| Hearings on Yucca Rail Line Doable
Oct 16 - Las Vegas Review - Journal
The federal railroad board's chairman says he is open to having a public
hearing on the Department of Energy application to build a rural Nevada rail
line to ship nuclear waste to Yucca Mountain.
Charles Nottingham said the three-member Surface Transportation Board
generally does not have public hearings. It decides most rail construction
cases based on paper records filed by applicants.
However, Nottingham said he planned to recommend to the two other board
members that a hearing be scheduled on Yucca Mountain rail "given the
importance of this proposed project and the extensive public interest
involved."
Nottingham made the comments in a letter dated Friday to Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev.
A copy was obtained Tuesday.
A Reid spokesman confirmed the senator's staff has met with counterparts at
the Surface Transportation Board to discuss when the hearing could be
scheduled. No date has been announced, and Nottingham in his letter said it
could be "most likely in the next several months."
The Surface Transportation Board is considering an application to build a
330-mile rail line from Caliente across rural Nevada to Yucca Mountain,
where DOE plans to build a nuclear waste handling complex and an underground
tunnel system to store the radioactive materials.
Nevada members of Congress, who oppose the Yucca project, have pressed the
board to hear testimony on the railroad, arguing that the project will have
implications for rail traffic across the country when DOE commences
shipments of waste from 39 states.
"The DOE plan will affect millions of Nevadans and Americans across the
country, and it is so important that the public be given a chance to voice
opposition to this project," said Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev.
"It's important that Nevadans have their voices heard before the
administration spends billions more of taxpayer dollars to build a railway
for radioactive waste through their backyards to this failed dump," Reid
said.
Yucca Mountain opponents are turning their sights on the railroad portion of
the repository project that has been underfunded to date as DOE has shifted
resources to planning other segments.
The Surface Transportation Board this summer rejected a Nevada request that
the DOE rail construction application be rejected outright. Since then the
proposal has been under review, and agency officials say they do not know
when a decision will be reached.
Meanwhile, Friends of the Earth, an environmental group, announced it has
set up a Web site, www.dontdumponnevada.org, where the public can send
messages urging the Surface Transportation Board to reject the application.
Friends of the Earth, the Sierra Club and the Progressive Leadership
Alliance of Nevada have initiated a Nevada media campaign to call attention
to the railroad project.
PLAN spokesman Launce Rake said the groups have made an initial investment
of $100,000 for English and Spanish-language newspaper and business
publication ads, and radio commercials.
Friends of the Earth also is spending an undisclosed sum for ads in
progressive Internet blogs in selected parts of the country, said Erich
Pica, domestic campaigns director for the organization.
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