and involvement in the license renewal process, and hope 78 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 that you find my comments constructive. Thank you. MR. BARKLEY: Okay. Thank you, Grace. And on behalf of the NRC, I would like to thank the community college for hosting this year; this is a great facility. It's one of the nicest facilities I've ever had a public meeting in. The next three

people I would like to call are: Kevin Kamps, Connie

Carroll and, finally, Phil Skarbek. Kevin, welcome. MR. KAMPS: Hello, everybody. Good afternoon. My name is Kevin Kamps and I serve as a

radioactive waste specialist at Beyond Nuclear, based

in Tacoma Park, Maryland, right outside of Washington, D.C., but I'm from Kalamazoo, Michigan, and did this

environmental work in Michigan as a volunteer for the

1990s as a board member of Don't Waste Michigan, representing the Kalamazoo Chapter. I got involved

because of problems at Palisades on Lake Michigan. And I guess the theme of what I would like to address with

these short five minutes is Fukushima lessons learned, or not learned, as the case may be.

I have the odd experience, I guess, of having visited Fukushima Daiichi seven months before

the catastrophe began. It was Hiroshima Day of 2010 and I was invited to Japan by a coalition of 79 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 environmental groups to speak at different nuclear power plants about a program called "Mixed Oxide Plutonium Fuel." In Japan, they call it "fluid thermal" and I have a banner from Japan that I picked up on this tour that says, "Stop Plutonium Thermal" in Japanese. So, I traveled the country and my first stop was Fukushima Daiichi, because Unit 3 was

planning on installing plutonium fuel in its core, in

the near future, and local concerned citizens and

environmentalists hoped to stop that from happening;

in fact, they had stopped it for a decade, but it was

loaded a month after I visited in September of 2011.

And, so Unit 3 experienced the largest of the explosions during the catastrophe.

So, it's just an odd experience because a lot of the things that have been said by employees here, today, by local elected officials, Chamber of Commerce folks, I've heard the same thing in Futaba and Okuma.

Fukushima Daiichi is so big, six reactors, that it straddles two towns; it has two host towns. I met with

the mayor of one of the towns, I met with the vice mayor

of another town and, you know, a lot of confidence

-- and I guess that's the question I put out there to you all is: do you think that the people in Futaba, in Okuma, 80 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 the employees, the management, the elected officials, were any less confident than you are that everything was fine? And in fact, I suppose if I had met with

them on March 10th of 2011, the same would have been the case. They were very confident that it was safe;

they were very confident in their ability to keep it

safe. They certainly enjoyed the money that flowed.

In fact, Tokyo Electric had built a giant City Hall that

the town couldn't afford to even maintain, that's how

big the City Hall was. Another community received a

semipro baseball stadium from the local nuclear

utility, that was used once a week by the local Little

League Team, so the money was flowing in Japan. And

as powerful, economically and politically, as the

nuclear power industry is in this country, especially in a community like this, in Japan it was much more so.

Whereas the U.S. used to get 20 percent of its electricity from nuclear, in Japan it used to be 30

percent. And, of course, that all changed.

Everyone that I met over a couple, three days' period of time, when I was there, is now a nuclear

refugee, including the former mayor of Futaba whose name is Katsutaka Idogawa. And the entire town of Futaba was moved to an abandoned school on the 81 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 outskirts of Tokyo, where they still live three-and-a-half years later. There are still tens

of thousands of nuclear refugees. So, there is a 12.4 mile dead zone around Fukushima Daiichi.

So, you know, you draw a line around Fermi 2. Fermi 2 is identically designed, only it's as big

as Fukushima Daiichi Units 1 and 2 put together and scaled up. And the issue has been mentioned of the

radioactive waste. The radioactive waste risks here

are actually much greater than at Fukushima Daiichi and

if the official version of things is true at Fukushima

Daiichi, we very narrowly avoided a pool fire there.

I mean, you may remember St. Patrick's Day of 2011, the

desperate attempts to drop water into Unit 4 by helicopter, very reminiscent of scenes from Chernobyl.

And the official version is: Oh, that wasn't

necessary. It turns out there was water in the pool

the whole time. Obviously, there was a lot of concern that that was not the case, and so much so that once you lose

the water, you can't send people in, because they'll

get a fatal dose of radioactivity from the uncovered

waste within a very short period of time. So, here at Fermi, as was mentioned 82 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 earlier by Carol Izant, there is well over 600 tons of high-level radioactive waste perched at the top of Fermi 2. They've had a permit to bring it down for several years, but they can't because of structural

deficiencies in the reactor building. And even when they bring it down, it's planned to be put into whole tech (ph) casks and an industry whistleblower named Oscar Suranyi from Hominoff (ph) Edison, an NRC

whistleblower, Dr. Ross Landsman from Region 3, questioned the structural integrity of the whole tech

casks sitting still, on-site storage, because of major

quality assurance violations in their design and

manufacture, let alone moving down the railroads at 60

miles per hour, which is the plan at some point.

So, as was mentioned earlier by Michael Keegan, radioactive waste -- you know, we may enjoy the benefits of the electricity a nd the money that's flowing in the present -- radioactive waste is a curse

on all future generations; they're going to get to deal

with this. We're 70 years into this, we have a mountain of radioactive waste 70 years high, and we don't know

what to do with the first cupful that was generated by

Enrico Fermi on December 2nd, 1942, as a part of the Manhattan Project. And the speaker from the 83 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 community college mentioned preserving an archive of the history of Fermi 1 and we have made, on the record, suggestions for contributions to that history, one of which was the original plan for Fermi 1 to supply

weapons-grade plutonium to the U.S. Nuclear Weapons

Arsenal; that was a document we would like included in that archive. And, of course, another classic document would be We Almost Lost Detroit by John

Fuller, a 1975 book, which chronicled the Fermi 1 partial meltdown in 1966, that Keith Gunter mentioned.

So, a lot of risks have been taken here over the decades. Twenty more years of a General Electric

boiling water reactor with a MARC 1 containment is

really a risk this community should not enter into

lightly. Thank you.

MR. BARKLEY: Thank you, Kevin. Connie?

MS. CARROLL: Good afternoon. My name is Connie Carroll and I'm the executive director of the United Way of Monroe County. We talk about the money

flowing in Monroe County, but let me assure you that

we still have plenty of homeless and plenty of hungry

to go around. Looking around Monroe County, you can see we're still struggling to recover from our previous 84 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 economic levels. While there has been some improvement, the slow economic recovery continues to

have significant effect on local support for the United Way and other philanthropic efforts in this

community. Latest statistics show us that 68 percent of Monroe County's workforce is employed outside this

community. Once upon a time, that was at a moderate

rate of only 50 percent working outside the community, but with the increase in Monroe County's residents

leaving the county for work each and every day, it

stands to reason that they are also taking with them

their retail business and even their community

charitable contributions are going somewhere else.

The renewal of the Fermi 2 license would ensure continued employment for many here in the future

of Monroe County. Over the past 30 years, corporate

contributions to charities in the United States have fallen swiftly. Against this backdrop, DTE Energy, the DTE Energy Foundation, and the company's employees, are a continuing resource and support system for the economic growth and stability needed in Monroe County.

DTE Energy remains the largest single employer in Monroe County. The company and its employees are 85 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 also the single largest charitable contributors we have. Not only do they contribute monetarily to the United Way of Monroe County and many other nonprofit organizations, but they give freely of their volunteer time and services; everything from holding

coat drives for children to serving community meals

and -- and food drives for those who are still homeless and hungry.

Recently, they partnered with a great project in the City of Monroe, partnered with Michigan

Gas Utility employees on a beautification project, planting flowers and bringing growth to a very ugly, for lack of a better term, little corner in Monroe.

Fermi 2 and DTE Energy have over the years given tens of thousands and tens of millions of dollars

to the charities in Southeast Michigan. In 2013 alone, they contributed more than 20 percent of the entire

United Way of Monroe County campaign.

Monroe County is a better place to live because of DTE Energy and their employees. Many

employees sat on our nonprofit Board of Directors, they

volunteer their time and their services. Renewal of this license will most definitely and positively affect the economic environment of Monroe County. It 86 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 will mean sustained employment and additional jobs for our community. Outages and annual maintenance

will bring in additional skilled work forces that will enhance rental and retail income. The typical nuclear energy plant annually produces 430 million dollars in local sales

of goods and services, providing millions of dollars in federal, state, and local tax -- tax revenue.

Excuse me. I am certain that this renewal will have

a positive impact on the local philanthropic community as well. As a representative of the nonprofit sector, I endorse the renewal of the license for Fermi 2. Thank you very much.

MR. BARKLEY: Thanks, Connie. Phil?

MR. SKARBEK: Thank you. Good afternoon.

My name is Phillip Skarbek and I've been a resident of Monroe since 1993 with my wife. I am also a shift manager of Fermi 2. What that means, most people

probably don't know, is that during my operating shift, whether it's dayshift or nightshift, I'm in charge of

all plant operations and the operating crew in the main

control room. After many years of study and passing

a demanding test given by the federal government, I was -- I earned a senior reactor operator license, 87 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 which gives me the position of shift manager. The NRC has placed a great responsibility on me to operate the

plant with just one overriding concern, and that is

the health and safety of the public. Nothing comes before that responsibility. I now speak for every shift manager at Fermi 2 and, in fact, for every Fermi employee, that we take this responsibility very

seriously. The standards are higher here because we know they have to be. And those standards are always

rising through continuous improvement, sharing lessons

learned throughout the industry, and a constant self-critical assessment of our own performance.

Being self- critical means you can't have thin skin of a nuclear business. We criticize ourselves and our

peers, and this is with one overriding factor, and that is safety. I'm glad that's the way it is, because my

family lives right there, near the plant, and I want

the best for my family: the best air to breathe, the

best water to drink, the most reliable power, and the

best community to live in, Monroe. Fermi 2 contributes to all of that.

Our energy is clean, our energy is safe, and our energy is abundant. And best of all, with a

20-year license renewal, I know that my family will 88 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 be able to enjoy everything this plant provides to the community for many years to come. They will be able to enjoy the energy and the commitment of protecting the environment, where they live, work, and play.

That makes me proud and it also makes me even more

committed every day I step foot on the Fermi 2 property to protect it and the health and safety of everyone who lives here. I thank you for the opportunity to

speak. MR. BARKLEY: Thanks, Bill. The next three people I would like to have speak are: Floreine Mentel, Sandy Pierce, and Martha Gruelle. So, Floreine, thanks for making such an effort to come see

us and talk.

MS. MENTEL: Good afternoon, everyone. I had to ask to be a little bit ahead because I have many

4-H'ers waiting for me to bring in their projects at

the Monroe County Fair.

My name is Floreine Mentel and I am a former Monroe County commissioner and I really appreciate this opportunity to offer the perspective of a lifelong

member of the county and someone who has been involved

in this community for decades. I support the DTE Energy's application 89 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 for an extension for its license for Fermi 2. Despite the concerns expressed whenever nuclear power is discussed, it is my belief that there are no reasons, environmental or otherwise, why DTE Energy's application for a license extension should not be

approved. Fermi 2 has been in operation for a quarter century. During that time it has

demonstrated that it is committed to enlightened operation and environmental stewardship. They have

demonstrated that they are good stewards of the

environment through their involvement with the Detroit

River International Wildlife Refuge and the attention

that they devote to their property in partnership with the Wildlife Habitat Council. I can say with great

certainty that if DTE Energy says they are going to do

something, they do it.

There are many reasons why the license extension should be approved. Thinking of my lifelong

home here in Monroe C ounty, the construction and operation of Fermi 2 would be good for Monroe County.

I am thinking specifically and first of the great number of jobs involved; hundreds of good paying jobs for

current DTE Energy employees, the hundreds of 90 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 contractors employed at any given time, as well as the indirect jobs supported by Fermi 2 related spending. Second, it will continue to provide much needed electricity for our homes, offices, and business. This is the electricity on which we have come to depend. Replacing it would not necessarily be easy or less costly. My confidence in nuclear power, in DTE Energy, is built on my experience taking

school children on field trips to the plant in the years

before 9/11, getting to see things up close and getting

to talk with their employees.

Additionally, in my many years of involvement in the community, I am hard pressed to think of any significant endeavor that did not involve DTE Energy or its employees. In fact, as chairman of

Monroe County Michigan Week, I nominated DTE Energy and

Fermi 2 with the Minuteman and Corporate Citizens Awards. They are interested and active in the

community. DTE Energy is always there for help. In

a rather small town like Monroe, being described as a good neighbor is a high-valued compliment. DTE Energy is a very, very good neighbor. I am confident that the

vast majority of Monroe County residents will want the

peace of mind that they will have from renewing Fermi 91 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 2's operating license for 20 additional years. Thank you very much.

MR. BARKLEY: Thanks again, Floreine.

MS. MENTEL: Thank you.

MR. BARKLEY: Welcome, Sandy.

MS. PIERCE: Thank you for the opportunity to be here. My name is Sandy Pierce and I am the director of the Monroe Senior Citizens Center and a lifelong resident of Monroe County. I am here, today, to offer my wholehearted support of the license

renewal for Fermi 2.

DTE and its employees are to be commended for its commitment to safety. I know people who work

out there and they really -- that's what they talk, safety. In addition, DTE is a long supporter of the Monroe Center. Every year we have volunteers come out

and serve our Thanksgiving dinner to the older folks of our community; it's something they do on their own

time because of their commitment to making our world a better place. Employees serve on the Board of

Directors of many agencies; they are vital to the United Way campaign, which human services rely on.

Additionally, DTE has supported our health care, which

has provided health services to older adults in the 92 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 community, to be -- DTE is vital to our community; they provide jobs and they are committed to our community. So, again, thank you for this opportunity and I offer my support. Thank you.

MR. BARKLEY: Thank you, Sandy.

MS. GRUELLE: Hi. My name is Martha Gruelle. I work for Wildlife Habitat Council as the

director of the Huron to Erie Waterways for Wildlife Project. Wildlife Habitat Council is a 26-year-old

coalition of companies and conservation groups that

promotes and certifies habitat conservation and

management on working lands through partnerships and education. We focus on voluntary action by companies

to support, by diversity, by providing and enhancing habitat for native species. Wildlife Habitat Council

is headquartered near Washington, D.C. and works internationally. My position is based in Detroit; it

involves communications with corporate habitat

programs in the U.S., in Canada, within the Lake Huron

to Lake Erie corridor.

One of Wildlife Habitat Council's current activities is our certification of corporate efforts

to manage parts of their property for the use of native species and for nature education. We call this 93 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 "Wildlife at Work Certification" and more than 665 corporate habitat programs in 17 countries are now certified by Wildlife Habitat Council, and that

includes the program at DTE Energy's Fermi 2 Nuclear Power Plant, so that is how I am equated with the history of land stewardship at Fermi 2, and that's the

context for my comments, today. Wildlife Habitat Council certification requires documentation of valid voluntary habitat

activities. DTE Energy's Fermi 2 Plant has provided this documentation regularly since the year 2000.

Most recently, in 2011, the wildlife team at Fermi 2 achieved its fourth Wildlife at Work recertification.

All of the activities that contribute to Wildlife at

Work certification are voluntary; that is, they are not done to meet any regulatory or legal requirements. As

part of the wildlife program at Fermi 2, DTE Energy

employees currently help maintain about 650 acres of

wildlife habitat, including forested wetlands, coastal wetlands, wood lots, open fields, and quarry lakes.

Our understanding is that a renewal of the Fermi 2

operating license will not change the footprint at the

plant and, thus, will not impede the Wildlife Habitat Program on site. And that program is extensive.

94 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Activity includes: creation and maintenance of wildfowl, minnow, an annual bird count, and shelter includes sources for local bird and bat populations.

Native wildflowers planted in the meadow area include: perennial lupine, Lanceleaf coreopsis, purple coneflower, black-eyed Susan, prairie cone

flower. The meadow is maintained and monitored for invasive plants. Fermi 2 employees, with assistance from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, evaluated problems with invasive plant species on site and decided to release Galerucella beetles. Those beetles

are a predator of the invasive plant purple loosestrife. Site employees and volunteers monitor

the program to evaluate its effectiveness and also have taken measures to control common reed, or phragmites.

In 2003, as has been mentioned, about 650 acres at Fermi 2 site were designated as a Laguna Beach

Unit of the Detroit River International Wildlife

Refuge, so the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and DTE Energy co-managed this area. Rafter platforms have been erected at the site. Plant employees actively

participate in National Audubon's Annual Christmas

Bird Count since 1990, and wildlife habitat programs there are, like anywhere, not just about habitat.

95 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Corporate programs that are certified by Wildlife Habitat Council include community partnerships and

elements of nature education. At Fermi, the wildlife team has partnered with scout troops from local school systems to use the habitats on their site for education. Through its wildlife program at Fermi 2, as well as other sites, DTE Energy has shown a long-term commitment to stewardship of the available natural areas. This past -- past commitment is a reasonable predictor of future actions. I thank the Commission for your

efforts in evaluating the application for a license renewal and for this opportunity to come in. Thank

you. MR. BARKLEY: Thank you, Martha. I would say, at this point in the meeting we're kind of in the seventh-inning stretch. We have seven people left to

speak, so we'll call three next, and then I'll give the last four names. The first person is Archana

Manoharan, the second is Tracy Oberleiter, and the third is David Schonberger. Archana, you want to come

up? MS. MANOHARAN: Good afternoon. My name is Archana Manoharan and I'm a licensing engineer at 96 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 Fermi 2. My role is to ensure work done at Fermi is safe and compliant with stringent -- stringent regulations, which is to say, my top priority is the health and safety of the public. It is a top priority not only for me, but for the entire Fermi workforce. I'm here, today, to express my immense pride in being a part of this dedicated and hard- working group of people. Our dedication is evident in the several initiatives we have championed

over the years. We take pride in being a certified wildlife habitat. As a result of our continuing

efforts to improve our environment, we are certified

as a 1401 institution.

I am active member of Women in Nuclear, an organization dedicated to promoting diversity and

encouraging women and girls to pursue the sciences.

Several Fermi engineers are teachers and mentors at the Monroe County Community College, right

here, and are devoted to the success of the Nuclear

Engineering Technology Program, what's commonly known

as the NET program. Fermi provides reliable, safe, and clean electricity that helps power the lives, businesses, and communities in Southeast Michigan. I

am proud that in my role I help ensure we operate with 97 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 the health and safety of our public as our top most priority. I appreciate this opportunity. Thank

you. MR. BARKLEY: Thank you. Tracy?

MR. OBERLEITER: At this point, I think it's probably more appropriate to say good early evening. I'm Tracy Oberleiter, chairman of the Monroe County Economic Development Corporation. I thank you for having the opportunity to have me before you this afternoon, or this early evening. My comments are going to be in two perspectives: One, professional, and the other, very personal.

Professionally, Monroe County Economic Development Corporation is dedicated to promoting the

county-wide economic growth, and employment stability, and to improve the quality of life for all people living and working here in Monroe County. We do this by

attracting and retaining business development through

effective partnerships with government units, business

industry, and labor. There can be no doubt that the

availability of a reliable, affordable electricity is

absolutely essential to our economy and to our way of life. The proposed 20-year license extension for the Fermi 2 Nuclear Power Plant will help to ensure the 98 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 supply for decades to come, the business that we intend to bring into this community. For that reason, the Monroe County Economic Development Corporation supports the proposed renewal of a Fermi 2 license

extension for 20 years.

Secondly, we recognize that we can only achieve our economic development objectives through effective partnerships. In this regard, I can say with great confidence that there is probably no more effective partnerships anywhere in Monroe County than the one we enjoy with the men and women of DTE Energy.

You have heard this time and time again; I am here to reinforce that. The efforts of DTE Energy's officers

and employees have been leveraged in the ongoing effort to improve the quality of life here in Monroe County.

Finally, on a personal level, I'm an active and dedicated outdoorsman. I have long been deeply

involved with Ducks Unlimited organization in this

community and throughout the state in its efforts to conserve North American waterfall habitat. Monroe

County and its Lake Erie wetlands are an important part

of the Mississippi Flyway, providing important

migration, breeding, and wintering areas for many of

the continent's waterfall, including wood ducks, 99 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 mallards, canvasbacks. Ducks Unlimited has worked with a variety of partners to restore and enhance thousands of acres of wetlands in more than 30 counties across Michigan, all to maximize the amount

and quality of nesting habitat and, more generally, the conditions for migrating waterfall. Monroe County

is prominent on that list and here, too, DTE Energy has been an instrumental partner. DTE takes environmental stewardship extremely seriously -- we've heard this time and time again. The

Fermi Complex hosts the Laguna Beach Unit of the Detroit River International Wildlife Refuge; in addition, DTE

and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has a special

cooperative agreement by which the Fish and Wildlife

Service manages probably 650 of Fermi's, roughly, 750

acres, a far majority part of the complex.

Thank you for affording me this opportunity to speak on behalf of extending the Fermi

2's licensing for an additional 20 years. MR. BARKLEY: Thank you, Tracy. David?

Welcome, David. MR. SCHONBERGER: Hello, Ms. Colon, Ms. Perkins, and everyone. My name is David Schonberger, I live in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and I'm speaking today 100 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 as an individual member of the general public. First, please note that all of the previous speakers representing local governments, and civic boosters, and Yahoos who fly planes over the facility, everyone failed to mention any issues which are pert -- pertinent -- pertinent to the scope of today's meeting, about significant health, safety, and environmental impacts, and it would be delusional to suggest that license renewal has no significant

adverse impacts.

If this meeting were about jobs, you lose the argument, but this meeting is actually about NEPA, and there are many issues of contention. And today, I would like to spend my five minutes focusing on a

fundamental and egregious failure of safety- related

quality assurance which occurred during a 20- year

period from 1986 to 2006 at the Fermi Plant, at Unit

2, and which remains unresolved to this day, thus

warranting a hard look as part of any NEPA review or

safety review process pertaining -- thus warranting a

hard look as part of any NEPA review or safety review

process pertaining to the Fermi 2 license renewal application. And, therefore, I submit that this item

is well within the scope of today's NRC meeting, unlike 101 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 many of the previous comments.

I am specifically referring to the 20- year period during which Detroit Edison, now DTE

Electric Company, repeatedly tested the Fermi Unit 2 emergency diesel generator protection safety system

using the wrong answer key, resulting in the operation of a facility with inaccurate technical specifications, as a result of gross negligence,

incompetence, and pervasive mismanagement at Detroit

Edison by employees who have not been held accountable and are probably sitting here, today. As a result of

their actions, for 20 years fundamental process

flaws -- fundamental process flaws went undetected, uncorrected, creating new problems and sustaining old

ones. Ominously, the root cause of this fiasco remains unresolved and continues to constitute a systemic

failure of regulatory oversight, as well as an ongoing

weak -- ongoing weakness throughout the entire fleet; this issue must be revisited. Whereas, under the

contemptible leadership of individuals, such as Mr. J.

Todd Conner, Mr. Joseph H. Plona, and Mr. Peter W.

Smith, DTE Electric Company will surely shirk corporate responsibility and not initiate such a review, therefore the NRC lead project manager overseeing the 102 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 safety review of the Fermi 2 LRA -- and I believe that would be Ms. Colon, as well as her boss's boss's boss -- must take the lead as the regulator and demand

a revisiting of that issue. Thank you. MR. BARKLEY: David, you made a fairly serious accusation. I need to have the staff review that, and I would like to have them get back to you on the details of the matter. Since it's 2006 or earlier, it predates some of the staff who work on the

facility now. So, I would like to get your name and

address afterwards, so we can re-contact you after

this. Thank you.

We have four other speakers who want to speak this evening. The four are: Taiya Himebauch, Greg Brede, Nancy Dover, and finally, Michael Smith.

So, is it "Tai-ya"?

MS. HIMEBAUCH: "Tai-ya."

MR. BARKLEY: Okay, thank you.

MS. HIMEBAUCH: Good afternoon. My name is Taiya Himebauch. I have worked at DTE for about 20

years in radiation protection, chemistry, and now

nuclear training, as a senior training instructor, and

my husband also works there as a senior reactor operator. We actually came to the area in 1995 for the 103 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 job opportunity and would like to stay for another 20 years, a good three decades, so we definitely would

like to support the license extension for Fermi 2. I also have two middle schoolers that attend Airport Community Schools. Based on my experience in my areas that I work at, at Fermi 2, and my husband's intimate knowledge of process safety as the senior reactor operator, I am confident in their safety to attend the school, which is in such a close proximity to the plant. I am very proud to work at DTE

as a member of the community; it provides a lot for the

area. One thing I would like to mention is the DTE Energy Foundation. As employees at Fermi 2, we can

volunteer for different community organizations, as has been mentioned before. We spend a few hours with

the organization as a volunteer, and the foundation

then rewards that effort, as employees to the

organization, with a grant that the organization can use to then further serve the community. And I just, I am proud of that effort.

Personally, I have been involved in grants that have been given to Meadow Montessori, which is just across the street; Airport Community Schools; the March 104 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 of Dimes, and other organizations that

-- and I am just one of 800 employees that is at the Fermi 2 site that

contributes in this way.

Thank you for the opportunity to speak.

MR. BREDE: Hello. My name is Greg Brede. I live in Newport, Michigan, within three miles from the Fermi Nuclear facility. I support the

20-year license renewal of Fermi 2 generating clean, reliable, and safe energy. If I was not completely

confident of the safety and no adverse environmental impact, I would not live here with my family. This is understanding what occurred in Fukushima. Thank you. MS. DOVER: Hello, my name is Nancy Dover, and I am a member of the general public. I came here, today, because I was interested in seeing what the process was. There has been a lot in the paper, I was

curious, so I came here, today, to see what the process

was. I have to say, after seeing this process, I really do have a lot of faith in it. I have a lot of faith in the people that I have heard speak. I think there

is a lot of opinions, but I think this renewal process

seems to be very safe, I guess is the word. I think

that there is ability of people -- there is the ability of people to express their opinions and I think they 105 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 will be considered. So, I guess after seeing this, after seeing the employees and their obvious passion for safety, I'd say I support the process and, therefore, support the renewal of the license. Thank

you. MR. BARKLEY: Thank you. Michael, our last speaker. He stepped out, by chance? All right,

was there anyone else in the audience that wanted to

speak? (No verbal response)

MR. BARKLEY: Okay. At this point, I would like to wrap up. There are a couple of issues

that were brought up; I would like to try to have the

staff speak with some of the people who did bring the

issues up. One was on a diesel fuel oil leak at the facility in the last year or so. One was issues

regarding the ability to transfer spent fuel from the

reactor building into dry casks, and I understand

that's an issue that has been corrected in the last

several years. So, I would like to have you connect

with the staff and understand how that was resolved.

There were some emergency preparedness concerns raised

here and we need to handle those with staff afterwards and discuss that. And, again, there was an issue with 106 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 emergency diesel generator testing, and I do need to do some follow-up on that for you. But at this point, I would like to wrap up the meeting. We had I think 34 speakers, you averaged about four minutes a person; that was great, I did not have to really cut off anyone for time. There were a few people that had some lengthy remarks, but they were very well-supported, very professionally presented, so I gave you the latitude of the time. I

do greatly appreciate the professionalism and the civility of this audience. There are some strong

opinions on either side, but you handled yourselves

wonderfully as you went through it, and it was a real pleasure to facilitate this meeting. I would like to

see if Leslie has any remarks to wrap up. Brian, do

you want to make some remarks? Have at it. MR. WITTICK: Let me start with -- with some -- well, let me first introduce myself. My name

is Brian Wittick; I am the branch chief in the Division

of License Renewal at the NRC, responsible for the environmental projects. I would like to thank the

Monroe Community College for -- for hosting us here, today. I would like to thank Rich for a great job in

facilitating; Leslie and Daneira, for their 107 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 informative presentations. And most importantly, I'd like to thank all of you, today, for taking the time that you -- you took out of your busy days, busy

schedules, to come here and provide us with -- with your comments, views, and opinions. As -- I would like to echo what Jessie said earlier today, that it's great that we live in a country that we can all view

our opinions and -- and we, at the NRC, value every

one that you have provided us, today.

And, just a couple of the remarks that were made concerned the -- with the issue of waste

confidence; I would like to amplify on the waste

confidence issue and how that ties in with -- with what

we're doing in license renewal. As Leslie mentioned

earlier, the -- the waste confidence rule, back in 2012, was remanded and this staff has been working on the waste confidence rule now for two years. On this past

Monday, the staff presented the draft final rule and

environmental impact statement to the Commission, and

as of this afternoon that draft was -- the draft of both

of those documents, as well as the second paper associated with them, was made public. So, if anyone

is interested in taking a look at that, that's available online at the NRC website, through the "waste 108 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 confidence" links in the website. So, what are we -- where do we go from here? What do we do with these comments, today?

Process-wise, these comments, we'll be taking a look at the transcript, as well as all of the hard copy comments that were provided. The comments will be evaluated. Leslie will process the comments, work with the technical staff at the Nuclear Regulatory

Commission, and provide a thorough evaluation of each of -- each of the comments that were provided. The

comments will be dispositioned in the form of a Scoping

Summary Report, which will probably come out early next

year, as well the environment -- the draft

environmental impact statement.

The -- a couple of reminder, a couple of important dates that are coming up: The 19th (sic) of

August is the -- the deadline for Petitions for Hearing; the 29th of August is deadlines for submitting comments

associated with the scoping meeting and the scoping process. And if there's any follow-up questions, please feel free to contact the project manager, point

of contact that's listed -- listed up here on the

screen. Lastly, as Rich mentioned, several of the 109 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433 staff will be available after this meeting for further discussion, if you so desire. And with that, I would

like to adjourn the meeting. Thank you. UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: The deadline, you had mentioned the 19th; it's the 18th. MR. WITTICK: Oh, I'm sorry. Okay, thank you. Thank you for that correction. That the

Petitions for Hearing, the deadline for that is

the -- the 18th of August.

MR. BARKLEY: Thank you.

MR. WITTICK: Thank you.

(WHEREUPON, the Public Meeting was adjourned at 4:50 p.m.)

110 NEAL R. GROSS COURT REPORTERS AND TRANSCRIBERS 1323 RHODE ISLAND AVE., N.W. (202) 234-4433 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20005-3701 (202) 234-4433