The selection of even lower levels of clean up standards for each site/state is another example of how the linear threshold/ALARA concept results in unnecessary cost to the public and risk from moving large quantities of low level radioactive material across country. I’m proud that Oregon applied reason and used the NRC standard for clean up of Trojan. My evening rant 😯 Regards Tom Meek CHP
Sent from Tom's iPhone > On Apr 12, 2018, at 8:52 AM, emgoldin via Powernet <[email protected]> > wrote: > > I just saw an article that says the Massachusetts Dept of Health wants a 10 > mrem/yr standard for the decommissioning of Pilgrim. Does anyone know what > the scenario will be for the site? Resident farmer? Just curious because > there seems to be a trend for states to set limits considerably lower than > NRC regs. > > Thanks, Eric Goldin, CHP > > > > Sent from my Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone > _______________________________________________ > Powernet mailing list > [email protected] > http://hpspowernet.org/mailman/listinfo/powernet_hpspowernet.org
_______________________________________________ Powernet mailing list [email protected] http://hpspowernet.org/mailman/listinfo/powernet_hpspowernet.org
