And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Utah Tribe in Nuke Dump Flap
 
 .c The Associated Press
 
  By ROBERT GEHRKE
 
 SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -- For Leon Bear and 27 other members of the Skull 
Valley Band of Goshute Indians, home is an 18,000-acre patch on the parched 
alkali flats of Utah's western desert.
 
 The reservation is tucked between a low-level nuclear waste dump, a 
hazardous waste incinerator, an Army chemical and biological testing range, 
the nation's largest storehouse for chemical weapons and an Air Force bombing 
range.
 
 Those unsavory neighbors make it hard for the tribe to attract jobs, and 
more and more of the band's members are leaving to find work.
 
 So the tribe decided to make a virtue of its desolation. It contracted to 
temporarily store high-level nuclear waste shunned by every other state.
 
 But the plan has divided the tribe and placed it in conflict with state 
leaders, who say they're worried the dump will become permanent. They also 
shudder at the thought of waste being shipped along Interstate 80 and fear 
the site's proximity to the bombing range.
 
 Legislators have backed Republican Gov. Mike Leavitt in opposing the 
proposed dump, voting for state control over a chain of dirt roads around the 
reservation.
 
 That would allow the state to block waste shipments on paved roads or rail 
lines that cross the roads if the Nuclear Regulatory Commission approves the 
dump and it begins operating, which could happen as soon as 2002.
 
 ``We just don't want it,'' Leavitt said. ``The drawbridge will be raised to 
the waste storage utilities and permission to cross refused.''
 
 Lawmakers have also stripped the proposed dump's owners of protection from 
lawsuits that could result from an accident there.
 
 Bear, the tribal chairman, eyes the jobs, roads, sewer system, health clinic 
and fire station the project backers have promised for his tiny reservation 
50 miles west of Salt Lake City. He said the safety arguments weren't voiced 
against the other hazardous repositories in the area, and raising them now 
``is racist.''
 
 ``All we have is our land,'' Bear said. ``If this economic development can 
be done in balance between the environment, our people and private 
corporations, why not do it?''
 
 But one-third of the tribe's adult members don't see it that way. They and 
the state have gone to federal court to challenge the lease with the 
utilities.
 
 ``We are going to be waking up every morning wondering when this thing is 
going to be contaminating our land,'' Margene Bullcreek, a Skull Valley 
Goshute and founder of a group opposed to the facility, said in a hearing 
last year. ``If they tell us they are doing us a favor by making millionaires 
out of us, then why are they sacrificing our lives?''
 
 In 1996, the tribe signed a potentially lucrative lease with Private Fuel 
Storage, a consortium of eight utilities: Southern California Edison, GPU 
Nuclear Corp., Northern States Power, Consolidated Edison of New York, 
Illinois Power, Indiana Michigan Power, Southern Nuclear Operating Co. and 
Genoatech.
 
 Neither the tribe nor the consortium will disclose how much the tribe would 
receive.
 
 Under the plan, 40,000 metric tons of spent reactor rods would be stored in 
concrete casks with 2 1/2-foot-thick walls and placed on a concrete pad 3 1/2 
miles from a cluster of Goshute homes.
 
 Only 28 of the band's 119 members live on the reservation, where a 
rocket-testing facility is the main employer. Bear said the dump's 200 
temporary and 50 permanent jobs are needed to keep more members from leaving 
and further eroding the tribe's heritage.
 
 Although the lease spans 25 years, with a 25-year option, Bear and the 
consortium point out that it may be just 10 years before the Department of 
Energy opens a permanent nuclear waste repository.
 
 The DOE is looking at burying the waste at Yucca Mountain, 100 miles 
northwest of Las Vegas, as early as 2010. But Nevada Gov. Kenny Guinn remains 
vehemently opposed to the plan, which is why Leavitt and other Utah officials 
worry that the Goshutes' dump would become permanent.
 
 Leavitt says the waste should stay at the utilities' reactor sites until a 
permanent repository is found. Scott Northard, the project manager for 
Private Fuel Storage, says that would force the reactors to stop operating 
because they can't store more waste.
 
 Northard says one big reason for Utah's opposition is fear and mistrust 
stemming in part from open-air nuclear tests in Nevada during the 1950s that 
may have caused cancer in southern Utah residents downwind of the explosions.
 
 Leavitt, a southern Utah native who had friends die of cancer, says the 
state won't back down even if can't stave off the utilities in court.
 
 ``We're clearly at a disadvantage in terms of our resources but we're not at 
all disadvantaged in terms of our resolve,'' he said.
 
 Bear has seen a bottled-water company reject the reservation because of its 
inhospitable surroundings. But he says the tribe will still try other 
economic development options if the plans for the dump fall through.
 
 ``We're not going to die, that's for sure,'' he said. ``We're going to be 
out there. We've survived all these years and will continue to survive.''
 

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          Tsonkwadiyonrat (We are ONE Spirit)
                     Unenh onhwa' Awayaton
                  http://www.tdi.net/ishgooda/       
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