FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: JANUARY 10, 2003
Contact:
Andy Mele, Executive Director, 845-454-7673 x121
Manna Jo Greene, environmental director, 845-454-7673 x113
Cell phone 914-399-6071
Report Finds Indian Point Emergency Preparedness Inadequate
Clearwater Calls for Plant to Be Shut Down
BUCHANAN, NY - A long awaited report on emergency preparedness
for the Indian Point nuclear power facility has confirmed what the
Poughkeepsie-based Clearwater environmental organization and others have
long been saying: the evacuation plan for Indian Point is inadequate and
does not protect the health and safety of the people living in the
emergency evacuation zone.
In August 2002, Governor George E. Pataki hired James Lee Witt
Associatesa consulting firm founded by James Lee Witt, former
Director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)to review
emergency preparedness for the Indian Point and Millstone nuclear power
plants. Indian Point is located in Westchester County, NY. Millstone,
just west of New London, CT, is on the Long Island Sound.
In the report released today Witt Associates stated that because of a
wide array of inadequacies in emergency preparedness planning for Indian
Point, the current radiological response system and capabilities are
not adequate to overcome their combined weight and protect the people
from an unacceptable dose of radiation in the event of a release from
Indian Point, especially if the release is faster or larger than the
design basis release.
The report is also critical of FEMA and the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) in that emergency planning is based on compliance with
regulations, rather than a strategy that leads to structures and systems
to protect from radiation exposure.
An evacuation plan that is protective of public health and safety is a
condition of license for the operation a nuclear facility. The Witt
report confirms that the Indian Point evacuation plan is not protective
of public health and safety. Therefore, Indian Point must be shut down
immediately until the critical issues of public health and safety can be
addressed.
The findings of the Witt report leave no room for doubt that the
emergency preparedness plan for Indian Point is inadequate, and that
Entergy, the plants owners, should not be allowed to continue
operations at Indian Point, said Clearwater Executive Director, Andy
Mele.
The sloop Clearwater, Americas environmental flagship, has been sailing
for 33 years. More than 400,000 schoolchildren and another 250,000
adults have participated directly in Clearwaters ship-board and
land-based education programs. Members of this Clearwater Generation
are active and informedand they vote!
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