Laptop Battery It's early, yes, but it may already be time to award the Leaden-Footed Lobbyist award for the year. Who can expect to outdo John Sununu, former governor of New Hampshire, who has been retained by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce to coax the state of Nevada to accept other states' nuclear garbage, and who has issued a wraparound insult-injury to the state guaranteed to infuriate just about everybody?
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Thinkpad Sununu told the Las Vegas Review-Journal that if Nevada didn't do its patriotic duty, the country should vacation elsewhere.
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Microsoft "He's probably helped us," chuckled the leader of the opposition, Nevada's senior senator and the Senate's Democratic whip, Harry Reid. "The big klutz."
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Laptop Computers Lecturing another state on its patriotic duty is hazardous, particularly if it's Nevada, with its painful history of nuclear tests and its record number of military bases. But assuming that Nevada doesn't know anything is even worse. Nevada, after all, has been resisting the repository for decades and is quite familiar with the fact that Sununu, as governor of New Hampshire and a nuclear power fan, fought like a tiger to keep the toxic waste out of the White Mountains.
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Laptop Computer Then, the argument made was political. If the federal repository came to the Granite State, it would bring endless contention about nuclear power with it. New Hampshire's Seabrook nuclear plant was a subject of bitter argument among environmentalists and academics from the moment it went on line. Sununu and his confederates argued that it would swamp all other issues in the state's presidential primary, which is always the nation's first, something that would not be good for nuclear power or the state. Nevadans have no such political tool handy. Two million people and four electoral votes gets no respect.
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Desktop Computer Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham's announcement that Nevada had won the booby prize was expected. Even the lead lobbyist for the Nuclear Energy Institute in Las Vegas, former governor Bob List, says he wishes the radioactivity would go elsewhere. He concentrates on what he calls "Plan B": acceptance of what can't be avoided and lining up job opportunities from the project.
Notebooks George Bush can accept or reject Abraham's recommendation. He is expected to be for it. He and Vice President Dick Cheney are gung-ho for nuclear power, which has been in eclipse since well-publicized incidents at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl. Cheney declines to share with the public the deliberations that led to the energy policy that passed the House.
Lenovo Reid, a former gambling commissioner in Nevada, reckons his chances of stopping the government from stuffing Yucca Mountain with nuclear waste that remains toxic for 10,000 years at no better than 40 percent. A natty, indefatigable expediter of Senate business, he is wired with his colleagues, but the legislation was written with a pen dipped in inevitability. Yucca Mountain is the only possible site. Filibuster is out, fast track is in, which means no amendments.
Hard Drive In the House, chances of defeating Yucca are dim. A recent pro-nuclear vote on the Price-Anderson Act showed which way the wind was blowing. Almost casually, the House voted to extend a giant break for nuclear energy. "In the case of a major nuclear accident," says Anna Aurilio of U.S. Public Interest Research Group, "the nuclear industry gets a federal guarantee of limited liability."
Travelstar Sept. 11 is cited by both sides in the Yucca Mountain showdown. Abraham said the calamity highlighted the urgent need to concentrate nuclear waste in one facility. But Reid emphasizes the perils of transporting 77,000 tons of waste currently stored at the nation's nuclear plants. It would provide target practice for terrorists, he says. One hundred thousand trucks would be required, and 20,000 trains.
Gateway Reid was encouraged recently by visits to Denver and St. Louis. Both passed local ordinances against nuclear-bearing trains or trucks using their rails or streets. The fight over the mountain promises to make the issue of drilling in Alaska seem a Sunday school picnic. John Sununu's presence alone would ensure it.
Laptop Parts By Mary McGrory
Washington Post - 1/20/2002
Topic: Nuclear
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