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News Archive 2003 Don't overreact
on Indian Point
Editorial
New York Daily News
March 17, 2003
The owners of the Indian Point nuclear plant did themselves
and the community a disservice by asserting after 9/11 that
everything was just hunky dory at the facility. There are
problems - notably with the evacuation contingencies - and
closing the power plant may yet have to be considered.
However, right now, short of an immediate threat, Indian
Point Reactors 2 and 3 should keep running until there's a
plan for replacing the 2,000 megawatts supplied by the plant.
That's power for 2 million homes.
In the meantime, the sky-is-falling crowd should stop stirring
the public's fear. That's irresponsible. The decision on whether
to shutter the plant must be based on fact and reason, not
emotion.
Gov. Pataki commissioned a report on Indian Point by James
Lee Witt, director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency
under former President Bill Clinton. While it doesn't take
a position on plant closure, it does say the evacuation plan
in case of a nuclear accident is inadequate, something the
owners of Indian Point never made clear to the public.
FEMA has ordered New York State to certify emergency plans
by May 2. The agency will then report to the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission on the adequacy of the plans. The goal should be
to secure the reactor and upgrade evacuation contingencies.
Even if Indian Point is closed, though, there's still the
issue of four decades worth of spent nuclear fuel stored at
the Buchanan site, 35 miles north of midtown. Risks will remain.
On the plus side, Witt pointed out that Entergy, which owns
the plant, has made it more secure and has replaced equipment
and overhauled training practices. Just last week, the NRC
released annual performance reviews showing that Indian Point
3 continues to be one of the best-run nuclear plants in the
country. Meanwhile, Indian Point 2, which has had problems
in the past, has made significant improvements. (Indian Point
1 was closed in 1974 because it lacked an emergency cooling
system.)
Pataki says the NRC should reevaluate the way it licenses
and monitors nuclear plants. While that form of regulation
is the feds' job, making sure New York has enough power is
the governor's job.
Pataki, who has yet to express an opinion on Indian Point,
must decide whether to close the place. In the process, he
must make sure the public understands the alternatives - including
the need to site and build replacement fossil-fuel plants.
When it comes to power, nuclear and otherwise, New Yorkers
should not be kept in the dark.
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