Las Vegas Review-Journal

Key figure in Yucca fight retires at 71

‘We haven’t won the battle,’ Halstead says

- Bygarymart­in Review-journal Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — The man whose name is synonymous with Nevada’s opposition to building a nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain is ending a career after three decades of service to the state under Democratic and Republican governors.

Bob Halstead, executive director for the Nevada Agency for Nuclear Projects, became a well-respected nemesis to the Department of Energy,

Nuclear Regulatory Commission and nuclear energy lobby.

Although the Trump administra­tion and Yucca Mountain advocates from other states in Congress have backed off previous proposals to store 110,000 metric tons of spent fuel rods and radioactiv­e waste north of Las Vegas, Halstead is reluctant to let down his guard.

“We haven’t won the battle,” Halstead, 71, said in an interview with the Review-journal on Wednesday.

Halstead allowed, however, that watching President Donald Trump flip-flop in Las Vegas on Yucca Mountain this year was a momentous occasion in the decades-old fight between the state and the federal government.

Trump had pushed for three years to jump-start licensing. He did not do so this year, an election year in which Nevada remains a swing state and possibly pivotal to the presidenti­al outcome.

“I think the high point is President Trump’s speech in Las Vegas,” Halstead said with a chortle, “because that meant we kicked his ass.”

Wide-ranging fight

In addition to nuclear waste, Halstead led the state’s legal and scientific challenge to the National Nuclear Security Administra­tion’s

secret shipments of weapons-grade plutonium to the Nevada National Security Site north of Las Vegas in 2018.

“I don’t want Interstate 11 to become the plutonium expressway,” Halstead told the Review-journal at the time. He accused the Department of Energy of underhande­d dealing in shipping the material even as the state openly was preparing

a legal motion to stop it.

The blustery rhetoric toward the Energy Department was nothing new.

Halstead for years accused the department of submitting an applicatio­n that was “bungled” to build the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository. Reciting memorized facts, analysis, missteps and faulty conclusion­s by government experts, he would often blurt out: “You can’t make this stuff up.”

Congress designated Yucca Mountain as the sole site for permanent

nuclear waste from power plants and Navy ships. Under the George W. Bush administra­tion, the Energy Department applied for a license to build the facility, but that was scrapped when President Barack Obama was elected and Sen. Harry Reid, D-nev., became Senate majority leader.

Since then, Trump and lawmakers with nuclear power plants in their states have tried to restart the licensing process. Congress has failed to approve funding for the process.

‘A fierce and dedicated partner’

In a tribute to Halstead, Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-nev., submitted to the Congressio­nal Record on July 2 a statement that commemorat­ed his deeds. His last day working for the state was technicall­y July 5.

She said, “He has been a fierce and dedicated partner in the fight against the Yucca Mountain project.”

Halstead worked as executive director of the state’s nuclear projects agency since 2011. Prior to that, he was a consultant to the state about nuclear transporta­tion issues in Nevada. In all, he has over 30 years of service to the state involving nuclear waste, radioactiv­e materials and transporta­tion.

Cortez Masto cited Halstead’s institutio­nal knowledge about the state’s nuclear history in her July 2 tribute to his “decades long commitment to helping Nevadans.”

Halstead was first hired by Bob Loux, who led the state’s nuclear agency for 23 years, and resigned over a controvers­ial pay issue. Republican Gov. Jim Gibbons appointed

Bruce Breslow, previously a Sparks mayor, to run the office.

Gov. Brian Sandoval, a Republican, hired Halstead to run the agency in 2011, taking over from an acting caretaker.

Bipartisan figure, gone fishing

Halstead’s tenure is marked by his ability to work with Republican and Democratic governors, U.S. senators and members of the House of Representa­tives. In his lifetime, Halstead has worked for 11 governors in several states, including six in Nevada.

It’s part of his family lineage, public service for the people without a public showing of political leanings.

“They kept out of partisan issues,” Halstead said.

His father was a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service special-agent-incharge in eastern North Carolina. His grandfathe­r fought against the plume trade in Florida.

“The business my family has chosen is environmen­tal protection,” Halstead said. “This is what I was born for.”

As his career with Nevada ends, Halstead plans to hang a shingle as a consultant for nuclear waste issues, giving the state the right of first refusal.

Other than that, he’s ordered a Nevada fishing license and plans to fish with wife Margaret and his two grown children back in Wisconsin, the family home.

“One of the first things I’ll do when I get back there is go fishing together,” he said.

Contact Gary Martin at gmartin@ reviewjour­nal.com or 202-662-7390. Follow @garymartin­dc on Twitter.

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