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Gibbons to Reid: Kill Yucca already
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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Updated: Apr. 9, 2012 | 11:07 p.m.
CARSON CITY -- Gov. Jim Gibbons challenged Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid on Friday to "put up or shut up" about working to stop Yucca Mountain from being used as the nation's nuclear repository.
Gibbons wrote a letter to Reid, D-Nev., asking him to use his influence in Congress to repeal the Nuclear Waste Policy Act that designates Yucca Mountain as a high-level nuclear repository.
"Senator Reid should make Nevada safer by working to immediately repeal the NWPA and kill Yucca Mountain once and for all," Gibbons said in a written statement.
Jon Summers, a spokesman for Reid, dismissed the criticism.
"Jim Gibbons has done very little as governor to advance the state's fight against Yucca Mountain," he said.
Thursday, Reid said he had been assured by the Obama administration that it will seek to eliminate funding in 2011 for a review needed to open the nuclear waste site 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas.
Obama opposes the project, and Energy Department officials have said it's the administration's policy that Yucca Mountain would never be used. But the licensing process continues.
On Wednesday, the Senate voted to cut funding for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's review to $29 million in 2010. The president had requested $56 million.
The Obama administration has said it will appoint a commission to find alternatives to Yucca Mountain.
"I'm convinced that for the foreseeable future, for the next 50 to 100 years, we'll simply store the spent fuel rods on site," Reid told reporters this week in Washington, D.C.
The statement did not satisfy Gibbons. "Every few weeks or months we hear from someone in Congress that Yucca Mountain is dead, yet the project and the licensing process continue," he said.
The governor has come under fire for sending mixed messages on Yucca Mountain.
In his budget proposal to the 2009 Legislature, Gibbons sought to cut staff at the state's Nuclear Projects office, citing the state's revenue shortfall.
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years ago i suggested that the native americans, the ones that were jammed into barren desert "reservations", should construct nuke generators.
likely there is sufficient acreage with the needed water rights to set up mega generators. on tribal lands, no surveys for endangered fire ants or threatened weeds. no captain nemo kennedy to complain about seeing transmission towers in "his" view [like he did with wind generators]. the revenue from such power sales west of the rockies might eclipse that earned from flensing the anglos using casinos.
Let's see the economy is in the tank, tax revenues are in the tank, tourist aren't coming like they did and will never return since in the numbers you have gear your state budget on. Casinos have gotten to expensive (fat monies gone nevada) and you sit on a hole in the middle of no where that had nukes tested on where people will pay us billions of dollars to store nuke waste. You have to be either the dumbest people ever born or the down wind effect of the gold mine you are sitting on in yucca mountain has rotted you pea size brains.