KUED Presents First Comprehensive
Skull Valley Report
The vast open landscape of Utah's West Desert has become a
crossroads for a national energy, safety and accountability
debate.
The small Skull Valley Band of the Goshute Indian tribe, already
surrounded by military, chemical and radiation hazards, is poised
to welcome more than 80 million pounds of the nation's high-level
nuclear waste to their traditional homeland. If their partnership
with a consortium of nuclear power utilities gains federal approval,
the Skull Valley reservation lands will store 40,000 metric
tons of spent uranium fuel rods from the nation's nuclear power
plants for up to 40 years. The above-ground, open-air storage
plan has moved forward despite the opposition of Utah's Governor,
state legislature, congressional delegation and public sentiment.
The result is a full-blown power struggle: a small, forgotten
Native American tribe's sovereignty in direct conflict with
a state's determination to block potentially lethal spent nuclear
rods from storage within its borders. Large public utilities
facing an energy crisis drive forward with plans to move nuclear
waste from power plants across the country to the barren deserts
of the West. The federal government's promise to manage nuclear
waste comes in sharp conflict with a state's ability to control
its own destiny. And at the center of the controversy is arguably
the most lethal industrial waste ever produced by humankind.
In the first balanced, in-depth examination of the proposal
to temporarily store nuclear waste on the reservation lands
of the Skull Valley Band of the Goshute Indian tribe, KUED Senior
Producer Ken Verdoia details the cultural, political, economic
and environmental conflicts that make this one of the most compelling
public policy crises of the new century. In a special 90-minute
documentary designed to educate Utahns on a largely misunderstood
and complex public process, Skull Valley: Radioactive Waste
and the American West premieres on KUED-Channel 7 on Wednesday,
July 11, at 8 p.m. The documentary's release comes just
prior to release of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission's
final Environmental Impact Statement on the plan. Public hearings
will be held in Utah later this year as a precursor to a final
decision on the project in the spring of 2002. The companion
Web site will be continually updated throughout the process
to serve as the most informative, all-encompassing pubic information
resource on the topic to date.
Skull Valley takes the viewer to the little known locations
and introduces the players that will shape the future of nuclear
waste storage and the American West:
Meet the Skull Valley Band of the Goshute Indian tribe. With
a sacred tie to its stark reservation lands in Tooele County,
located just 80 miles southwest of Salt Lake City, the tribe
has agreed to accept 80 million pounds of radioactive fuel rods.
With its members divided over an issue that could affect most
of the nation, the tribe has signed an agreement for an undisclosed
amount of money with Private Fuel Storage, a Limited Liability
Company. The tribe's West Desert home would accept the radioactive
waste generated by some of the nation's more than 100 nuclear
power plants. Tribal leaders hope the pact will reverse generations
of poverty and neglect at the hands of government.
Perhaps more volatile than the lines drawn between the tribe
and the government - and between the tribe members themselves
-- are the divisions between the government and the utility
companies.
Meet Private Fuel Storage, L.L.C. (PFS), a consortium of eight
nuclear power utilities which has decided to take nuclear waste
storage out of the hands of an indecisive federal government
and into their own. Pending federal approval of the plan, PFS
will remove spent uranium fuel rods from nuclear power plants
coast-to-coast, place them on specially designed rail cars,
and ship them to Skull Valley. If the PFS plan fulfills its
promise, the Skull Valley reservation would house the first,
private, high-level radioactive storage site in the nation's
history.
Throw in several competing interests including:
-
Utah Governor Mike Leavitt, who, along with
various grassroots groups, adamantly opposes the storage
-
The state of Nevada, who is fighting designation
of its Yucca Mountain underground site as the permanent home
of the waste
-
Xcel Energy, a PFS member who has assumed
a leadership role in the planning and execution of the Utah
storage facility, yet has been sharply criticized for secretive
and deceptive practices by Utah officials and
-
Tooele County government, which stands to
receive about $200 million from the utility companies in "mitigation
fees" in an agreement with PFS that ensures local government
will
not criticize, but promote, the project, and a struggle of
major proportions erupts.
In probing the elusive details of the PFS/Skull Valley proposal,
Verdoia and his KUED colleagues interviewed dozens of participants
in the controversy, including: Gov. Leavitt, who questions PFS'
negotiations with the Goshutes; Goshute Chairman Leon Bear, who
insists the contract is an issue that only concerns his tribe
and PFS; Utah Representative Jim Hansen, who believes a nuclear
waste site could erode the mission of Hill Air Force Base; PFS
Project Director Scott Northard, who argues that every move made
by the consortium is in strict compliance with federal law; Goshute
Sammy Blackbear, who alleges pay-offs to tribal members by PFS;
and Forrest Cuch of the State Office of Indian Affairs, who warns
that the PFS/Skull Valley contract may very well be one of the
consequences of 150 years of government neglect of Native Americans.
Professionals in the academic, scientific, legal and political
communities are also included, as well as the perspectives of
neighboring tribes.
In addition to the interviews, the program contains archival
footage and photos that demonstrate the evolution of Utah's West
Desert into one of the most embattled, if not toxic, areas of
the United States. The program also depicts what the final storage
site will look like, as it sprawls across the equivalent of seven
side-by-side football fields. Skull Valley will also feature
maps of key sites and activities, including: the major transportation
routes for the waste, on its way into Skull Valley; the West Desert,
where several military projects already exist; and the nation's
nuclear reactor sites, where the waste will begin its journey
to Utah.
Verdoia puts the complex struggle into context, showing how the
federal government's promise, yet failure, to develop a clear
policy for dealing with nuclear waste has led to the current situation.
"'Skull Valley' affords an opportunity to explore numerous
critical issues confronting the nation at the dawn of a new century,"
says multiple Emmy Award-winning producer of the documentary.
"It offers an often shocking depiction of a breakdown in
the nation's system of checks and balances. A breakdown with serious
repercussions for every Utah citizen."
Following the documentary, KUED will air a 30-minute, citizen
speak-out edition of "Civic
Dialogue" to discuss the issue with panelists and a small
audience made up of opponents, proponents, participants in the
program, and unaligned, average citizens.
Funding for Skull Valley was generously provided
by the Lawrence T. and Janet T. Dee
Foundation and Norman and Barbara Tanner.
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