Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Bill would give Nevadans defense against Yucca Mountain

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Maybe, finally, it’s time for Nevada to obtain a right of refusal on efforts to dump the nation’s nuclear waste in our state. This year, as they’ve done in the past, Southern Nevada’s congressio­nal delegates have introduced a bill that would ban the federal government from transporti­ng waste into a state without getting permission from the governor and local officials. With that protection in place, Nevada would gain substantia­l power to halt the developmen­t of the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository and keep it off the table as an option for storing radioactiv­e materials.

The bill, which is spearheade­d by Rep. Dina Titus and Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto in their respective chambers, would require the feds to obtain unanimous permission from the governor, affected units of local government and affected Native American tribes before shipping waste. In the case of shipments to Yucca Mountain, it could also involve the Clark County Commission if and when the federal government authorizes detailed plans for transporta­tion routes.

The previous bills died amid opposition from the Trump administra­tion and leaders of other states, mostly Republican­s, who were bent on shoving waste from their nuclear power plants and weapons-making facilities down Nevadans’ throats.

But this year could be different, thanks to several key factors. For starters, our political clout in Washington is on the rise, with our Southern Nevada congressio­nal delegates increasing­ly working their way into positions of prominence and as members of powerful committees. One example: Cortez Masto rose up the leadership ranks last year when, as chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, she played a key role in Democrats gaining control of the Senate.

Another plus for Nevada is having Joe Biden in the White House. Biden and our state Democratic leaders are close, with Biden having campaigned here extensivel­y as Barack Obama’s vice president and as a candidate in 2020. Gov. Steve Sisolak gave him an early endorsemen­t last year after Biden endorsed Sisolak’s gubernator­ial bid in 2018.

In addition, Biden remains close with

Given that both Democratic and Republican political leaders in Carson City, Washington and Clark County have been staunchly against the project, the bill would offer Nevadans some assurance that the project would remain dead, as federal officials would be unable to obtain permission to transport waste here.

former Nevada Sen. Harry Reid, with whom he served in the Senate for decades.

All of this bodes well for Nevada in the decades-long bid to protect itself from the Yucca Mountain project.

Biden supported Obama in suspending licensing for the repository in 2010 and keeping it on ice through the remainder of his administra­tion. Biden also is on record unequivoca­lly saying he opposes the project, including in an interview with the Sun’s editorial board before last year’s Nevada caucuses.

“I assure you as president there will be no storage at Yucca Mountain, period,” Biden said. “And it’s not just because of the instabilit­y and possibilit­y of earthquake­s, but because of the transporta­tion to Yucca Mountain.”

The new bill would give Nevada a strong shield to block any attempt to resurrect the project. The entire Southern Nevada delegation has signed onto it. And given that both Democratic and Republican political leaders in Carson City, Washington and Clark County have been staunchly against the project, the bill would offer Nevadans some assurance that the project would remain dead, as federal officials would be unable to obtain permission to transport waste here. Unless the political attitude in our state were to change drasticall­y, Nevadans could be assured that the state wouldn’t allow shipments.

In a prepared statement, Titus said officials in the Biden administra­tion and Department of Energy are allied with Nevada on the issue. Cortez Masto, also in a statement, indicated that Energy Secretary

Jennifer Granholm would work with her on developing alternativ­e storage plans that wouldn’t involve shipping tons of highly radioactiv­e waste through Las Vegas.

“For too long, the voices of our state, local and tribal government­s in Nevada have been silenced by a broken process,” Cortez Masto said in a prepared statement. “This legislatio­n ensures that states like Nevada have a seat at the table when a permanent nuclear repository is proposed in their backyards.”

We’ll watch this bill with fingers crossed. But first we’ll applaud the congressio­nal delegation for its vigilance and persistenc­e on the issue.

The idea of moving thousands of metric tons of this material per year along train tracks and truck routes through Las Vegas is unacceptab­le, as is storing it in a mountain where it could leak into the groundwate­r or escape into the atmosphere over the thousands of years it will remain radioactiv­e.

Keep in mind, this stuff is so hazardous that even when stored in heavily lined transporta­tion casks, it will give off enough radioactiv­ity to be measured a half-mile away. The consequenc­es of one accident or a terrorist attack during transporta­tion through Las Vegas would be terrifying.

Therefore, as Cortez Masto stated, we deserve a seat at the table in any discussion involving Yucca Mountain. It’s commendabl­e that our leaders in Washington have recognized that the stars may be aligning this year, and are taking advantage of the opportunit­y to finally pass this much-needed bill.

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