| Albany Says It
Can't Certify Indian Point Evacuation Plan
By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD
The New York Times
January 31, 2003
New York State said yesterday that it could not approve an
emergency plan for the area around the Indian Point nuclear
plant, asking the federal government to take the next step
in the fierce battle over the two reactors in Westchester
County.
Gov. George E. Pataki did not comment on the merits of the
emergency plan, which has come under increasing attack since
a consultant he hired reported this month that it was inadequate
to protect the public from a release of radiation, especially
a large release from a terrorist attack. But Mr. Pataki said
in a statement that the report "has heightened our concerns
about the adequacy of the emergency plans for these communities."
Today is the deadline for New York to issue its normally
routine annual certification of the emergency plan, which
the state drafts in consultation with federal and local officials
and the plant owner. But the state told federal officials
yesterday that it could not give that approval because the
four counties surrounding the plant, concerned about safety,
had refused to issue their own certifications.
In effect, the governor sought to shift the focus to federal
agencies, which will decide what happens next and will face
pressure from opponents of Indian Point to close the plant,
35 miles north of Midtown Manhattan, in Buchanan.
Many of those opponents, including local elected officials,
hailed the state's move as an important step in their campaign.
But closing the plant would require at least a year of legal
and administrative decisions, with the plant's owner, the
Entergy Corporation, fighting at every turn. And New York's
message yesterday was cast more as a bureaucratic formality
than an emphatic statement.
In a letter to the Federal Emergency Management Agency,
the state said it simply could not give its annual certification
to the plan because the four counties had refused to submit
required "checklists." Those forms confirm that
the counties have performed necessary training and drills
and have completed various administrative functions.
Mr. Pataki urged FEMA and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
which requires a FEMA-approved plan as a condition of the
plant's operating license, to heed the counties' concerns
and "continue working with us to ensure that these plans
will protect our residents in the event of a nuclear emergency."
A spokesman for FEMA, Mike Beeman, said officials were reviewing
the letter, which they received late yesterday, and had not
determined what their next step might be. For one thing, the
spokesman said, it was not clear what if anything the state
was asking of the emergency agency, or if it intended to send
a letter of certification at a later date.
"It is an incomplete," Mr. Beeman said, adding
that the agency planned to deliver a fuller response, perhaps
as early as today.
At any rate, he said, a report the agency is completing
on the plant, due within a month, would carry more weight
than the state's letter in deciding whether the emergency
plan is adequate.
Although the Nuclear Regulatory Commission requires a FEMA-approved
plan, it has never closed a plant over emergency planning
problems; indeed, it has never closed a plant permanently
against an owner's will.
Even if it decides an evacuation plan is inadequate, the
commission can give the plant owner a chance to show that
the plan is adequate or that the owner can address the problems.
The commission can also let the owner offer "other compelling
reasons for continued operation," and Entergy has often
pointed out that Indian Point contributes at least one-fifth
of the electricity for New York City and its northern suburbs.
The company, which has defended the emergency plan as realistic,
said yesterday that it welcomed the state's move as an opportunity
to improve the plan.
Advocates for shutting the plant also took heart in the
state's move.
Assemblyman Richard Brodsky, a Westchester Democrat who
has led the fight to close the plant, criticized Mr. Pataki
for not explicitly opposing the plan, but he said that even
a tacit sign from the state might be good enough.
"It is inconceivable that FEMA can certify the plan
over the objections of the counties and the state, even if
the objection of the state is in the form of a quiet whine
from deep in a bunker," Mr. Brodsky said.
Alex Matthiessen, executive director of Riverkeeper, an
environmental organization that has led a coalition of plant
foes, said, "It puts us one step closer to closing the
plant."
Mr. Pataki's stance suggests that the state cannot or will
not play a lead role in emergency planning. That was not the
case in 1983, when Gov. Mario M. Cuomo faced a similar dilemma
after Rockland County refused to participate in emergency
drills for the plant.
The state told the N.R.C. then that it could fill in for
Rockland emergency workers, and the commission voted to accept
the plan and allow the plant to continue operating.
"The governor assured the plant would stay open by
using state resources," said Alfred Delbello, a former
Westchester County executive, who as Mr. Cuomo's lieutenant
governor organized the state plan. Doing the same for four
counties, however, would prove a challenge, he said.
Both supporters and foes of the plant said the Indian Point
debate put Mr. Pataki in something of a bind. Although his
home in Garrison is within the evacuation zone for the plant,
he infrequently addressed the concerns raised about the plant
before the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks heightened anxiety.
Mr. Pataki hired the consultant, James Lee Witt, the former
director of FEMA, in August as Mr. Pataki's opponents in the
governor's re-election campaign began making the plant's safety
an issue.
Mr. Witt's preliminary report — a final report is
due next month — forced Mr. Pataki to balance the concerns
of allies in the business community, who want to see the plant
operating, and those of many suburban constituents who have
taken Mr. Witt's findings as gospel.
"He is really in a box because a lot of his suburban
support is concerned about Indian Point," said Blair
Horner, legislative director of the New York Public Interest
Research Group, which wants the plant shut down. "But
he has the other factor of the business community, which would
view closing the plant as a negative signal. And he has to
come up with the energy."
If Indian Point were to close, much of its power could be
replaced by other sources, but independent analysts have warned
that that could be costly for ratepayers. "There is a
practical reality for him that the plant is a tremendous economic
engine for the state," said Gavin Donahue, executive
director of the Independent Power Producers of New York.
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