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Bipartisan Group Plans Overhaul Of Nuclear Waste Program

Feb. 11, 2013 | Northwest News Network
CONTRIBUTED BY:
Anna King


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  • A long-term nuclear waste repository at Nevada's Yucca Mountain was scrapped in 2010. credit: Department of Energy
A long-term nuclear waste repository at Nevada's Yucca Mountain was scrapped in 2010. | credit: Department of Energy | rollover image for more

RICHLAND, Wash. - A bipartisan group of senior senators is drafting a bill to overhaul the U.S. nuclear-waste program. The group, which includes Oregon’s Democratic Senator Ron Wyden, is aiming to find a permanent home for the nation’s radioactive waste.

Wyden is the new chair of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee. The radioactive waste working group also includes Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski, Senator Dianne Feinstein of California and Lamar Alexander of Tennessee. They’re all high-ranking members of both parties who hold key positions on committees that deal with energy issues. They hope to draft legislation that would find a temporary and a long-term repository for the storage of the nation’s hazardous nuclear waste.

According to a spokesman, Wyden doesn’t favor reviving Nevada’s Yucca Mountain — the massive and politically-wrought project scrapped by the Obama administration. Keith Chu, with Wyden’s office, says the senator opposes any Department of Energy nuclear reservation – such as Hanford in southeast Washington – becoming a permanent waste disposal site.

Wyden plans to pen a draft bill within a month.

This report originally appeared at Northwest News Network.

© 2013 Northwest News Network
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