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Centralized Storage

With the scientifically unsound proposed Yucca Mountain radioactive waste dump now canceled, the danger of "interim" storage threatens. This means that radioactive waste could be "temporarily" parked in open air lots, vulnerable to accident and attack, while a new repository site is sought.

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Entries by admin (702)

Monday
Oct122020

Beyond Nuclear's 11th set of public comments, re: Docket ID NRC-2016-0231, and report number NUREG-2239, NRC's ISP/WCS CISF DEIS -- re: NRC collusion with Holtec & ISP on CISFs rubber-stamps is illegal, dangerous

Submitted via: <WCS_CISF_EIS@nrc.gov>
 


Dear NRC Staff,

We submit these comments on behalf of our members and supporters, not only in New Mexico and Texas, near the targeted ISP/WCS CISF site, but across both of these states, and the rest of the country, along road, rail, and waterway routes that would be used for high risk, highly radioactive waste shipments to ISP/WCS's CISF, as well as to Yucca Mountain, Nevada, on Western Shoshone land -- wrongly and illegally assumed by ISP/WCS, as well as by NRC, to someday (or some decade, or some century) become a permanent disposal repository. This unnecessarily repeated, multiple legged, cross-continental transport of highly radioactive waste, is another significant aspect of the EJ (Environmental Justice) burden associated with this ISP/WCS CISF scheme.

The following subject matter has gotten little to no attention in NRC's ISP/WCS CISF DEIS, a far cry from NEPA's legally binding "hard look" requirement: NRC collusion with Holtec on CISF rubber-stamps is illegal, and dangerous.

NRC's collusion and complicity in rubber-stamping license application approvals for CISFs -- both Holtec/ELEA's in NM, as well as ISP/WCS's in TX -- is objectionable. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission is supposed to protect public health, safety, security, and the environment. As the country's nuclear safety regulatory agency, NRC is not a policy setting agency, and is not supposed to promote nuclear power industry schemes, such as these CISFs.

In fact, on each of the four ISP/WCS CISF DEIS NRC call-in sessions (Oct. 1, Oct. 6, Oct. 8, and Oct. 15), NRC's Environmental Review Project Manager, James Park, has stated aloud during the NRC slide show introductory presentation (while reading the following written bullet point from Slide #9):

The NRC’s CISF Review Process...

[Is] Not to promote ISP’s proposal or the Consolidated Interim Storage Facility (CISF) concept

Indeed, that is the way it is SUPPOSED to be. But James Park's assurances are false.

For example, at its late 2015 Division of Spent Fuel Management RegCon (Regulatory Conference), NRC's Tony Hsia, Acting Director of the Division of Spent Fuel Management, in his closing remarks, concluded the two-day symposium with no less than a pep rally cry. He passionately called for industry and NRC (as well as DOE, and other nuclear establishment players) to work together ("[If we] all work together, we can make it [centralized interim storage] happen!"), to open de facto permanent, surface storage, parking lot dumps, such as at Interim Storage Partners/Waste Control Specialists, LLC in Andrews County, TX, and/or Holtec International/Eddy-Lea Energy Alliance, near WIPP in NM. He even pumped his fist in the air when he did so. Such advocacy in favor of the proposed CISFs, by a senior NRC manager, was incredibly inappropriate.

And, relevant to this public comment proceeding, NRC's behavior shows that it is overwhelmingly biased in favor of the ISP/WCS CISF, despite its LARGE, and EXTRA LARGE (to borrow a phrase and concept from a Nuclear Issues Study Group member, during her public comments on a Holtec call-in session), impacts on not only the environment, but also public health and safety. This, despite James Park's false assurance, during the call-in session introductory slideshows, that "The NRC’s CISF Review Process...[Is] Not to promote ISP’s proposal or the Consolidated Interim Storage Facility (CISF) concept."

See slide #9 in the Oct. 1, 2020 slideshow, here:

https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML2027/ML20274A035.pdf

All four slideshows -- Oct. 1, Oct. 6, Oct. 8, and Oct. 15 -- were identical.

Such schizophrenic safety regulation/industry promotion imbalance is what led to the demise of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) by the mid-1970s. Stringent safety regulation and unbridled industry advocacy are mutually exclusive, of course. NRC rose from AEC's ashes with the clear mandate to "protect people and the environment," as the NRC logo puts it. Most unfortunately, for the public interest anyway, DOE was given AEC's nuclear advocacy role, embodied in its unbridled Office of Nuclear Energy (ONE). NRC has violated its mandate. It has strayed very far into the policy setting and industry advocacy arena.

(And by the way, when Holtec and ISP claim to simply be carrying out the will of the Blue Ribbon Commission on America's Nuclear Future (BRC), to establish CISFs, as stated in the BRC's Jan. 2012 Final Report, this must be taken with a grain of salt. BRC was based at DOE's ONE. In fact, in BRC's mandate, it was stated explicitly that BRC was to issue final recommendations on so-called "solving the nuclear waste problem," so that the nuclear power industry could get along with carrying out its greedy, dangerous, immoral, and unwise agenda, of building new nuclear power industry facilities in the U.S. and overseas. Besides that blatantly promotional -- as opposed to environmentally-, safety-, and health-protective -- agenda of DOE ONE's BRC, that is also the contradiction that "consent-based siting" was another BRC Final Report top tier recommendation, right up there with establishment of CISFs. And ISP/WCS, as well as Holtec/ELEA, do not have the consent of the host states, NM and TX. Both Democratic Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham in NM, and Republican Governor Greg Abbott in TX, have written to President Trump, expressing strong opposition to both CISFs -- Holtec/ELEA's and ISP/WCS's -- targeting NM and TX, within 40 miles of each other.)

NRC Staff, as well as the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel, and even the NRC Commissioners, have consistently demonstrated their overwhelming bias in favor of CISFs, despite the LARGE and EXTRA LARGE risks and impacts; they have done so consistently, ever since Tony Hsia's incredibly inappropriate pep rally cheer in favor of CISF licensing in late 2015. NRC's complicity and collusion with Holtec/ELEA and ISP/WCS is not only immoral, illegal, and unwise, it is very dangerous.

The Japanese Parliament concluded that the root cause of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear catastrophe was collusion between regulator, industry, and government officials. It was the reason the three reactors, which melted down and exploded, causing a catastrophic release of hazardous radioactivity to the environment, were so very vulnerable to the earthquake and tsunami that struck them on 3/11/11 in the first place. Such dangerous collusion exists in spades in the U.S., as on radioactive waste, as between NRC (Staff, Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel, and Commissioners) and Holtec/ELEA, re: the proposed CISF in NM, and ISP/WCS, re: the proposed CISF in TX, immediately upon the NM border at Eunice.

Please address and rectify your woefully inadequate "hard look" under NEPA, re: this health-, safety-, and environmentally-significant, as well as legally-binding, subject matter above.

And please acknowledge your receipt of these comments, and confirm their inclusion as official public comments in the record of this docket.

Thank you.

Sincerely,

Kay Drey, President, Board of Directors, Beyond Nuclear

and

Kevin Kamps, Radioactive Waste Specialist, Beyond Nuclear

Monday
Oct122020

Beyond Nuclear's 10th set of public comments, re: Docket ID NRC-2016-0231, and report number NUREG-2239, NRC's ISP/WCS CISF DEIS -- re: the Cerro Grande Fire exacerbates the environmental injustice of the ISP/WCS CISF scheme

Submitted via: <WCS_CISF_EIS@nrc.gov>


Dear NRC Staff,

We submit these comments on behalf of our members and supporters, not only in New Mexico and Texas, near the targeted ISP/WCS CISF site, but across both of these states, and the rest of the country, including Oklahoma, along road, rail, and waterway routes that would be used for high risk, highly radioactive waste shipments to ISP/WCS's CISF, as well as to Yucca Mountain, Nevada, on Western Shoshone land -- wrongly and illegally assumed by ISP/WCS, as well as by NRC, to someday (or some decade, or some century) become a permanent disposal repository. This unnecessarily repeated, multiple legged, cross-continental transport of highly radioactive waste, is another significant aspect of the EJ (Environmental Justice) burden associated with this ISP/WCS CISF scheme.

The following subject matter has gotten little to no attention in NRC's ISP/WCS CISF DEIS, a far cry from NEPA's legally binding "hard look" requirement: the Cerro Grande Fire exacerbates the environmental injustice of the ISP/WCS CISF scheme.

On Sunday, May 10, 2020, the following article was published:

As Beyond Nuclear commented upon in the closely related Holtec/ELEA CISF DEIS proceeding, this is yet another reason that the Holtec/ELEA CISF targeted at NM is one environmental justice burden too many.
But so too, in the context of and regarding the WCS/ISP CISF, targeted at the NM border at Eunice, just 0.37 miles into TX, as reported in NRC's ISP/WCS CISF DEIS. NM, and TX, and even Oklahoma, have suffered enough from the nuclear industry already.
The map is posted online here:
This map clearly shows that the smoke plume from the Cerro Grande Fire not only impacted NM, but so too OK and TX downwind, as the smoke plume exited the northeast corner of NM. This smoke plume included radioactive contamination, including plutonium contamination, swept up into the smoke plume due to radioactive contamination at the Los Alamos National Laboratory being burned in the fire. The radioactive contaminants, including plutonium, inevitably fell out as radioactive fallout, not only in NM, but also in OK and TX, and beyond.
Such fallout inevitably happened onto land, but also onto surface waters, some of which flow from NM into OK and TX, and then beyond.
NM, TX, and OK have, for too long, shouldered too many EJ burdens -- nuclear-related, fossil fuel-related, and related to other hazardous industries. ISP/WCS's CISF scheme would add to that EJ burden, including, absurdly, due to the nonsensical multiplication of irradiated nuclear fuel transport risks, for no good reason whatsoever. ISP/WCS's plan is for the stored irradiated nuclear fuel to be shipped out of TX, to Yucca Mountain, NV, via a rail route taking it all through NM, TX, and OK, a route through which a large percentage of the inbound shipments to the ISP/WCS CISF had previously traveled. Thus, NM, TX, and OK will be hit coming, and going: coming, from atomic reactors to the east; going, to Yucca Mountain, NV.
And of course Yucca Mountain, NV is Western Shoshone land, so the ISP/WCS and even NRC assumption that the CISF's inventory will be dumped at Yucca Mountain is itself not only a violation of EJ, but also a violation of the Treaty of Ruby Valley of 1863, the highest law of the land, equal in stature to the U.S. Constitution itself.
For these reasons listed above, the ISP/WCS CISF in TX is a non-starter, as yet another, major, EJ violation, on top of so many others.
But so too is the Holtec/ELEA CISF in NM, for the same reasons.
The two CISFs would be but 40 miles apart, after all.

Please address and rectify your woefully inadequate "hard look" under NEPA, re: this health-, safety-, and environmentally-significant, as well as legally-binding, EJ subject matter above.

And please acknowledge your receipt of these comments, and confirm their inclusion as official public comments in the record of this docket.

Thank you.

Sincerely,

Kay Drey, President, Board of Directors, Beyond Nuclear

and

Kevin Kamps, Radioactive Waste Specialist, Beyond Nuclear

Friday
Oct092020

Letter from New Mexicans to their governor, urging even stronger state government efforts to block environmentally unjust Holtec high-level radioactive waste dump

See a PDF of the letter, here, listing all of the New Mexico signatories.

Here is the full text of the letter:

Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham

State of New Mexico

490 Old Santa Fe Trail

Room 400

Santa Fe, NM 87501

Dear Governor Lujan Grisham:

The undersigned organizations are in firm opposition to the plan to bring the nation’s High - Level Waste for “temporary storage” in southern New Mexico at the Holtec site between Hobbs and Carlsbad. We thank you for persistent courageous opposition to Holt ec's proposal to bring commercial spent fuel to New Mexico. We also thank you for the in depth comments submitted by your Environment Department to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) working Draft Environmental Impact Statement ( DEIS) and the Septemb er 22 comments of the Environment Department and the Radioactive Waste Consultation Task Force on the many deficiencies in the DEIS.

Nevada succeeded in the battle against becoming the nation's high - level waste dump by creating a division of government to defeat the high - level waste proposal. The undersigned groups would support such an entity and respectfully ask you to form such an agency within state government.

The NRC DEIS fails to consider the state's position of non - consent and considers only a non - credible time span of 40 years for what would be a long - term toxic nuclear dump imposing serious financial, environmental, resource and health burdens on New Mexico, among many other inadequacies.

If the radioactive waste is brought to New Mexico, it wou ld be for all time because of many technical reasons, including:

The claim that the site is for temporary storage is nothing more than sleight of hand because no permanent geological repository is developed or under consideration.

The containers would be risky and not transportable due to gamma ray deterioration, spent fuel leakage and potential criticality.

There will strong opposition by other states to transporting it again, and there is no funding for such shipments or another site.

Moreover, e xisting state law prohibits high - level waste and spent fuel disposal in New Mexico. We suggest that you invoke that statute against Holtec:

74 - 4A - 11.1. Condition.

No person shall store or dispose of radioactive materials, radioactive waste or spent fuel in a disposal facility until the state has concurred in the creation of the disposal facility, except as specifically preempted by federal law. As used in this section, "disposal facility" means an engineered facility designed primarily for the isolation of radioactive materials, radioactive waste or spent fuel other than tailings or other waste from the extraction, beneficiation or processing of ores and minerals.

New Mexico’s people and our environment deserve better treatment than a plan offering milli ons of years of a public health menace from radioactive waste spreading into our soil, air , water, and rivers.

Please consider what more aggressive steps can be taken to defeat the Holtec plan.

Respectfully,

[See PDF of letter for full listing of New Mexican signatories]

Thursday
Oct082020

Beyond Nuclear's 9th set of public comments, re: Docket ID NRC-2016-0231, and report number NUREG-2239, NRC's ISP/WCS CISF DEIS -- re: the license for Private Fuel Storage, LLC, CISF -- targeted at Skull Valley Goshutes Indian Reservation in Utah -- is not terminated, contradicting NRC Staff assertions to the contrary

Please note that these public comments were submitted verbally by Beyond Nuclear's radioactive waste specialist, Kevin Kamps, during the NRC call-in session on Oct. 8, 2020.

NRC: Overview of the Draft Environmental Impact Statement for Interim Storage Partners LLC’s Proposed Consolidated Interim Storage Facility

See the relevant document, posted online here:

https://adamswebsearch2.nrc.gov/webSearch2/main.jsp?AccessionNumber=ML20121A016

A copy of the PDF formatted version of the Overview is viewable posted online here as well.

Thursday
Oct082020

Beyond Nuclear's 8th set of public comments, re: Docket ID NRC-2016-0231, and report number NUREG-2239, NRC's ISP/WCS CISF DEIS -- re: Environmental Justice (EJ), Environmental Injustice, Environmental Racism, Radioactive Racism

Submitted via: <WCS_CISF_EIS@nrc.gov>

Dear NRC Staff,

We submit these comments on behalf of our members and supporters, not only in New Mexico and Texas, near the targeted ISP/WCS CISF site, but across both of these states, and the rest of the country, along road, rail, and waterway routes that would be used for high risk, highly radioactive waste shipments to ISP/WCS's CISF, as well as to Yucca Mountain, Nevada, on Western Shoshone land -- wrongly and illegally assumed by ISP/WCS, as well as by NRC, to someday (or some decade, or some century) become a permanent disposal repository. This unnecessarily repeated, multiple legged, cross-continental transport of highly radioactive waste, is another significant aspect of the EJ (Environmental Justice) burden associated with this ISP/WCS CISF scheme.

The following subject matter has gotten little to no attention in NRC's ISP/WCS CISF DEIS, a far cry from NEPA's legally binding "hard look" requirement: Environmental Justice (EJ), Environmental Injustice, Environmental Racism, Radioactive Racism.

This proposal is a severe violation of environmental justice. ISP/WCS is targeting west Texas, and southeastern New Mexico, where many of the surrounding communities in the area are majority Hispanic, or close to it. The Mescalero Apache Indian Reservation (itself previously targeted for a CISF, first by the U.S. Department of Energy Nuclear Waste Negotiator, and then by Private Fuel Storage, LLC, its container-provider none other than Holtec!) is not far away. Numerous other Indigenous Nations also have deep traditional and spiritual connections to the land ISP/WCS is targeting for this CISF. Southeastern NM is relevant to this EJ discussion, as the ISP/WCS CISF would be just 0.37 miles from the NM state line. Eunice, NM, a majority LatinX city, is the nearest population center near the targeted ISP/WCS CISF site, just a few miles away. Water flows from the WCS site, back into southeastern NM, another potential EJ impact, if and when that water flow becomes radioactively contaminated, as due to contaminated, leaking, defective, failed, or otherwise problematic containers holding highly radioactive, irradiated nuclear fuel at -- or in transport to -- the ISP/WCS CISF, or as due to a severe accident or intentional attack involving one or more irradiated nuclear fuel containers at -- or in transport to -- the ISP/WCS CISF, etc.

While a lot of money has been made in the Permian Basin -- in both NM and TX -- from fossil fuel and nuclear industries, that wealth is not and has not been equitably distributed nor shared with the local LatinX and Indigenous population. Thus, any statistical shenanigans involving average, median, or mean wealth levels in the area are inappropriate (along the lines of "Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics"). There are serious pockets of poverty throughout the southeastern New Mexico and western Texas region, and the rest of the states as a whole, including along irradiated nuclear fuel transport routes inextricably linked to the ISP/WCS CISF scheme. In fact, New Mexico ranks towards the very bottom of all 50 states in numerous demographic measures of health, wealth, education, etc. And Public Citizen Texas Office executive director Adrian Shelley testified at the Oct. 6, 2020 NRC call-in verbal comment session re: this DEIS, about the major EJ burden along impacted transport routes in Texas alone, associated with this ISP/WCS CISF scheme.

Thus, there are very significant environmental justice issues involving low income and/or people of color communities in southeastern NM and western TX, being targeted for this dump.

As shown by a remarkable map by Deborah Reade of Santa Fe, NM, southeastern NM, and the rest of the state, as well as western TX, all bear a tremendous pollution burden from these fossil fuel (concentrated in the Permian Basin, in NM's southeastern corner, and western TX) and nuclear (throughout NM, but with a particular concentration of significant polluting facilities in/near the southeastern corner, as well as in TX) and other hazardous industries.

See this map posted online here:

http://static1.1.sqspcdn.com/static/f/356082/28292760/1588368272923/2020-ThreatsMap_11x17-v2.pdf?token=oopcheAXONZota6%2Bd%2FqgHb87tEM%3D

It is entitled "Water, Air, and Land: A Sacred Trust."

Although the map focuses on NM as a state, it can be seen on the map, that the ISP/WCS CISF proposal is included, even though it is in TX, due to its very near proximity to southeastern NM. The map explicitly mentions, depicts, and points to "Waste Control Specialists (Texas dump) Proposed High-Level [Radioactive] Waste storage site." Per the map key, also designated at the WCS site, by symbols, are: "Sites contaminated with depleted uranium"; "Sites contaminated with nuclear materials"; and "Sites contaminated with hazardous materials". Thus, the national so-called "low" level radioactive waste dump at WCS (which already also "stores" highly radioactive GTCC "low" level waste, with proposals to simply dump it there permanently), which accepts Class A, B, C, and GTCC "low" level radioactive wastes from scores of states, and also dumps hazardous chemical wastes from multiple states, is already an EJ burden to western TX and southeastern NM. The proposed ISP/WCS CISF would only serve to make the EJ burden significantly worse.

Again, including NM in this discussion is entirely appropriate, as mentioned above -- the ISP/WCS CISF would be located just 0.37 miles from the NM state line, as NRC's DEIS itself reports; Eunice, NM, a majority LatinX city, is just a few miles away, and is the nearest population center; and hazardous radioactive releases from the ISP/WCS CISF, whether contaminating flowing water, blowing air, blowing soil, the food chain, etc., would certainly impact southeastern NM, downwind and downstream, up the food chain, and down the generations, just as it would impact western TX, and beyond.

Focusing just on southeastern NM, and extreme western TX, the map shows the following dirty, dangerous, and expensive nuclear industries present:

Waste Control Specialists (Texas dump) and proposed spent fuel rod storage site (the already present WCS dump is a national dump-site for so-called "low" level radioactive waste; its sibling irradiated nuclear fuel CISF would hold up to 40,000 metric tons of highly radioactive waste);

Eden radioisotopes (proposed reactor);

URENCO USA (uranium enrichment plant) -- this was stopped in Louisiana, and Tennessee, in the 1990s and early 2000s, due to its environmental justice violations, but unfortunately was rammed through, including by NRC rubber-stamp, despite best efforts by a broad environmental and environmental justice coalition, to stop it;

Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (dump) -- WIPP had a supposedly impossible leak to the environment on Valentine's Day 2014, leading to a three-year shutdown, and $2 billion in recovery costs -- nearly two-dozen workers at the surface were exposed to ultra-hazardous alpha radiation inhalation doses, as are countless residents downwind, as plutonium and other trans-uranic pollutants are very long-lived hazards -- the highly controversial WIPP site was widely resisted in NM -- it is the only geologic repository for radioactive waste in the country -- a promise was made at the time of WIPP's opening, that if NM took military plutonium and TRU disposal at WIPP, the state would not be targeted for high-level radioactive waste disposal or even storage in the future -- the Holtec/ELEA CISF scheme breaks that promise;

International Isotopes (DU hexafluoride de-conversion facility--on hold) -- but the risk of its actual construction and operation is yet another potentially foreseeable cumulative impact that must be accounted for.

Gnome-Coach Experimental Test Site -- an underground nuclear weapon detonation!;

and of course the Holtec International proposed spent fuel rod storage site -- the subject of another, closely related, NRC CISF DEIS. Holtec/ELEA's CISF would only be about 40 miles from the ISP/WCS CISF. Holtec/ELEA's CISF would be located in southeastern NM, midway between Hobbs and Carlsbad, as the "Sacred Trust" map cited and linked above clearly shows.

Of course, all those nuclear facilities located in southeastern NM could well, and almost certainly would, have hazardous radioactive pollution impacts on people, and other living things, in western TX, as well. As but one example, the TRU (transuranics, including plutonium) environmental release from WIPP (Waste Isolation Pilot Plant) in southeaster NM, just 16 miles from the Laguna Gatuna site targeted for Holtec/ELEA's CISF, very likely impacted Texas downwind, with hazardous TRU fallout. As certain plutonium isotopes, such as Pu-239, have hazardous persistence measured in the hundreds of thousands of years, such impacts will extend that long into the future; people and other living things could be exposed to that hazardous Pu-239, contaminating dust, surface water and groundwater, the food chain, etc., for the next 240,000 years, in both southeastern NM, and western TX, due to the environmental release at WIPP, that was supposed to have been "impossible," before it actually happened on Valentine's Day, 2014.)

That long list of hazardous, polluting nuclear facilities in just southeastern NM, or immediately on the border in extreme western Texas, is a daunting one, in terms of environmental justice burden, environmental injustice, and radioactive racism.

The Holtec/ELEA CISF should be included in this NRC EJ analysis, and otherwise in the DEIS, for the Interim Storage Partners/Waste Control Specialists CISF, as the two CISFs would be only 39 miles apart (this distance according to Holtec CEO Krishna Singh, at his license application unveiling press conference on Capitol Hill in early April 2017; although NRC's Holtec DEIS says 45 miles apart). So should the WCS national "low" level radioactive waste dump. In fact, the largely Hispanic community of Eunice, NM is only about five miles, or less, from WCS, TX. It is the nearest town. And certain surface, and perhaps even ground, water flow pathways, flow into NM from the WCS, TX site.

Just the list above represents a tremendous nuclear pollution EJ burden for southeastern NM and western TX. The Holtec/ELEA and ISP/WCS CISFs would represent major additional nuclear pollution and risk burdens, on top of what is already borne by the low income and/or people of color communities residing in southeastern NM and western TX, as well as to Indigenous Peoples Nations, which have been displaced from their traditional lands in southeastern NM and western TX, although they retain legitimate cultural, spiritual, and even legal (such as treaty, and traditional use) claims to the land there.

Of course, southeastern NM and western TX is also burdened with a very large fossil fuel pollution burden, as the map also shows. The Permian Basin oil and gas fields are the busiest/most concentrated in North America, and the second busiest/most intensive in the world, after only the Middle East. In fact, some now claim that the Permian Basin has surpassed its Middle Eastern competitors, in terms of fossil fuel extraction intensity. This is an additional, major EJ burden on southeastern NM and western TX.

But, as the map shows, the list of historic and still ongoing nuclear abuses of NM is even longer, including:

Los Alamos National Laboratory has been making a large-scale, concentrated radioactive and toxic chemical mess of its neighborhood since 1943. This is especially an EJ burden for the Pueblo Indian communities listed on the map, Los Alamos's neighbors who have lived there since time immemorial, long before 1943. Nowadays, as with the Trump administration proposal to expand plutonium pit production at Los Alamos for new nuclear weaponry, the nuclear abuses continue and expand there.

As shown on the map, the smoke plumes from the Cerro Grande Fire (May 2000) show that not only New Mexicans, but even people in other states downwind, including Texas, were exposed to radioactive (including plutonium) and toxic fallout and inhalation doses. And the Las Conchas Fire boundaries (June 2011) shows that such risks continue, and worsen, in an age of global warming mega-droughts in NM and TX.

The Trinity Test Site (first nuclear explosion), which occurred on July 16, 1945, haunts the Tularosa Basin Downwinders Consortium, 75 years later. They have never been compensated for their suffering and losses, as documented at their website: <https://www.trinitydownwinders.com/>

Please note that the radioactive contamination in the plumes from the Cerro Grande Fire, the Los Conchas Fire, and the Trinity nuclear weapon test blast, could well have impacted Texas downwind, or still could do so in the future. After all, the radioactive contaminants include hazardous isotopes with persistence measured in the hundreds of thousands (Pu-239, for example, or millions (I-129, for example), or years. If those plumes already directly deposited such hazardous radioactive contaminants in TX, the impact has already begun, years or even decades ago. But even if the contaminants fell short of Texas, they could still reach Texas, over the long time spans into the future that they will remain hazardous, as due to blowing winds carrying contaminated dust, flowing waters carrying contamination, food chain contamination, etc. The risks and impacts from such cross-border hazardous radioactive contamination will continue for countless generations into the future, a further reason that all these NM-based and TX-based EJ violations must be taken into analytical consideration by NRC in its EIS, as a synergistic whole, not in isolated silos. Such isolated silos analysis would represent illegal segmentation under NEPA.

Sandia National Laboratories, and Kirtland Airforce Base's Kirtland Underground Munitions Storage Complex (1,900+ nuclear weapons) also puts Albuquerque at risk. The Mixed Waste Landfill puts Albuquerque's drinking water supply at risk.

Then of course, there is the uranium mining and milling region of northwestern NM, and the Four Corners area. This is of course a largely Native American region, including the Navajo/Diné, numerous Pueblo Indian tribes, and even Utes, as in Colorado. As the map lists, there are a large number of nuclear pollution sources just in this quadrant of NM:

Shiprock Mill and Disposal Cell;

Ambrosia Lake Mill and Disposal Cell;

UNC (United Nuclear Corporation) Mining and Milling, Church Rock Mill -- Church Rock was the scene, on July 16, 1979, of one of the worst radiological releases in U.S. history, when an earthen dam failed, releasing a large amount of radioactive and toxic uranium mill liquid waste into the Rio Puerco River, which traditional Navajo/Diné shepherds utilize for drinking and irrigation water (note that this marks the second mention of a nuclear disaster in NM that has happened on July 16th -- along with the Trinity blast, above; NRC's choice of July 16, 2018, to docket the Holtec/ELEA CISF application for licensing, and announce it in the Federal Register, marked a ghoulish new low of tone deafness and lack of compassion at the agency, itself an EJ violation);

(Quivira) Ambrosia Lake Mill & Disposal Site 2;

Phillips Mill;

Homestake/Barrick Gold [and Uranium] Mining Company Mill & Disposal Site;

(SOHIO) LBAR Mill Site;

Jackpile Mine;

Cebolleta Project (mines and mill);

Anaconda/ARCO Bluewater Mill & Disposal Site.

The open pit uranium mine located on the Laguna Pueblo is the largest on the planet. Its downwind and downstream pollution emissions have harmed the Laguna Pueblo, its immediate neighbors, as well as others downwind and downstream.

And as if the nuclear detonation site in southeastern NM was not enough abuse, there is also one in northern NM -- the Gasbuggy Experimental Test Site.

The Ute Mountain Ute tribe is mentioned in the extreme northwestern quadrant of the map. The Ute Mountain Ute have the dubious distinction of "hosting" (unwillingly) the White Mesa uranium mill, a highly polluting radioactive facility where many nefarious activities take place (radioactive waste "processing," storage, and even disposal, done under the supposed excuse of uranium extraction from waste streams imported from across the continents, and perhaps even overseas).

As I mentioned during my oral comments on the NRC webinar/call-in on June 23, 2020, in the very closely related NRC's Holtec CISF DEIS public comment proceeding, such a list as the one depicted on the map above is nothing short of nightmarish. It represents a health, safety, environmental, and economic catastrophe for the indigenous peoples of NM, as well as other low income and people of color communities in the Land of Enchantment, but also LatinX and Indigenous Peoples in TX.

Again, NM's inclusion in NRC's EJ analysis on this ISP/WCS CISF proposal is needed, given how close the TX site is to NM, and can and will impact it over long time periods.

NM has already suffered a bad enough nuclear nightmare since 1943, one that continues to the present day. The Holtec/ELEA CISF, and the ISP/WCS CISF, for that matter, represent the straw that breaks the camel's back -- one more nuclear abuse and EJ violation too many.

Of course, as the map also shows, NM has suffered not only a nuclear nightmare. The fossil fuel pollution in the northwestern and southeastern quadrants of NM is also concentrated and severe. As is the fossil fuel pollution in western TX.

Just one more recent example of the eco-disasters this area has suffered includes the Gold King Mine toxic waste water release of 2015, epicentered near Silverton, CO. It was caused, ironically enough, by human error perpetrated by none other than the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and its contractor, Environmental Restoration LLC of Missouri.

The trickery employed in both Holtec's Environment Report and NRC's DEIS, as well as in ISP/WCS's ER and NRC's DEIS, in order to find no EJ impact, is to only compare southeastern NM (and only out to a radius of 50 miles from the Holtec CISF site, at that), with the rest of the State of NM, and similarly, to only compare western TX to a limited broader region. But of course, comparing s.e. NM near Holtec to the country as a whole, would show a much greater concentration of Hispanics and Native Americans, than is typical of the rest of the country as a whole. NRC's 50-miles out from Holtec's CISF radius focus, and then only in comparison to the rest of the State of NM, blinds it to the bigger picture of the country as a whole. Combined with the fact that NM as a whole ranks towards the very bottom of all 50 states on many socio-economic indicators, NRC's willful blindness to the EJ impacts of the Holtec CISF proposal is an outrage. NRC's own behavior is an EJ violation, as is Holtec's CISF proposal to begin with!

The NM Environment Department pointed out this fault in NRC's EJ analysis in the Holtec DEIS, in point #5, on pages 11 to 12, of its 9/22/20 written comments to NRC. See the NMED comments, posted online here: <https://www.env.nm.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/2020-09-21-NMED-Holtec-draft-EIS-comments-to-NRC-Final.pdf>. They clearly show that NM is a majority minority state, with a full 60% of residents being Hispanic or Latino, or American Indian, compared to only 19.6% of residents of the U.S. as a whole, being Hispanic or Latino, or American Indian. Thus, NM is more than three times more populated with LatinX and/or Indigenous persons, than is the U.S. as a whole. And yet both Holtec/ELEA, and ISP/WCS, have targeted NM, or its border, with highly radioactive waste CISFs. This seems to be an EJ violation on its face. And yet NRC is willfully blind to this, and is poised to rubber-stamp licenses for both CISFs, despite the "extra large" EJ violation that would represent, to borrow the phrase from a member of the Nuclear Issues Study Group, who made a verbal comment during an NRC Holtec CISF DEIS verbal comment session.

Similarly, NMED pointed out that Persons in Poverty in NM number 19.5% of the population, while Persons in Poverty in the U.S. as a whole number 11.8% of the population. Thus, NM has a poverty rate nearly twice that of the U.S. as a whole. And again, both Holtec/ELEA, and ISP/WCS, have targeted NM, or its border, with highly radioactive waste CISFs, despite this region, at least in the case of the State of NM, suffering a poverty rate twice the national average. Again, this seems to be an EJ violation on its face. And yet NRC is willfully blind to this, and is poised to rubber-stamp licenses for both CISFs, despite the "extra large" EJ violation that would represent.

Similarly, as Adrian Shelley of Public Citizen's TX Office verbally commented on the Oct. 6, 2020, NRC call-in re: the ISP CISF DEIS, NRC's EJ analysis in this proceeding is also badly flawed, and intentionally blinded to the actual EJ impacts, including from transportation of irradiated nuclear fuel throughout western TX.

Violations by NRC itself of EJ is further underscored by the experience of Alliance for Environmental Strategies in the NRC ASLB licensing proceeding in the Holtec case. AFES is a largely Hispanic EJ group in s.e. NM. It intervened against the Holtec CISF, raising EJ contentions. Incredibly, the ASLB and NRC never even clearly acknowledged or recognized AFES's legal standing to bring such contentions. But both ASLB and NRC did reject AFES's EJ contentions outright -- the supposed excuse for not having to rule on AFES's legal standing. Such ASLB and NRC behavior is, in itself, a blatant EJ violation, on its face!

Rose Gardner, a co-founder of AFES, also joined with Beyond Nuclear as a member and supporter in the ISP CISF ASLB licensig proceeding. This helped Beyond Nuclear win legal standing in the ISP ASLB licensing proceeding. After all, Rose Gardner's lifelong home, in Eunice, NM, is just 4 miles from the targeted ISP/WCS CISF site in TX. But even then, the ASLB in the ISP CISF licensing proceeding, rejected Beyond Nuclear's contention, yet again nipping in the bud Rose Gardner's, other Beyond Nuclear members' and supporters', and Beyond Nuclear's objections to the ISP/WCS CISF. Beyond Nuclear has appealed the ASLB's ruling to the NRC Commissioners, but they have yet to rule on the appeal, after many long months.

It is worth noting that Holtec's previous attempt at a CISF was targeted at the Skull Valley Goshutes Indian Reservation in Utah. Holtec would have been the container supplier -- 4,000 Holtec containers, to "temporarily store" 40,000 metric tons of irradiated nuclear fuel at the surface. A consortium of a dozen nuclear power utilities comprised Private Fuel Storage, LLC (PFS). Despite opposition by traditional Skull Valley Goshutes, such as Sammy Blackbear, as well as Margene Bullcreek, leader of Ohngo Gaudadeh Devia Awareness (or OGD Awareness, Goshute for "Mountain/Timber Setting Community"), a grassroots group of traditional tribal members opposed to the dump, the PFS license was rubber-stamped in the end by NRC. When that happened, flying in the face of opposition not only by the State of Utah, and a coalition of nearly 500 environmental and environmental justice organizations across the country, Kevin Kamps (then working at Nuclear Information and Resource Service; Kay Drey also then served on the NIRS board of directors) dubbed NRC the Nuclear Racism Commission. These strong words were justified, for NRC had just commissioned a radioactively racist facility, committing a severe environmental injustice. More information on the ultimately successful resistance to the PFS dump is posted on-line here: <http://archives.nirs.us/factsheets/pfsejfactsheet.htm>. Also posted there is the list of nearly 500 environmental and EJ groups opposed to the PFS CISF at Skull Valley Goshutes.

In fact, before PFS targeted the Skull Valley Goshutes for a CISF, it had targeted the Mescalero Apache in southeastern NM. This followed the U.S. DOE Nuclear Waste Negotiator's own concerted but unsuccessful targeting of both Mescalero Apache, NM as well as Skull Valley Goshutes, UT for a CISF. Such shameful environmentally racist targeting of Native American reservations for CISFs is also documented at the website link provided immediately above.

It should also be noted that TX bears an EJ burden of nuclear facility risk and pollution, although not included on the "Sacred Trust" map focused on NM. An example in west TX itself is the Pantex DOE facility, near Amarillo, TX, where many thousands of nuclear warheads are stored and handled, for assembly or disassembly. Thus, large quantities of high explosives, fissile nuclear explosive material, and other hazardous and radioactive substances, are stored, transported to and from, and handled and processed there, representing a very large impact and risk.

NRC should engage, or be complicit, or collude, in no more such environmental injustice and radioactive racism, in this region, such as the Holtec/ELEA CISF in NM, and the ISP/WCS CISF in TX.

Please address your woefully inadequate "hard look" under NEPA, re: this health-, safety-, and environmentally-significant, as well as legally-binding, EJ subject matter above.

And please acknowledge your receipt of these comments, and confirm their inclusion as official public comments in the record of this docket.

Thank you.

Sincerely,

Kay Drey, President, Board of Directors, Beyond Nuclear

and

Kevin Kamps, Radioactive Waste Specialist, Beyond Nuclear