[Update: The bill authorizing mining has been pulled from consideration. The issue is dead, at least at this time. But with this much money involved this issue will never be truly deceased.]
In the middle of Virginia between Lynchburg
and Danville is
a large uranium deposit. The people who
own the land want the right to mine if, and to do so they
need to change Virginia ’s
laws against uranium mining.
Of course
the proponents don’t mention the huge financial gains they would make, they
argue that they are doing this for the good of the country and the economy.
Chatham, Virginia A Nice Place to Make Into a Radioactive Dump |
Bills introduced last week would lift a moratorium on uranium
mining at the site here, known as Coles Hill. Political supporters say that the
mining would bring economic benefits and that risks from radioactive wastes, or
tailings, can be safely managed.
The tactics of the supporters of lifting the ban are
right out of American politics 101. Buy
influence.
To influence lawmakers, Virginia
Uranium has poured more than $600,000 into campaign contributions and lobbying
since 2008, according to public records.
For the current 45-day legislative session in Richmond , it has retained 20 lobbyists. . . .
In 2010 and 2011,
Virginia Uranium paid $122,000 total to fly about two dozen members of the
General Assembly to France
to visit a tailings storage site, which critics quickly labeled a junket. The
sponsor of the Senate bill that would lift the uranium ban, John C. Watkins,
was among those traveling.
The opposition has a pretty strong case, that the
environmental risks are huge and the result of mining could be highly
destructive.
A National Academy of Sciences report in 2011 stopped the momentum in last year’s General Assembly for lifting
the ban, imposed three decades earlier in the wake of the Three Mile Island
nuclear plant accident. The report warned of “steep hurdles” to safe mining and
“significant human health” dangers if a capped tailings pile leaks because of
the state’s “frequent storms.”
And surprisingly the politics do not divide along
party lines. Here is a leading Democrat
spouting an “I don’t care” message.
A
prominent supporter is the minority leader of the State Senate, Richard L.
Saslaw, a Democrat, who lives in the northern suburbs. Asked about buried
uranium tailings that remain a risk for hundreds of years, Mr. Saslaw, who is
known for unguarded statements, said in a radio
interview, “I’m not going to be here.”
which is of course the sentiment of all those who hate
protecting the environment from their own greedy clutches. A Republican has a different take.
Delegate James E. Edmunds II,
a Republican, said that in the event that radiation leaked into the
groundwater, his district would be one of the first affected. “There’s no
waiting for a big rain to clean it up,” he said. “I’m not going to have that as
my legacy.”
The issue has turned many of the region’s
elected Republicans, the party of “drill, baby, drill” and property rights,
into mining opponents.
Yeah, funny how pollution and environmental
destruction attitudes change when it is happening in your back yard.
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