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A Debate Has Begun On a Nuclear Waste Site in Andrews County

Opponents of a proposal to store nuclear waste in Andrews County will speak before a U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission panel at a hearing Wednesday.

Representatives for environmental groups and oil companies are set to present 50 contentions regarding “health, safety and economic risks, as well as the legality of licensing the facility,” according to a press release.

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Why a Domestic Violence Bill Was Vetoed By Abbott

In a veto statement late Wednesday afternoon, Abbott said the bill was a “laudable effort to address domestic violence, until someone slipped in an ill-considered giveaway to a radioactive waste disposal facility. Unfortunately, the bill author’s good ideas about domestic violence have been dragged down by a bad idea about radioactive waste.”

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Holtec Wins Battle for Their Nuclear Waste Storage Facility

Holtec International has won a round in its fight to open a nuclear-waste storage facility, but the company’s opponents say they’re not giving up.

A three-judge panel this week rejected nearly 50 objections to the Camden firm’s proposal for a "consolidated interim storage facility” that would initially hold up to 8,680 metric tons of uranium in a remote area of southeastern New Mexico.

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The Opposition To a Texas Nuclear Waste Site Has Returned

Now a joint venture called Interim Storage Partners LLC has the plan moving forward again. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission recently restarted its review of a consolidated interim storage application for a site in Andrews County, Texas. And the NRC staff's safety, security and environmental reviews could be finished in summer 2020.

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Why Andrews County Is Open To Taking in Radioactive Waste

Peggy Pryor grew up the poor daughter of a roughneck, maligned as “oilfield trash,” but she prides herself on having good horse sense. For more than a decade, this feisty West Texas woman has seen something terribly wrong with plans to turn a former ranch near her hometown into the final resting place for massive amounts of radioactive and hazardous waste. Not too many years ago, Pryor could be found raising hell trying to stop the dump. These days, she’s more or less resigned to the inevitable.

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