Morning Briefing - September 22, 2016
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September 22, 2016

Lawmakers Want NRC to Uphold Safety Exemptions Longer

By ExchangeMonitor

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission should uphold all emergency preparedness and response requirements at shuttered nuclear power plants until spent fuel is moved into dry storage, a host of lawmakers suggested in a recent letter to the agency.

The NRC’s issuing of safety exemptions has drawn criticism from lawmakers and residents near closed nuclear power plants. In Vermont, for example, locals spoke out in 2015 when the NRC granted a safety exemption to Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Plant owner Entergy, shrinking the plant’s 10-mile emergency planning zone to within the site’s boundaries. Entergy plans to move Vermont Yankee’s spent fuel into dry storage by the end of 2020.

The NRC issued the exemption with the reasoning that a closed facility poses less of a safety risk than an operating plant. Concerned residents and lawmakers, however, contend that safety risks remain high until fuel is moved into dry storage.

Fifteen Lawmakers from Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Illinois wrote to NRC Chairman Stephen Burns on Sept. 16, offering suggestions as the regulator works through its 2019 decommissioning rulemaking. The rulemaking is intended to streamline the decommissioning process, with a particular focus on reducing the need for regulatory exemptions.

The lawmakers voiced concern over industry calls that the NRC “narrow the scope” of the rulemaking and focus first on standardization of exemption requests. This approach, the letter argues, delays consideration of broader decommissioning issues in the rulemaking, including: whether the NRC should be the body to approve post-shutdown decommissioning activities reports; determinations on decommissioning timelines; and defining the role of state and local government involvement.

“Delaying consideration of these important issues would hamper the NRC’s proper goal of comprehensively reviewing and revising the rules that govern the decommissioning process,” the letter reads. “Fast-tracking the exemption standardization process risks prioritizing the concerns of the nuclear industry over those of our constituents.”

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NEW: Via public records request, I’ve been able to confirm reporting today that a warrant has been issued for DOE deputy asst. secretary of spent fuel and waste disposition Sam Brinton for another luggage theft, this time at Las Vegas’s Harry Reid airport. (cc: @EMPublications)

DOE spent fuel lead Brinton accused of second luggage theft.



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