Government
shutdown forces 90 percent staff cut at nuclear regulator. Don't
panic.
On-site
inspectors will remain on the job at nation's 100 commercial
reactors, despite the Nuclear Regulatory Commission implementing its
government shutdown plan. The agency had been able to skirt the
government shutdown by using carryover funds, but now those funds
have run dry.
CSM,
10
October, 2013
Having
exhausted carryover funds that kept it open during the government
shutdown, the federal agency responsible for regulating the nation’s
100 commercial nuclear reactors began furloughing more than 90
percent of its staff Thursday.
There's
no short-term threat to public safety, officials at the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission and other analysts said. On-site inspectors
will remain on the job and employees will be called out of furlough
in the case of an emergency.
But
non-emergency reactor licensing, emergency preparedness exercises,
and inspection of nuclear materials are among the day-to-day
operations put on hold amid the lapse in appropriations. The cutback
significantly crimps the agency's ability to lend oversight and
planning for a nuclear industry already troubled by cheap energy
competitors and waning electricity demand.
"We
are mindful of the impact the shutdown will have on the public, our
licensees, our staff and contractors and others who count on us,"
NRC Chairman Allison Macfarlane wrote in a post announcing the
furloughs on the agency's website Wednesday.
The
cuts leave about 300 of the agency’s 3,900 employees, roughly half
of whom are the on-site inspectors that oversee operations at nuclear
reactors. The other half make up emergency personnel. The
presidentially-appointed chairman, NRC commissioners, and inspector
general are also exempted from the furloughs.
"The
government shutdown is not good for the NRC," Dale Klein, a
former NRC chair and now associate vice chancellor for research at
The University of Texas System, wrote in an e-mail. "[B]ut I
expect the NRC to maintain critical staff positions and they would
immediately call back most workers if there was a serious event."
Private
industry is also equipped to respond to any kind of emergency
situation, said Scott Peterson, senior vice president of the Nuclear
Energy Institute, an industry advocacy group.
"From
a safety, security, and operational oversight perspective, there will
be no change at all," Mr. Peterson said.
The
NRC was among other energy agencies – including the Department of
Energy (DOE) and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) –
that were operating at full capacity during the shutdown by using
carryover funds. DOE and FERC continue to use those funds, but
officials have said they will have to implement furloughs eventually.
One person's view -
One person's view -
US
Shutdown Causes No Nuclear Power Regulation | US Has No Way To Handle
Any Nuclear Power Crisis
The
US NRC has no funding so they have no ability so deal with any
nuclear power crisis at any power plant.
references:
Shutdown
furloughs about to hit nuclear safety agency
Irreparable'
safety issues: All US nuclear reactors should be replaced,
'Band-Aids' won't help
http://rt.com/usa/us-nuclear-reactors...
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