Email Your Comments to New Mexico Environment Dept.
Dear Editor,
The HOLTEC site that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission would allow for “interim storage” of 10,000 tons of nuclear reactor waste is a location for disaster. According to the NM Environment Department, the location was not chosen for environmental safety but rather because it was “privately owned, near highways and other federal land.”
Further, the NRC environmental statement ignores the geology and hydrology of the site that is riddled with playas, sinkholes, fractured bedrock, subject to subsidence and hydrologic transport of radioactive waste to groundwater.
The Cost/Benefit analysis of the NRC does not adequately consider the adverse impact on the value of the region’s water resource, gas, minerals, agriculture, and wildlife from radioactive waste forever seeping into the environment.
New Mexico already experienced the testing of a nuclear weapon. There is irresponsible treatment of its citizens to suffer the exposure of nuclear fallout, laboratory radioactive waste, piles of uranium tailings, dam failure and the ensuing cancer and diseases often without warning, compensation and medical treatment.
The concerns of New Mexico’s Governor, Legislature, agencies, tribes and public are most often blithely dismissed by the NRC as “beyond the scope” of its environmental statement. NRC is not doing the New Mexico public a favor with its faux safety analysis.
NRC’s failed record for protection of the public is not inspiring.
NRC allowed a Diablo Canyon reactor to operate after it was built backwards on an eroding sea cliff in an area of tsunamis. NRC allowed the spent nuclear fuel at San Onofre, California to be placed next to the ocean in an area for tsunamis and rising ocean levels. NRC allowed the Trojan Nuclear Reactor in Oregon to expand spent fuel storage on the Columbia River knowing of geologic evidence that an earthquake could be twice the strength the reactor could withstand. NRC fails to consider hydrogen explosions for US reactors such as occurred at Fukushima.
The nation’s reactor waste was not generated in New Mexico and should remain in place where produced until there is a suitable permanent geologic repository without a second removal that may never occur.
David B. McCoy
818 448-9981
2446 Palomas Dr. NE
Albuquerque, NM 87110
Email Your Comments to New Mexico Environment Dept.
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The Alliance, a coalition of groups and individuals, works to protect the diversity of traditional cultures and industries, including farming and ranching, of the Southwest US as well as to support innovative projects that promote the economic and environmental well being of the people of the Southwest, United States.
We are in opposition to projects which endanger the health and well being of our communities while offering little economic advancement; a proposal of Holtec International to bring high level nuclear waste to south eastern New Mexico is one of those projects, as well as the renewal of uranium mining in western New Mexico and the proposed high level waste dump in West Texas.
We advocate for using the national labs to develop technologies that provide better long term solutions to domestic issues such as radioactive waste, converting from the lab's current central mission of manufacturing weapons of mass destruction.
The Southwest Alliance will promote regenerative policies in agriculture, land use that balances human use with wild life habitat, as well as reuse of fibers, and re use of metals and other materials in economic development. SWA will advocate also for policies that develop technologies to repurpose materials and promote land use policies that facilitate the repurposing of land use for successive generations without transferring contaminated waste to other areas.
We strive to educate on public policy that protects human health and natural resources as well as policy that poisons and exhausts the land, air, water, and all natural life including human life, and to advocate for changes in public policy to prevent any further degradation to natural resources from the use of destructive technologies, including nuclear technology. In addition, we will advocate for using the safest policies and best available technology to deal with all industrial wastes, including nuclear wastes from weapon production and nuclear power plants.
The Alliance will work for consensus on issues and use the Jemez principals in the decision making process