Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Titus criticizes effort to revive nuke waste plan

Congress pushing again for Yucca Mountain project

- By SEAN WHALEY

CARSON CITY — It is a riddle for the ages: What is dead but never dies? The answer in Nevada is the proposed nuclear waste dump at Yucca Mountain.

As a state legislativ­e panel overseeing the moribund Yucca Mountain high-level nuclear waste repository gets ready to meet later this week, Rep. Dina Titus has criticized a new effort in Congress to move the project forward.

In a news release last week, Titus, D-Nev., spoke out about a plan to fund the project in the Fiscal 2017 Energy-Water Appropriat­ions bill, HR 5055.

The provision would allot the U.S. Department of Energy $150 million to continue an applicatio­n process to license the project as a nuclear storage facility. The legislatio­n also prohibits any funds from being used to close Yucca Mountain as a future storage option.

Titus noted that congressio­nal supporters of Yucca Mountain made the same attempt last year but failed to see it become law.

Titus has sponsored the Nuclear Waste Informed Consent Act, which would require projects such as Yucca Mountain to receive approval from local government­s in affected areas.

“Yucca Mountain is not a secure depository that would seal dangerous waste safely for a million years,” Titus said.

“It is instead a proposal based on bad science and faulty assumption­s. Specifical­ly, the NRC confirmed that it is not secure, that it will leak, and that radiation will travel miles through undergroun­d water sources to farming communitie­s in the Amargosa Valley on its way to Death Valley National Park.”

The waste will also have to be transporte­d across the U.S. to the site, 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas. The Obama administra­tion in 2010 shelved the controvers­ial project, which faced opposition from many Nevada political leaders and citizens, but efforts to revive it continue.

U.S. Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nev., sent a letter to the House Appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee members on April 12 asking that the provision, and another $20 million for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to advance the Yucca Mountain license applicatio­n, be removed from the legislatio­n.

“I would urge the subcommitt­ee to prioritize funding for the Department of Energy’s efforts to advance alternativ­e long-term storage options for our nation’s spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactiv­e waste,” he said.

“While I understand that many of my colleagues disagree with me on the issue of Yucca Mountain, Nevadans have a right to be safe in their own backyards.”

Nevada’s Committee on High-Level Radioactiv­e Waste will meet for the first time this year on Friday to get an overview of the status of the project from various officials, including Bob Halstead, executive director of the state Agency for Nuclear Projects.

While some house members may want to move the project forward, the Senate version of an appropriat­ions bill contains no such funding.

Sen. Harry Reid of Nevada has repeatedly said the project is dead.

But presumptiv­e GOP presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump has not made it clear where he stands on the issue.

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