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Nuclear Plant Fine

Editorial: Nuclear Plant Fine
Nodding off The Philadelphi Inquirer Jan. 12, 2009 A U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission decision last week is another blow to efforts to build greater public trust in nuclear power as an alternative to the nation’s expensive appetite for foreign oil.The NRC proposed a paltry $65,000 fine against the owner of Peach Bottom nuclear plant, where investigators found that security guards routinely napped on the job. The NRC last year issued a color-coded “white” finding – a low-to-moderate safety violation – for the incident.The agency’s actions seem more like a slap on the wrist for Chicago-based Exelon, rather than a strong message about safety and accountability. Exelon says it plans to pay the fine for the NRC’s findings, which were confirmed by its internal investigation at the York County nuclear power facility.It took the utility and its regulators more than a year to reach this disappointing conclusion to what should have been an open-and-shut case, with indisputable evidence.
The investigations were launched in September 2007, but only after a videotape of the sleeping guards had surfaced. After receiving a tip in a letter from a former employee at the nuclear plant, the NRC allowed Exelon to do its own investigation of the allegations. Talk about the fox guarding the hen house! It came as no surprise that Exelon initially found no evidence of guards napping. That quickly changed when the video became public.

Editorial: Nuclear Plant Fine | Philadelphia Inquirer | 01/12/2009

January 13, 2009 - Posted by | safety | , , ,

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