[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 72 (Tuesday, May 21, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H2806-H2807]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
YUCCA MOUNTAIN AND SCIENTIFIC INTEGRITY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Shimkus) for 5 minutes.
Mr. SHIMKUS. Mr. Speaker, there's good news in our pursuit of a
repository to hold our Nation's spent nuclear fuel and nuclear waste,
although it went largely unreported.
Officials from both the Department of Energy and the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission have publicly admitted that neither agency has
identified any technical issues that would prevent us from being able
to develop a safe repository at Yucca Mountain in Nevada. This
admission came during a recent hearing before the Energy and Water
Appropriations Subcommittee in response to a question from my friend
and colleague, Mr. Frelinghuysen, the subcommittee chairman.
To stakeholders in the nuclear waste debate, this fact should come as
no surprise. Why else would Greg Jaczko, Senator Reid's former staffer,
abuse his authority as NRC chairman and deceive his Commission
colleagues to scuttle publication of the agency's safety review?
If Yucca Mountain were as scientifically flawed as Senator Reid says
it is, then he would have benefited by having the agency's conclusions
released publicly. Instead, Senator Reid got a promise from President
Obama to shut down the program.
President Obama obliged, with no basis other than the cryptic
statements about Yucca Mountain being ``unworkable.'' Meanwhile,
Senator Reid's protege, Mr. Jaczko, made sure the NRC's independent
technical conclusions never saw the light of day.
These actions have been challenged in court. The State attorneys
general for both Washington and South Carolina, together with the
National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners, Aiken County,
South Carolina, and Nye County, Nevada, have all alleged that the NRC
has violated the Nuclear Waste Policy Act by ceasing its review of the
Yucca Mountain license application, which is mandated under the law.
The case is currently before the District of Columbia Circuit Court of
Appeals.
When President Obama took office, he said that this administration
would ``restore scientific integrity in government decisionmaking.''
Shortly after taking office, he issued a Presidential Memorandum
stating:
Political officials should not suppress or alter scientific
or technological findings and conclusions. If scientific and
technological information is developed and used by the
Federal Government, it should ordinarily be made available to
the public.
Except for information that is properly restricted from
disclosure, each agency should make available to the public
the scientific and technical findings or conclusions
considered or relied upon in policy decisions.
The public must be confident that public officials will not
conceal or distort the scientific findings that are relevant
to policy choices.
He reaffirmed these statements recently when addressing the National
Academies of Science:
In all the sciences, we've got to make sure that we are
supporting the idea that they're not subject to politics,
that they're not skewed by an agenda, that, as I said before,
we make sure that we go where the evidence leads us.
Mr. Speaker, I find it very difficult to reconcile these
pronouncements with the Yucca Mountain situation as it stands today.
Electricity consumers and taxpayers have invested $15 billion to find a
safe disposal site for our Nation's civilian spent fuel and the nuclear
waste left over from the Cold War. After investing 30 years and $15
billion in Yucca Mountain, they deserve, at a minimum, for the
independent nuclear safety regulator, the NRC, to release its
conclusions on whether the site is safe or not.
Given the admissions from these DOE and NRC officials, it appears we
have found a safe solution to our Nation's nuclear waste problem: Yucca
Mountain. The bad news is that this administration would rather play
politics
[[Page H2807]]
than solve the problem. Transparency and scientific integrity should
not be debased into political buzz words easily cast aside for the sake
of political favors.
Mr. Speaker, the American people deserve better. They deserve to know
the truth about Yucca Mountain. It's outrageous that they must go to
court to get it.
____________________