New "Mobile Chernobyl" Bill
Filed in the U.S. Congress:
Ask Your U.S. Representative and U.S. Senators to Say
NO to Nuclear Waste Transport
House Resolution 45 (H.R. 45), the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1999, is
the most recent attempt by the nuclear power industry to force the premature
transportation of 8,000 casks of high-level nuclear waste over 30 years through Indiana to
Yucca Mountain, Nevada.
With H.R. 45, the nuclear power industry intends for you, the
taxpayer, to assume the financial and health risks for moving their nuclear waste across
the country. Millions of Americans would be at risk from probable accidents involving
high-level nuclear wastes and would be assessed billions in tax dollars for transportation
and disposal costs.
The nuclear power industry refuses to compromise on this issue.
1999 will be its third attempt to pass "Mobile Chernobyl" through Congress.
Moreover, last year industry attorneys refused to accept money from the Department of
Energy to pay for storage of nuclear waste on site at nuclear power plants. Instead, the
nuclear power industry wants the public to pay for the transportation and disposal of its
wastes, which is much more expensive but relieves the industry of any responsibility for
the waste.
Environmental and citizen groups expect the next "Mobile
Chernobyl" bill to be similar to the last two. It will most likely:
Order the Department of Energy to begin interim storage
construction without approval of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and before a
permanent solution is approved.
Mandate the transportation of radioactive waste through 43 states,
including Indiana, over the next 30 years. Based on current safety statistics, at
least 15 accidents involving radioactive waste per year can be expected on U.S. highways
and railways if the bill passes.
Transfer title and liability of high-level nuclear waste from the
nuclear power industry to taxpayers before a repository for the waste even opens. This
means that the public will pay for transportation and disposal costs, and any liability
incurred as the result of accidents. According to the Department of Energy, one bad
accident could cost hundreds of millions of dollars.
Preempt or diminish state and local environmental and safety laws
and standards regarding nuclear waste transportation and storage and restrict public
participation in developing and enforcing those laws and regulations.
New Developments
Since last year, there have been a number of developments on the Mobile
Chernobyl issue:
The Indiana House of Representatives passed House Resolution 56,
urging Congress not to transport nuclear waste until the nuclear power plants have been
shut down and the location of a permanent disposal facility has been determined.
Ground water studies conducted by the Federal government demonstrate
that Yucca Mountain will most likely not be able to contain radioactive waste. Scientists
have found that water moves through the mountain much more quickly than expected.
The Radiation and Public Health Project (formed by scientists
concerned with public exposure to radiation) asserts that any additional radiation
exposure, such as exposure to radiation along nuclear waste transportation routes, is of
particular concern for a developing baby in the mothers womb.
What You Can Do
Call or write your U.S. Senators and U.S. Representatives today. (see
below) Urge them to vote against H.R. 45. Call newly elected U.S. Senator Evan
Bayh. Ask him to continue his opposition to out-of-state waste by voting NO on H.R.
45.
U.S. Representatives Who Voted
Against Consumer Interests In 1998 |
U.S. Representatives Who Voted for
Consumer Interests In 1998 |
Previous Vote: Yes
District 8
John Hostettler (R-Evansville)
1507 Longworth House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
202-225-4636
e-mail: johnhost@hr.house.gov |
Previous Vote: No
District 7
Ed Pease ( R-TerreHaute)
119 Cannon House Ofc. Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
202-225-5805 |
Previous Vote: Yes
District 1
Pete Visclosky (D-Merrillville)
2313 Rayburn House Office Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
202-225-2461 |
Previous Vote: No
District 4
Mark Souder (R-Ft. Wayne)
109 Cannon House Ofc. Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
202-225-4436 |
|
Previous Vote: Freshman
District 9
Baron Hill (D-Seymour)
1208 Longworth House Ofc. Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
202-225-5315 |
|
Previous Vote: No
District 3
Tim Roemer (D-South Bend)
2352 Rayburn House Ofc. Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
202-225-3915
e-mail: troemer@hr.house.gov |
|
Previous Vote: No
District 10
Julia Carson (D-Indianapolis)
1541 Longworth House Offc.Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
202-225-4011 |
|
Previous Vote: No
District 2
David McIntosh (R-Muncie)
1610 Longworth House Offc.Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20515
202-225-3021
e-mail: mcintosh@hr.house.gov |
U.S. Senate Anti-Consumer
Vote In 1998 |
U.S. Senate Freshman In 1999 |
Previous Vote: Yes
Richard Lugar (R)
306 Hart Senate Ofc. Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20510
202-224-4814 |
Previous Vote: Freshman
Evan Bayh (D)
380 Russell Senate Ofc. Bldg.
Washington, D.C. 20510
202-224-5623 |
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