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NewsSeptember 17, 2014

WASHINGTON -- Amid action in Congress to intensify the fight against Islamic State militants, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid found time Tuesday for an issue closer to home: ensuring a nuclear waste dump in his home state of Nevada remains mothballed even after the government has spent $15 billion on it...

By ERICA WERNER ~ Associated Press
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., speaks with reporters after a Democratic policy lunch Tuesday at the Capitol in Washington. Reid is working to ensure that a nuclear waste dump in his home state stays closed even though the government has spent $15 billion on it. (J. Scott Applewhite ~ Associated Press)
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., speaks with reporters after a Democratic policy lunch Tuesday at the Capitol in Washington. Reid is working to ensure that a nuclear waste dump in his home state stays closed even though the government has spent $15 billion on it. (J. Scott Applewhite ~ Associated Press)

WASHINGTON -- Amid action in Congress to intensify the fight against Islamic State militants, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid found time Tuesday for an issue closer to home: ensuring a nuclear waste dump in his home state of Nevada remains mothballed even after the government has spent $15 billion on it.

Reid devoted floor time to confirming two nominees to the agency that oversees the nation's nuclear reactors. That means a Democrat-appointed majority will weigh any further steps related to creating a national nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain, 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas.

The confirmations come as Republicans have begun talking about trying to revive the Yucca Mountain project if they retake the Senate in November. The Obama administration, under pressure from Reid, abandoned the project early in the president's first term, leaving tens of thousands of tons of spent fuel sitting at nuclear reactors around the country with nowhere to go.

"There's been a huge investment made there and we've got to find a solution to store nuclear waste," said Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D. "One difference I can tell you for sure is that we'll have votes on it. Whether we can advance it or not remains to be seen."

Reid vowed Tuesday that Yucca Mountain, which he's spent years working against and can take almost single-handed credit for derailing, would stay dead.

"Yucca Mountain is all through," he said. "As long as I'm around, there's no Yucca Mountain."

But having a potentially sympathetic majority on the Nuclear Regulatory Commission couldn't hurt. Over Republican opposition, the Senate confirmed the nominations of Jeffery Martin Baran and Stephen G. Burns, bringing its composition to three Democratic appointees and two appointed under a Republican administration.

The votes were 56-44 for Baran and 60-40 for Burns.

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"Whether these two nominees will act with impartiality and make decisions based on prudence and sound judgment will be seen," Sen. David Vitter, R-La., complained before the vote.

Congress designated Yucca Mountain in 2002 as the one national repository for spent fuel from dozens of power plants around the country over the objections of Reid and the Nevada delegation, but once Reid became majority leader in 2007 he acquired clout to stop the dump.

He worked to position Nevada as an early nominating state in the 2008 presidential election, which helped ensure Obama and other Democrats running for president made commitments to oppose Yucca Mountain. Once president, Obama and his appointees moved to shut off funding, close operations in the Energy Department and shutter the site on a barren volcanic ridge in the Nevada desert, frequented by jackrabbits and desert tortoises.

Reid pushed for a former aide, Gregory Jaczko, to lead the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, an independent agency that oversees commercial nuclear operations. Under Jaczko's leadership the NRC allowed the Obama administration's shutdown of the dump to stand, but Jaczko resigned under pressure amid complaints of a bullying management style.

Last year, a federal appeals court ruled the NRC violated the law by delaying work and needed to complete the licensing process. The NRC is moving forward on a reduced budget with studying the project and making regular reports to Congress, but little is expected to come of it.

Meanwhile, the Energy Department is trying to implement a new process for finding a different site for a nuclear dump, one where local residents will welcome it. Meanwhile there is discussion of turning the Yucca Mountain site into a data storage facility.

Officials in states that want to get rid of their nuclear waste, and in the nuclear industry itself, can hold out hope for a solution of some kind, perhaps after the midterm elections.

"We're pleased that anyone is talking about it," said Rob Thormeyer, spokesman for the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners. "We are hopeful that the NRC can proceed, but we recognize that it's going to take an act of Congress in all likelihood to get the ball rolling to the next level."

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