May 12--WESTMINSTER, Vt. -- The selectmen voted 4-1 to sign a letter
presented to them by Magdaline Volaitis urging the United States Nuclear
Regulatory Commission to conduct a top to bottom safety inspection of the
Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Plant in Vernon. Last week the NRC decided to conduct it's own independent safety study of the
plant, a huge concession according to Volaitis, but one that still falls short
of addressing safety concerns according to the Westminster resident. Volaitis said that the inspection agreed to by the NRC does not include as
many safety points as an inspection called for by the Vermont State House of
Representative and the Senate. She wanted the town to voice support for the
higher standard of the state inspection by signing the letter. "I don't think it would hurt anything for the town to follow
through," she said. "Probably all of the local pressure aided to the
decision." According to Volaitis, towns in New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Vermont all
supported the tougher Senate resolution. That support for the inspection helped
determine the outcome she said. The Senate resolution called for more inspection hours as well as greater
oversight of the plant that sits 30 miles from Westminster. The study called for
by the NRC was initially a paper review according to Volaitis. The plant's owner, Entergy, is attempting to have a 20 percent uprate in
output approved while renewing its license. In recent weeks cracks in steam
dryers at the plant have been discovered and two fuel rods have turned up
missing. Volaitis came to the board at its April 27 meeting with the same letter and
won board approval, but the letter was not signed due to a technicality. With Selectman Chris Harlow not at the meeting a 2-1 vote approved the
signing of the letter, but Chairman Bill Noyes's abstention from voting
nullified the favorable tally. Harlow was in attendance last night and voted in favor of the letter, along
with Noyes, Paul Harlow and Sheldon Beebe. Peter Barrett voted against the
letter again, stating he was against the pressure on the plant. Before saying he doubted the letter would win town-wide support, Barrett
railed against special interest pressure on businesses, government regulation
and proposed agriculture regulation in California that would regulate air around
dairy farms. Chris Harlow conceded he did not like over-regulation on businesses either,
but that higher standards out to be in place for the plant that is close by. "I'd rather have a nuclear plant down the river than a huge coal
thing," he said. Volaitis was pleased with the support she got from the board. "We're asking for the highest safety standard possible," she said.
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