On September 14, 2018, CACC joined with other national environmental organizations, represented by Attorney Terry Lodge, to legally intervene against the Holtec International/Eddy-Lea [Counties] Energy Alliance application to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) for a construction and operation license for a so-called centralized interim storage facility for irradiated nuclear fuel in southeastern New Mexico. This proposed dump would have enormous health and safety ramifications for a great number of communities and watersheds along transport routes, (including many Great Lakes communities) as well as those communities near the proposed construction site. You may access the press release by clicking this link.
Category Archives: Clean Water
NEWS FROM BEYOND NUCLEAR
|
|
Beyond Nuclear Appeals to U.S. Supreme Court in Opposition to Fermi 3 Proposed New Atomic Reactor |
|
Environmental Coalition’s Decade-Long Resistance Challenges NRC Rule that Undermines National Environmental Policy Act to Aid New Reactor Construction | |
Washington, D.C. and Monroe County, MI—Beyond Nuclear, represented by Toledo, Ohio attorney Terry Lodge, has appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court regarding the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s (NRC) violation of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) at the proposed new Fermi Nuclear Power Plant Unit 3 atomic reactor in Frenchtown Township, Michigan. For over six years, the environmental coalition opposing Fermi 3 has protested NRC’s exclusion of the 29-mile-long, 300-foot-wide transmission line corridor from its NEPA-required Environmental Impact Statement (EIS). 10.8 miles of that transmission corridor would pass through previously undisturbed ecosystems, including forested wetlands, very likely critical habitat for numerous endangered and threatened plant and animal species.
On Monday, Lodge submitted a Petition for a Writ of Certiorari to the U.S. Supreme Court. (A link to the Petition, and related documents, is posted at the Beyond Nuclear website.) The appeal, of a November 27, 2017 U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruling, questions: Did the NRC commit segmentation, and violate the longstanding recognition of the pre-eminence of NEPA, when it redefined “construction” in its Atomic Energy Act regulations to exclude environmental impact analysis of a major, integral transmission line corridor through critical habitat for endangered and threatened species? Lodge further questioned: Did the NRC violate its duty to obey NEPA when it denied admission of public intervenors’ contention because of an arbitrarily short deadline and simultaneously rejected its own Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel’s (ASLBP) sua sponte recommended adjudication of the matter? The ASLBP presiding over the Fermi 3 licensing proceeding from 2009 to 2015 found the environmental coalition’s transmission corridor NEPA contention merited it to request permission from the NRC Commissioners to undertake its own review of the matter. Such ASLBP sua sponte initiatives have only occurred a small handful of times in decades. The NRC Commission, however, blocked the ASLBP review, just as it rejected the environmental coalition’s appeals, leading to this federal lawsuit. “This is the first time the NRC’s 2007 Limited Work Authorization (LWA) rule change has been challenged,” said Kevin Kamps of Beyond Nuclear, a national watchdog on the nuclear power industry based in Takoma Park, Maryland. “LWA allowed ground to be broken, and major excavation and construction to begin in a great big hurry, at proposed new reactors at Vogtle in Georgia, and Summer in South Carolina. We are striving to prevent such high-speed bulldozing, in violation of NEPA, at Fermi 3,” said Kamps. The NRC LWA rule change was brought to public light by Bloomberg reporter Elliot Blair Smith in a September 25, 2007 article entitled “Nuclear Utilities Redefine One Word to Bulldoze for New Plants.” Critics blasted the rule change, undermining NEPA, as Orwellian. (For a Beyond Nuclear backgrounder, see this link.) To exclude such major nuclear power plant construction projects as transmission line corridors as “preconstruction activities,” in an end run around many decades of established environmental protection law, critics slammed as “Nukespeak.” “In one of the worst revolving door scandals in NRC history, NRC Commissioner Jeffrey Merrifield shepherded the LWA rule change into regulations, upending decades of agency policy by redefining the word ‘construction’ to now exclude such major construction projects as transmission corridors,” said Michael Keegan of Don’t Waste Michigan. “After this favor to the nuclear industry, Merrifield then immediately went to work for the Shaw Group, which specialized in new reactor construction, taking a senior vice president position with an annual salary topping a million dollars,” said Keegan, who has watchdogged the Fermi nuclear power plant for more than three decades. “This jurisdictional grab is clearly not in the public interest,” Keegan added. “NEPA is one of the top environmental protection laws in our country,” said Toledo attorney Terry Lodge. “NRC cannot be allowed to excuse itself from obeying this half-century old, hard won law,” said Lodge, who has served as legal counsel for Beyond Nuclear and the environmental coalition since the beginning of this licensing proceeding in 2008. “The list of endangered and threatened species likely inhabiting this corridor, that would be damaged or destroyed by the transmission lines and towers, includes the Indiana bat, mussels such as the Snuffbox, Northern Riffleshell, and Purple Lilliput, snakes such as the Eastern Massasauga rattler and Eastern Fox constrictor, and plants such as the Eastern Prairie fringed orchid, to name but some,” said Lodge. This U.S. Supreme Court appeal caps a decade of resistance to Fermi 3. Detroit Edison (DTE) announced the proposed new reactor in February 2007, as part of the so-called “Nuclear Renaissance.” DTE applied to NRC for a combined construction and operation license in September 2008. The bi-national environmental coalition, comprised of Beyond Nuclear, Citizens for Alternatives to Chemical Contamination, Citizens Environment Alliance of Southwestern Ontario, Don’t Waste Michigan, and Sierra Club Michigan Chapter, legally intervened in March 2009. The coalition, with Lodge as legal counsel, ultimately submitted some three-dozen technical contentions to the NRC’s ASLB. Oral hearings were held in downtown Monroe, MI at Halloween, 2013. When the NRC approved DTE’s Fermi 3 license in May 2015, the coalition immediately appealed to the federal courts. This appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court not only culminates this decade of resistance. It carries on a tradition of anti-nuclear resistance at Fermi dating back six decades, to when the United Auto Workers appealed its case against Fermi Unit 1 to the U.S. Supreme Court. Fermi 3 would be built on the very spot where Fermi 1 had a partial core meltdown on October 5, 1966, as documented in John G. Fuller’s book We Almost Lost Detroit. |
|
Beyond Nuclear aims to educate and activate the public about the connections between nuclear power and nuclear weapons and the need to abolish both to safeguard our future. Beyond Nuclear advocates for an energy future that is sustainable, benign and democratic. The Beyond Nuclear team works with diverse partners and allies to provide the public, government officials, and the media with the critical information necessary to move humanity toward a world beyond nuclear. Beyond Nuclear: 6930 Carroll Avenue, Suite 400, Takoma Park, MD 20912. Info@beyondnuclear.org. www.beyondnuclear.org. |
Water Fest sure to make a splash!
Bring your favorite lawn chair to Mill Pond Park on Sunday July 9th for the Chippewa River Water Festival! The free concert will run from 12pm to 9pm.
Location/Directions:
Mill Pond Park
607 S Adams st
Mt. Pleasant, MI 48858
https://www.google.com/maps/place/Millpond+Park/
Check out the fb event
https://www.facebook.com/events/1392219884178741
Performers and Guest Speakers:
Steve & Mae Pego – Stories & Water Ceremony
Open Range
Alicia Patch Oldham – Michigan Poet
Stephanie Terpening
Lynn Dominguez – American Canoe Association
The Mudpuppys
Jeff Ostahowski – MCWC
Hawks & Owls
Mark Cole – Walk for Water
Barbarossa Brothers
Mystic Dub
Outreach Education & Vendors
Grand Rapids Water Protectors
Little Forks Conservancy
Naturally Yours By Well Oiled Mama
Chippewa Nature Center
Chippewa Watershed Conservancy
Mt. Pleasant Discovery Museum
Photography by Lorena Smith
Saginaw Chippewa Tribal College
Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation
Explore Chiropractic
Designed Henna Tattoos
American Canoe Association
Canoe Reflections
Canoe-Camping for Women
Marilyn Richmond Cards & Jewelry
Greentree Co-Op
Pita Pit
Los Jalapenos
Sponsors and Supporters
Watershed Initiative Network
Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe
Isabella Community Credit Union
Kerr & Utt Trust & Estate, Elder Law Firm, PLLC
Hometown Health Foods
Mt Pleasant Parks and Recreation
D Clare Services
T-Shirt Graphic Design Contest winning entry by Spencer Wehner
CACC would like to extend a hearty THANK YOU to everyone who has helped make this festival a reality! See you there! Extra special thanks to our co-coordinators Taylor Hollis – Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe, Carol Moody – Mt Pleasant Parks & Rec, and Liz Busch – Buckley’s Mountainside Canoes
Want to help CACC continue this and other great programs? Make a tax deductible donation today! [paypal_donation_button]