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Thursday, August 14

BRATTLEBORO — A handful of citizen groups and residents of Massachusetts and Vermont are urging the Bay State’s attorney general to not give up on forcing the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to change the way it evaluates the risks of spent fuel storage at Pilgrim, Indian Point and Vermont Yankee nuclear power plants.Earlier this month, the NRC denied a request by attorneys general from Massachusetts and New York that it consider changing its review methods.

“We hope that we can count on you to take this matter back to the First Circuit so that the NRC will finally be forced to address the significant public health and environmental risks posed by high-density pool storage of spent fuel at plants such as Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee,” stated Deb Katz, spokeswoman for Citizen Awareness Network, which opposes the relicensing of Yankee.

The AGs submitted a rule-making petition to the NRC that would have altered the license renewal process to include site-specific reviews of spent fuel pools, the tanks of water inside reactor buildings where nuclear waste is stored. Currently, spent fuel pools are evaluated on a generic basis, meaning the assumptions about waste storage are common to many nuclear power plants, requiring no special reviews.

Many of the reactors in the United States have pools that are filling up rapidly. To meet the demand for more storage space, power plant operators are moving the oldest