Conaway Introduces Bill to Add More Types of Nuke Waste at Dump in Andrews

 

Washington, D.C. — Thursday, Congressman Mike Conaway (R-TX) and Congressman Darrell Issa (R-CA)  introduced a bill that will, as Conway described it, pave a path forward for storage of the nation’s nuclear waste in Andrews.

The Texas Tribune reported in April 2016 that Waste Control Specialist, the company that owns the nuclear waste dump near Andrews and the Texas-New Mexico border, applied for the license to build and maintain a temporary storage site for the spent fuel.

“The Interim Consolidated Storage Act would allow the Department of Energy to use interest from the National Nuclear Fund to contract temporary storage facilities for spent nuclear fuel and could have the federal government begin collecting waste from nuclear facilities across the country in as little as five years,” Conaway stated in a release.

“Nuclear waste should be stored with the utmost care, but currently, licensed facilities such as Waste Control Specialists in Andrews, Texas, are not able to serve as interim nuclear waste storage sites due to an outdated law and bureaucratic inefficiencies. As a result, nuclear utility plants currently have no choice but to store their waste on site. This legislation allows the Department of Energy to cut through the red tape and enter into contracts with these licensed facilities, such as the one in Andrews, ensuring that nuclear waste will be properly stored until a permanent site is established,” Conaway stated.

Joining Conaway in sponsoring the bill is Issa who desires a location to move nuclear power plant waste away from his congressional district.

“The Interim Consolidated Storage Act is a great solution that allows us to break through past years of political gridlock to get this waste out of our communities and into safe, secure sites that are both well-equipped and want to store it.

“Maintaining the status quo isn’t an option. Until we can get temporary and – ideally – permanent storage facilities open, nuclear waste will remain on-site more than 120 different sites nationwide.

“In my district, the San Onofre Nuclear Generation Station houses more than 3.6 million pounds of nuclear material right on the coast, along a fault line, on one of the largest U.S. military bases, in the heart of one of our most densely populated communities. Allowing it to stay there indefinitely is only asking for trouble. This is just one of hundreds of examples of similar sites nationwide. This bill advances a creative solution to this problem and is a reasonable plan to get the waste moved quickly and securely,” Issa stated in the same release.

The Andrews nuclear waste facility received approval to store radioactive waste in 2009. It is the only facility to obtain regulatory approval within the last 30 years to store Class A, B and C low-level radioactive waste.

Conaway’s bill is among many steps in approving the storage of “temporary” radioactive waste at the Andrews site. This type of waste is highly radioactive and originates as spent nuclear reactor fuel, according to reports. The WCS proposal requires the Department of Energy to assume the title and liability for the spent nuclear fuel stored at the site, Texas Tribune reported. Congressional approval is required for the DoE to do so.

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I bet the people of Andrews just can't wait for this to happen. California and the rest of the U.S., dumping their waste in Tx sounds about right. Now, with former Gov. Pinhead Perry to head the DOE, (hope he doesn't think that's a female deer), I'm sure this will pass and I'm sure it won't be temporary. I guess this will definitely make Andrews a bright spot in Tx. Thanks Conaway!

Thanks Rep. Conaway. At least no one from the Andrews area will be mistakenly run over in the dark. You will be able to see them a mile away glowing brilliant blue due to Cherenkov Radiation.

If Conaway thinks that this is safe then he needs to store some nuclear waste where he lives.

The storage containers degrade and leak. That is an inescapable fact. When they leak the radioactive material will eventually find our water supplies.

Get rid of those pesky safety regulations so that our water can be polluted by pipelines, fracking, and nuclear storage facilities. Way to go Conaway.

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