By: | GoDanRiver
Published: June 17, 2012
I began my career as a water quality scientist in Virginia 40 years ago — six years before uranium deposits were discovered beneath farmland in Pittsylvania County. Since shortly after that discovery, Virginia law has banned uranium mining.
It is my firm belief, based on review of the highly anticipated
National Academy of Sciences’ report released last December, that the ban needs
to remain in place.
In 2008, after Virginia Uranium Inc. announced plans to develop
the only uranium mine, mill and waste disposal site in the eastern United
States, the Virginia Coal and Energy Commission contracted with the esteemed
National Academy of Sciences to conduct a rigorous, unbiased analysis of the
idea.
The NAS heard testimony from a wide range of stakeholders during
its review, including state agencies. Then, following release of its report, the
Academy conducted public outreach sessions around the state to answer the
questions and explain the report’s conclusions in greater detail. Those sessions
have just concluded.
Here are just three of the report’s key findings:
» "Extreme natural events (e.g.,
hurricanes, earthquakes, intense rainfall events, drought) have the potential to
lead to the release of contaminants if facilities are not designed and
constructed to withstand such an event, or fail to perform as
designed."
» "The decay products of uranium
provide a constant source of radiation in uranium tailings for thousands of
years, substantially outlasting the current U.S. regulations for oversight of
processing facility tailings."
» "Because almost all uranium
mining and processing to date has taken place in parts of the United States that
have a negative water balance (dry climates with low rainfall) federal agencies
have limited experience applying laws and regulations in positive water balance
(wet climates with medium to high rainfall) situations."
This last point is critical. Federal regulations have been
developed with an eye toward the arid conditions of the Southwest. For example,
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency generally requires "no discharge of
process wastewater" from uranium milling sites, but allows for controlled,
contaminated releases in the rare event of a wet-weather year. Here in
Virginia, of course, every year is a wet-weather year, making the "no
discharge" requirement meaningless.
We might look to Virginia regulations to close these federal
loopholes, but Virginia lacks the experience and expertise to oversee such a
technically complex and potentially dangerous new industry. To be candid, I
doubt whether state agencies would ever have the funding and political support
necessary to do the job as rigorously as this threat demands.
Here’s why: Virginia consistently spends less than 1 percent of
its total annual budget on environmental protection. That includes programs
administered by the Department of Environmental Quality, the Department of
Conservation and Recreation, the Virginia Marine Resources Commission and the
Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. A fair conclusion to be drawn from this
statistic is that the environment has not been a high priority for the
legislature.
When I served as director of DEQ, I witnessed the very real
effects of budget cuts on multiple occasions. Twice, I was compelled to borrow
money from the treasury to meet payroll. Twice, permit fees had to be raised
just to meet minimum standards for administering federally-delegated
programs.
Staffing and operational budget cuts often come at the expense of
data collection and inspection frequency. The forced triage of regulatory duties
means that agencies must often rely on industry self-reporting — a prospect that
should be unthinkable for an industry as risky as uranium mining and waste
disposal.
I have seen wells contaminated by regulated industrial activities
in Pittsylvania County and elsewhere. These are difficult problems to manage.
Toxic and radioactive materials from uranium operations would only make these
problems harder.
For legislators who said last year they wanted to "wait for the
study," that wait is now over. The Academy’s approach was open and transparent.
All sides — mining companies, downstream localities, environmental groups,
regulators, international experts — participated in and had "buy-in" to the
Academy’s process. The final report was then independently peer-reviewed.
Meanwhile, Gov. Bob McDonnell has assembled a group within his
administration to consider the issue. The governor should be encouraged to
deliberate carefully, but his administration’s review should not be confused
with an independent study.
The National Academy of Sciences report represents the gold
standard here. That is why I am advising the governor’s internal uranium group
to heed the Academy’s stern warnings.
Burnley served as director of the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality from 2002-06. He is president of Robert G. Burnley LLC, a firm that advises clients on environmental issues. He is consulting for the Southern Environmental Law Center on uranium mining.
Burnley served as director of the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality from 2002-06. He is president of Robert G. Burnley LLC, a firm that advises clients on environmental issues. He is consulting for the Southern Environmental Law Center on uranium mining.
http://www2.godanriver.com/news/2012/jun/17/all-credible-science-says-keep-ban-ar-1991297/
Keep the Ban on Uranium Mining
Virginia Coal and Energy Commission – Uranium Working Group Public Meeting Monday June 18th
When: June 18th 6:00 PM
Where: Chatham High School, 100 Cavalier Circle, Chatham, VA
Virginia has a nearly 30-year ban on uranium mining. The uranium industry is making a well-financed push to repeal the ban so they can mine and process uranium, starting in Southside Virginia. Drinking water, human health, farmland, property values, wildlife and tourism across Virginia are at risk.
The Keep the Ban Coalition is a group of local and state organizations working to maintain the existing ban on uranium mining in Virginia. Scores of public interest groups and localities (see the list here) and over 10,000 citizens have stated their support to the General Assembly for keeping the ban on uranium mining in Virginia.
http://keeptheban.org/
Keep the Ban coalitionWhen: June 18th 6:00 PM
Where: Chatham High School, 100 Cavalier Circle, Chatham, VA
Virginia has a nearly 30-year ban on uranium mining. The uranium industry is making a well-financed push to repeal the ban so they can mine and process uranium, starting in Southside Virginia. Drinking water, human health, farmland, property values, wildlife and tourism across Virginia are at risk.
The Keep the Ban Coalition is a group of local and state organizations working to maintain the existing ban on uranium mining in Virginia. Scores of public interest groups and localities (see the list here) and over 10,000 citizens have stated their support to the General Assembly for keeping the ban on uranium mining in Virginia.
http://keeptheban.org/
This past year the Sierra Club, working with the Keep the Ban coalition collected more than 10,000 signatures in opposition to uranium mining in Virginia.
Of course, we didn't fly state legislators to Paris like Virginia Uranium, Inc. And if we had the money, we'd take them to an Indian reservation in the Southwestern United States where the water and land have been contaminated by uranium mining, not to Paris.
Click here to urge your legislators to oppose uranium mining: http://keeptheban.org/?page_id=237
It's people power vs. polluters' money in this Virginia uranium mining fight, and people power won the 1st round when public opposition to mining convinced the General Assembly that the issue was too radioactive to consider in 2012.
Studies by the National Academy of Sciences and the City of Virginia Beach raised serious concerns about the safety of mining uranium in such a wet climate up river from more than a million people in Hampton Roads. Sadly, that did not keep Governor McDonnell from riding to the rescue of Virginia Uranium, Inc. When it was obvious that the General Assembly would not take up a bill to repeal the ban, McDonnell established his own Work Group to move forward with development of a regulatory framework for mining.
The Gang that Don't Shoot Straight
The good news is that the Work Group has been discredited through the McDonnell Administration's own ineptitude. At the announcement of the Work Force, a spokesperson announced that the proceedings would be closed to the public. When that approach generated heat from the public and the press, the Governor held a hastily called meeting for critics, so hastily called that many of us could not make it. Then McDonnell's people advised the press that they could attend but not ask questions.
One of the key public communication mechanisms from the Work Group was supposed to be a website that for several months did not have a functioning comment page. The failings of the Work Group continue to mount with defective meeting notices, prompting one observer to refer to the group as "the Gang that don't shot straight."
Stop the End Run
As we go to press, we are preparing for a public meeting by the Governor Work Group in Chatham, VA where the mining is proposed. Sierra Club and the Keep the Ban coalition are working to turn out at least 100 opponents at this June 18 meeting.
What you can do!
Members of the Virginia General Assembly, your Senator and Delegate need to hear from you.
Click here to urge your legislators to oppose uranium mining: https://secure.sierraclub.org/site/Advocacy?pagename=homepage&page=UserAction&id=8979&autologin=true&s_src=312Z5000A1&JServSessionIdr004=x5rqg1yvi1.app223a
Thank you for continued support on this very serious issue,
Glen Besa
Director, Virginia Chapter Sierra Club
P.S. For additional ways you can help keep the ban visit our website at www.vasierraclub.org/uranium.
Virginia Chapter
422 East Franklin St., Suite 302 - Richmond, VA 23219 | 804-225-9113