Native dumping ground.The scent of sage and the pounding hooves of abundant wild game are a memory to the Skull Valley Band of Goshute Shoshone Indians in Utah, an hour from Salt Lake City. Today, when the people look north from their 18,000-acre reservation, they smell chlorine gas from the Magnesium Corporation plant, identified by the Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and (EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid. EPA abbr. eicosapentaenoic acid EPA, n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic. EPA, n. ) as the most polluting plant of its kind in the country. Turning northwest, they see the Envirocare Low-Level Radioactive Disposal Site, where waste from the entire country is buried. The site has neighbors: two hazardous waste Hazardous waste Any solid, liquid, or gaseous waste materials that, if improperly managed or disposed of, may pose substantial hazards to human health and the environment. Every industrial country in the world has had problems with managing hazardous wastes. incinerators and one hazardous waste landfill. Directly south, there is the Intermountain Power Project, which provides coal-fired electrical power mostly to California but pollutes local skies. Finally, to the east, lies the world's largest nerve gas incinerator. And now pending is a plan to transport 44,000 tons of radioactive waste (80 percent of the entire U.S. supply) for interim storage on leased reservation land. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), an independent U.S. government commission, created by the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974 and charged with licensing and regulating civilian use of nuclear energy to protect the public and the environment. (NRC NRC abbr. 1. National Research Council 2. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Noun 1. NRC - an independent federal agency created in 1974 to license and regulate nuclear power plants ) Atomic Safety and Licensing Board ruled in Favor of granting a license to Private Fuel Storage (PFS PFS, n post facilitation stretch; therapeutic approach utilized during proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation in which the patient begins the stretch midway between the fully relaxed and fully stretched position and uses maximum level of effort to ) last February. Tribal Chairperson Leon Bear, a primary supporter of the lease, signed the agreement despite significant tribal opposition at public hearings. "They're treating the tribe as invisible people," says Kevin Kamps, nuclear waste specialist at Nuclear Information and Resource Service The Nuclear Information and Resource Service (NIRS) is a nonprofit group founded in 1978 to be the information and networking center for citizens and organizations concerned about nuclear power, radioactive waste, radiation and sustainable energy issues. (NIRS NIRS Near Infrared Spectroscopy NIRS Nuclear Information and Resource Service NIRS Near-Infrared Reflectance Spectroscopy NIRS National Institute of Radiological Science NIRS National Information and Reporting System NIRS National Informatics Recognition System ) in Washington, D.C. "The company says, 'If there was an accident it would only extend out two miles.' But that includes the entire Goshute community." An NIRS petition protesting the plan contains signatures representing 31 Native nations, a variety of national and international groups, and numerous state and local agencies. According to the petition, "The ... storage/transport containers are of questionable structural integrity and there is an increasing risk that PFS could well become de facto permanent storage." Among the petition signatories is the Indigenous Environmental Network (IEN IEN - Internet Experiment Note ) in Minnesota. "We believe this country has an unsustainable energy problem," says IEN Executive Director Tim Goldtooth, a Native American member of the Dine' (Navaho) and Dakota tribes. "What right do we have to leave this problem for future generations? It reflects a society out of balance with the sacredness of nature." The Nuclear Energy Institute defends the location of the federal dump. "It was kind of a natural match between people looking for a place to store nuclear waste and people looking for economic development," said senior project manager Rod McCullum to the San Diego Union-Tribune. Kamps adds that if President Bush achieves his nuclear revival goals, uranium mining on tribal lands would probably be revived. McCullum agrees, noting that "anyone who wants to move forward with nuclear energy, realizes we have to take care of the waste." CONTACT: Indigenous Environmental Network, (218) 751-4967, www.ienearth. org; Nuclear Information and Resource Service, (202)328-0002, www.nirs.org. |
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