If you like politics as blood sport, this is great stuff. On the other hand, if you worry about people, their lives, their health, how their money is spent and how their government protects their lives, their health and how their money is spent, well, then, this sucks.
If you had been waiting for the three-month follow-up to the Senate Environment and Public Works committee hearing on the Fukushima Near-Term Task Force recommendations–the one Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) promised in August at the last hearing on this issue of vital importance to US nuclear safety–well, that hearing was yesterday, Thursday, December 15. . . and whether you watched them or not, you are still waiting.
Though this hearing was, indeed, scheduled months ago, and was introduced Thursday by Boxer with the insistence that the committee should focus on the progress of post-Fukushima lessons learned, the Senators instead behaved much like some of their House brethren had the day before, spending over two-and-a-half hours debating whether Nuclear Regulatory Commission chairman Gregory Jaczko was either a bad chairman. . . or the worst chairman ever.
As has been detailed so many places, the four other NRC commissioners sent a super-complainy letter to the White House essentially accusing Jaczko of making decisions they disagreed with. . . oh, and yelling, banging his gavel, and causing three unnamed female NRC employees to cry. Not to belittle any real problems with real bullying, harassing, martinet bosses, but given the context–seeing this letter “leaked” by House Oversight and Government Reform Chairman Darrell Issa (R-CA) just before the scheduled release of a report (PDF) from Rep. Ed Markey (D-MA) accusing members of the NRC (most notably industry loyalist and Obama appointee Bill Magwood) of conspiring to slow-walk and/or submarine safety upgrades that Jaczko wanted to see adopted after the Fukushima disaster–it is hard to see this dustup as anything but a distraction and a witch hunt.
And it is hard to see the Representatives and Senators (all of them Republican) who spent the last two days berating Jaczko as anything but clumsy puppets of a nuclear industry hell-bent on seeing that nothing more is required them, memorable nuclear nightmare or no.
Look no further than Rep. Issa’s introductory statement at his Wednesday hearing, in which he so badly butchered the names of four of the five NRC commissioners seated in front of him. Issa did OK with “Magwood,” but the verbal Play-Doh that he substituted for “Jaczko,” “Svinicki,” “Apostolakis” and “Ostendorff” demonstrated either a purposeful slight of those “fereign” soundin’ names, or a complete and total ignorance of the matter at hand.
Now, I will cop to having botched the pronunciation of Chairman Jaczko’s name (I now have it on good authority that it is pronounced YAHTZ-ko), but in my defense, I was just going by what I heard on radio and television. Issa, on the other hand, should, in his role as a House member tasked with oversight of the NRC, and as a man who has pushed this apparent scandal as the single most important thing confronting nuclear regulation right now, have a familiarity if not a close working relationship with these people. His demonstration that he did not seemed to say that rather than have any deep knowledge of the matter at hand, Issa was likely just reading what had been placed in front of him by folks who had paid for the right to put words in the mouth of a US Congressman.
Now, as has been mentioned before, it is hard to find the energy to go to the mat for Chairman Jaczko, who may be the most liberal commissioner at the NRC, but is still not seizing this Fukushima moment and truly rethinking US nuclear policy. Perhaps Kevin Kamps of Beyond Nuclear put it best: “He’s not ‘our guy’ by any means, he has voted to re-license plants that should probably be shut down. But he does care about safety, in ways that the others do not.” It is hard not to wish that Jaczko were the worst commissioner at the NRC instead of the best. But it is easy to be outraged by what has happened to Jaczko, and more importantly, what has happened to the fight to improve the safety of America’s nuclear facilities.
And it was hard, while watching the House and Senate hearings within the boundaries of a TV screen, not to think you were seeing some colorized clip from the McCarthy era. The innuendo, character assassination and countless hours of self-righteous grandstanding from Republicans that all-of-the-sudden were oh-so-concerned about supportive work environments and reactor safety went beyond politics-as-usual–it was business as usual, and politics as business. A naked power play by an entrenched, privileged, presumptuous and protected industry.
But now what? This round goes to the nuclear industry–hats off–they made a week that should have been about following up on Fukushima taskforce recommendations, and made it instead about the regulator that dared to regulate. Big nuclear put reformers on their heels at a time when the literal and political fallout from Fukushima should have nuclear apologists running for the hills.
But this is far from over. Darrell Issa, Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK), commissioners Magwood, Svinicki, Ostendorff and Apostolakis, and the nuclear lobby that buttresses all of them will not stop here. The two days of hearings may have ended with a plea for a bunch of smart and dedicated public servants to “work it out,” but watching the events of the last week (and reading the emails included in Markey’s report) make it clear this is not just a war on Jaczko, this is a war on regulation. It may look on the surface like so much bread and circuses, but big nuclear’s henchmen are prepared to feed Christians to the lions all day long. Pro-nuclear forces will accept nothing short of an unobstructed path to privatized profits with socialized risks.
So, the ball’s in your court, Chairman Jaczko. Will you try to give the industry some of what it wants–go ahead with approval of the new AP1000 reactors, the restart of derelict facilities like Davis-Besse and Crystal River, and the relicensing of aged, Fukushima-class plants–in the hopes that somehow this will make the masters of the nuclear universe like you more? Or will you stand fast, indeed, stand faster–pause the relicensing, stop new construction, accelerate post-Fukushima safety upgrades–and stare down the lobbyists and wholly owned elected officials?
If they want to pose as Joe McCarthy, then you, Chairman Jaczko, channel your inner Joseph Welch: “Have you no sense of decency, sir, at long last? Have you left no sense of decency?”
Thanks to a rare alignment of personal interests and election-year politics, it appears the White House has the NRC chairman’s back (at least for now)–Jaczko should use the opportunity to look forward.




9 Comments

“Not to belittle any real problems with real bullying, harassing, martinet bosses…”
Harassment and bullying are “abuse of authority” – illegal practices under civil service law. So when Boxer, et al dismiss, whitewash, or minimize the situation, they are inflaming the situation and politicizing any subsequent investigation.
“Thanks to a rare alignment of personal interests and election-year politics, it appears the White House has the NRC chairman’s back (at least for now)–Jaczko should use the opportunity to look forward.”
Nice – let the alleged bully who might have broken merit principles and civil service law get away with it because the White House and Dems are circling the wagon.
So much for the rule of law.
thanks.
an industry that can’t possibly be make it in the free market, that is exceedingly slow in the building of new reactors, that requires government guarantees of various kinds, including assumption of all liability for its operations, to the citizens, that uses and produces the most dangerous byproducts there are, that is unreliable due to water cooling problems, that is inherently dangerous,
that nobody wants anywhere near them.
the real reason for this is the desire to own, to maintain, and to develop nuclear weapons. no other explanation makes any sense.
what is the likelihood of escaping without a fukushima style nuclear disaster?
I have the uneasy feeling that boxer is being managed.
I called her office recently and talked to an aide of hers, and said I would be writing a letter with information.
I get the feeling that she has “aides” who are aligned with the powers that be.
And that are keeping her misinformed about everything.
This is a woman who has previously stood up to the Military Defense Contractors and their bogus overcharges. Who has taken on the Major Pesticide and Pharma-related industries. And gets things done.
And now she is white washing things that need to be examined?
I really think she needs to think about who is working “for” her and who those people may really be working for.
You are So-o right.
Any thinking person realizes that the 50 to 58 billions of dollars that Obama is planning to “loan” the nuclear power industry, at the same time that people in 40 states are facing serious cutbacks to their state government would be money better offered up to the individual states.
Who knows, maybe after the states re-employ the laid off fire fighters, teachers, social workers, project managers, accountants, et al, there will be a little left over to help people put wind or solar on their homes. (Wind turbines are now being built that do not take up more area than the average attic fan, and do not look any different that that item when installed on the roof!)
Instead, just as Obama coddles the defense industry, he coddles the nuclear people. It only goes to show who really handles his puppet strings!
That’s Sense of SANITY, as opposed to NUKING FUTS; and if we want progress toward closing crippled plants and making the rest “safe(r)”, we’d better demand complete DESISTANCE of nuclear power And WEAPONRY, instead (AGAIN, basic negotiating, bargaining and conflict resolution 101)!
One wonders whether, even if Jacjko’s view had held sway, whether the nuke industry would have ended up making substantive movement toward safety and security. Would they not just have thumbed their noses at the regulator as they skated away?
I forgot to add, thanks Greg Levine for your writing on this subject.
Book Salon up with William Cohan’s Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World hosted by Jeff Madrick
This has the classic earmarks of a battle of good (with little or no backbone) vs. evil.
I like the reference to the nuclear industry’s primary purpose:
“unobstructed path to privatized profits with socialized risks.” That seems to be how the 1 percent defines capitalism, and then they wonder why public opinion of capitalism is souring.