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« Port Clinton, OH passes resolution against Canadian Great Lakes radioactive waste dump; bipartisan congressional opposition grows | Main | CTV interviews Stop the Great Lakes Nuclear Dump on OPG DGR »
Friday
Dec132013

Port Clinton, OH passes resolution against Canadian Great Lakes radioactive waste dump; Congressional opposition grows

Aerial photo showing targeted location for OPG's proposed DUD on the Lake Huron shoreline, immediately adjacent to the 9-reactor Bruce Nuclear Generating Station in Kincardine, Ontario, Canada

See what YOU can do to stop the Canadian Great Lakes radioactive waste dump, highlighted below!

On Dec. 10, the City of Port Clinton, Ohio passed a resolution opposing OPG's proposed radioactive waste dump targeted at the Great Lakes shoreline. What is very significant about this is that Port Clinton is located within the 10-mile Emergency Planning Zone (EPZ) of FirstEnergy Nuclear's Davis-Besse atomic reactor, on the Lake Erie shore just east of Toledo. Even "nuclear company towns" like Port Clinton -- which "host" many hundreds of tons of high-level radioactive waste, in "temporary storage" -- are opposed to any proposal to permanently bury radioactive waste on the Great Lakes shore.

In this regard, Port Clinton's resolution is similar to the Town of Ajax's, to the east of Toronto, located immediately adjacent to the 8-reactor Pickering nuclear power plant on the Lake Ontario shore.

Urge your town, county, and state to pass a resolution against the DUD (critics' sarcastic nickname -- standing for Deep Underground Dump -- instead of OPG's preferred DGR, for Deep Geologic Repository). You can use Port Clinton's, above, as a model, or any of the dozens passed elsewhere in Michigan, Ohio, and Ontario.

Port Clinton's population is just over 6,000, so the number of people represented by resolutions passed at the state, county, town, and village levels in both countries is still around 17.8 million. This, compared to the Town of Kincardine which supposedly has "volunteered" to "host" the dump in Ontario, with a population of only around 11,000, including many Bruce Nuclear Power Plant workers, and others influenced by Bruce Nuclear revenue streams. But in fact, local opposition in and around Kincardine itself has grown stronger over time.

Tom Henry of the Toledo Blade has published a comprehensive article, "Ohio, Mich. riled over plan to bury radioactive waste: Critics fear dump may contaminate lakes," reporting on Port Clinton's resolution. He reported that a concerned resident of Port Clinton, Victoria Clemons, was instrumental in advocating for passage of the resolution.

Henry also reports that U.S. Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur (D-OH) and U.S. Congresswoman Candice Miller (R-MI) are working on a letter to U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, urging him to negotiate with his Canadian counterparts to end this proposal. Kaptur, the Ranking Democrat on the U.S. House Appropriations Subcommittee on Energy and Water, also indicated she will take her concerns to the Canadian ambassador. Miller is Chairwoman of the Homeland Security Subcommittee on Border and Maritime Security, and also sits on the Transportation Subcommittees on Hazardous Materials, as well as Water Resources and the Environment.

Kaptur and Miller thus join Michigan's two U.S. Senators, as well as several additional U.S. House Members, in opposing the Great Lakes radioactive waste dump.

Urge your U.S. Senators and U.S. Representative to join the growing bipartisan opposition taking action against the DUD! You can call them by way of the U.S. Capitol Switchboard at (202) 224-3121.

In addition, Henry reports that Ohio State Legislators, Rep. Chris Redfern (D-Catawba Island) and Rep. Randy Gardner (R-Bowling Green), intend to introduce a resolution in the Ohio General Assembly early next year opposing the proposed dump.

This is similar to a State of Michigan Senate resolution, introduced by Sen. Hoon-Yung Hopgood (Democrat-Taylor) and passed unanimously in spring 2013.

Urge your State Representative, State Senator, and Governor to get involved too! Ideas include a State House Resolution, as reported to be in the works in Ohio; a State Senate Resolution, as has been unanimously passed in Michigan; and even a state law banning radioactive waste dumps that threaten surface waters like the Great Lakes. For example, the State of Michigan has a law barring radioactive waste dumps within ten miles of the Great Lakes shorelines, as well as placing other constraints on the location of radioactive waste dumps.

Meanwhile, the Stop the Great Lakes Nuclear Dump petition now has 44,441 signatories.

If you haven't signed the petition already, please do so now. And send it to everyone you know!