Pilgrim Watch

Pilgrim Watch Pilgrim Watch is a grassroots organization that serves the public interest in issues regarding the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station in Plymouth, MA.

Pilgrim Nuclear Station's license to operate will expire in 2012. We oppose re-licensing, which would allow Pilgrim to operate until 2032, unless the following standards are met:

- Heightened security to protect against attack from the air, water, and land.
- Safer storage of spent radioactive fuel rods until all spent rods are moved off-site.
- Reduction of allowable radioactive emissions into o

ur air and water.
- Monitors – computer linked to state and local authorities – at all points where radiation is released from Pilgrim and at appropriate off-site locations.
- Replace the water cooling system with one not harmful to marine life.
- Updated emergency planning.
- Meet technical specifications required for new reactors built today, and requirements for aging management program. Indeed, all of this can and should be done now!

- Upon Pilgrim’s closing, we support job placement efforts for workers not employed in decommissioning.
- We support development in Plymouth of businesses that do not pose a threat to the health, safety and property values of our community.

Law Limiting Pilgrim Water Release Awaits Baker’s Signaturehttps://provincetownindependent.org/featured/2022/11/09/law-l...
11/10/2022

Law Limiting Pilgrim Water Release Awaits Baker’s Signature

https://provincetownindependent.org/featured/2022/11/09/law-limiting-pilgrim-water-release-awaits-bakers-signature/

". . . . State Sen. Julian Cyr co-sponsored Moran’s amendment. “The release of contaminated water into Cape Cod Bay has the potential to significantly impact our environment and the lives of locals,” said the Truro Democrat in a statement issued last week. Moran’s amendment will ensure the public has a voice and the process is transparent, Cyr said, adding, “I am thankful to Sen. Moran for her diligence and for standing up for our community members.”

Mary Lampert, an NDCAP member and director of the Duxbury citizens group Pilgrim Watch, said it’s up to the governor now. “These provisions will protect an over $2 billion annual ‘blue economy’ at no cost to the Commonwealth,” Lampert said in an email. “And Holtec has other options to dispose of Pilgrim’s contaminated water.”. . ."

PLYMOUTH — A Holtec official said at a July public hearing that, if a state law prohibited it, his company would not release a million gallons of treated radioactive water […]

The Save Our Bay coalition, which opposes the release of radioactive water into Cape Cod Bay, is holding a rally at 5 p....
09/23/2022

The Save Our Bay coalition, which opposes the release of radioactive water into Cape Cod Bay, is holding a rally at 5 p.m. Monday on the green outside Plymouth Town Hall.

“No filter is perfect,” said James Lampert of Pilgrim Watch. “They will significantly reduce the level of pollutants, the level of minerals, but they will not get rid of them all.”

04/27/2022

https://www.wickedlocal.com/story/old-colony-memorial/2022/04/23/guest-column-holtecs-planned-nuclear-dump/7275399001/

Old Colony Memorial
GUEST COLUMN: Holtec's planned nuclear dump
By Theodore Bosen
April 23, 2022

Holtec argued that their planned nuclear dump into the bay will have a negligible environmental impact because past aqueous releases did no harm over several decades of Pilgrim’s operation. Not so!

In the mid-80s, I consumed bushels of mussels from Warren Cove, around the corner from Pilgrim. Sometime later, on behalf of the Pilgrim Alliance, I helped bring renowned physicist Ernest Sternglass of the University of Pittsburgh, to Plymouth to speak on his research into cancers surrounding nuclear plants. When I told him of my shellfish consumption, tears welled up in his eyes as he said, “Son, I’m sorry, but you are going to get thyroid cancer in 20 years, if not worse.”

I stopped eating those mussels and went to the office of the Massachusetts Radiation Control Unit to check their records on local radiological testing. They had told our community at a public hearing in 1986 that they were testing fish and shellfish around the plant at least twice a year. That turned out to be false. Their records showed only one or two fish from somewhere in the bay, and no more recently than three years prior, plus no mollusks whatsoever. I then asked them to test the mussels around Pilgrim. They agreed, asking me to bring them two quarts of mussel meat from around the plant, fresh-frozen, which I did two days later. Their analysis identified six radionuclides which they said were consistent with fission products from the plant. An independent lab verified that. I sent the report to Pilgrim’s operator, Boston Edison, but they disagreed. They stated it was background radiation from Chinese atmospheric tests. How I know that was a lie is that the last ever atmospheric test by the Chinese was on Oct. 16, 1980, and a couple of the isotopes in the sample had short half-lives that precluded them from being that old. I learned that day that the nuclear industry doesn’t take low-level radiation seriously and will lie.

A year later, as the person holding the designated anti-nuclear seat on the Plymouth Nuclear Matters Committee (the original charge was for at least one official “pro” organization and one official “anti” organization to be represented), I toured Pilgrim while it was shut down. The fellow who held the “pro” seat, took me over to the spent fuel pool to look down into it through a floating plastic box attached to a string. His gloved hand pulled the string to bring the viewing box over. That string had picked up droplets of water from the spent fuel pool, which he later pressed into my back while escorting me around the pool. He was dosing me so that the radiation alarm would sound when I tried to leave. In such case I would be prohibited from leaving until decontaminated. He and others got the biggest laugh out of that when the alarm went off and I was sent back from the gate to disrobe and wash up. This reinforced what I had already learned: nuclear industry people think low-level radiation risk is non-existent.

Sternglass’s prediction eventually came true. I was diagnosed with thyroid cancer in 2006. Two dear friends, anti-Pilgrim comrades-in-arms who lived at or near the beach during my mussel-eating days, one on each side of Pilgrim, Cheryl Nickerson and Wedge Bramhall, were taken from us by cancers nearly a decade ago. My cousin Marge, who had introduced me to Warren Cove mussels and who had eaten them for years, passed two years ago from cancer. Last month I said goodbye to my friend Renny Cushing who, at 69, lost his life to cancer. He had co-founded the Clamshell Alliance and lived in the shadow of the Seabrook nuke for decades, fighting it since its inception. Of course, one can say my anecdotal evidence is not proof. However, Sternglass’s research became more credible as time went on, because subsequent research concluded that there is no safe amount of low-level radiation exposure!

Those who rallied last Saturday at Plymouth Wharf in opposition to Holtec’s planned dump (and I was proud to have joined them), must gather up the science on the risks of low-level radiation, along with oceanographic research that indicates water in the bay is made up of streams and eddies within the larger body that can concentrate such a dump, keeping it from dispersing for considerable distances. Then they must thrust all that before both state and federal regulatory bodies with jurisdiction over ocean dumping, in particular, Coastal Zone Management, with the help of Senator Markey and state legislators, and demand that the dump be prohibited.

Lastly, activists should strip two quarts of bivalve meat from around Pilgrim, get it tested to serve as a baseline, then let Holtec know that any increase in bivalve radioactivity appearing after their dump will be used in a lawsuit as sufficient evidence of harm to the seafood, fishing, and tourist industries to give them legal standing to sue. Moreover, they should demand the NRC require Holtec to buy plenty of additional insurance.

The spirits of Wedge and Cheryl were there on Saturday along with several past and present nuclear safety soldiers. Tap their energy and experience and you can’t fail.

Theodore Bosen, Berlin, N.H.

02/09/2022
What: Rally to Save Our Bay-Oppose Holtec’s Plan to Dump Pilgrim’s Radioactive Contaminated Water into Cape Cod Bay-thre...
02/09/2022

What: Rally to Save Our Bay-

Oppose Holtec’s Plan to Dump Pilgrim’s Radioactive Contaminated Water into Cape Cod Bay-threatening our safety and marine based economy-oysters, lobsters, clams, shellfish, finfish, tourism, endangered species, and more!

WHEN: SUNDAY FEB 13-12:00 TP 1:00

SHOW YOUR LOVE FOR THE BAY-WHAT BETTER WAY TO CELEBRATE VALENTINE’S DAY WEEK-END?

03/30/2020

Action Alert: It is our understanding that Holtec plans to bring in 30 contractors this week from various states to move some of the spent nuclear fuel assemblies that are now in the spent fuel pool into dry casks. There is no reason that this transfer must be made now. These new contractors are in no way, shape or form necessary for the safe operation of the plant or for Holtec to meet its overall decommissioning schedule.

Accordingly, Pilgrim Watch sent the following letter to Bruce Watson @ NRC last week. If you share these concerns, please consider sending a similar letter to: NRC (Bruce Watson); Governor Baker; Attorney General; MDPH Commissioner; MEMA director; Elected local officials (Ply BOS, Senators and Legislators); Plymouth Board of Health Chair; local press-Christine Legere Cape Cod Times, David Kindy, Old Colony, David Abel Globe; and the Nuclear Decommissioning Citizen Advisory Panel.

"March 27, 2020
Bruce Watson
Chief Reactor Decommissioning Branch
NRC
Via Email
Request- Require Holtec to follow Covid-19 Advisory

The state has advised people to stay at home to help curb the spread of the coronavirus, unless they are essential to an essential business.[1] Governor Baker on March 27 instructed anyone traveling to Massachusetts to self-quarantine for 14 days, and he also urged that people simply not to travel to the state, particularly if they have symptoms.[2]

I understand that, next week, Holtec plans to bring in 30 contractors from various states to move some of the spent nuclear fuel assemblies that are now in the spent fuel pool into dry casks. There is no reason that this transfer must be made now. These new contractors are in no way, shape or form necessary for the safe operation of the plant or for Holtec to meet its overall decommissioning schedule.

Pilgrim is not generating electricity for the region. The only aspect of it that is essential is the workers onsite needed for safety - such as security workers and workers needed to assure the safe operations of the spent fuel pool.
Holtec’s decommissioning plan calls for building a new dry cask pad adjacent to Rocky Hill Road, and for moving the spent nuclear fuel in the spent fuel into dry casks on that new pad within two years. From a health and safety perspective, it will not matter if dealing with the coronavirus epidemic requires delaying work that otherwise would be done in the near future, even if to do so might somewhat stretch Holtec’s overall timeline.

The only logical explanations for Holtec’s decision to bring in new out-of-state workers to move fuel now are that “this is what we always planned,” and that “keeping to our current schedule will “save us money.” As always, Holtec’s only real concern is to make as much money as possible – health and safety, even in the midst of a COVID-19 crisis, fall far behind. We strongly doubt that it will take the responsibility and incur the costs of quarantining anyone.

We and Governor Baker clearly recognize that bringing in 30 new workers unnecessarily greatly increases the risk not only to Pilgrim’s current workers but also to their families and the broader Plymouth community. To negatively impact the workers onsite and more broadly the area, all it would take is for one of these contractors to bring the virus with them.

Why is Holtec willing to risk the unnecessary potential infection that would clearly impact not only the safe operation of Pilgrim by infecting current workers familiar with the site but also the health and safety of all who work, or in their daily lives will necessarily come into contact with someone who works, there?

We request that you require or do what you can to influence Holtec to follow the Covid-19 advisory."

Comment Before Midnight 11-19-19! Tell NRC: Keep super-hot nuclear power waste out of soil ditches! Keep managing 'GTCC'...
11/19/2019

Comment Before Midnight 11-19-19! Tell NRC: Keep super-hot nuclear power waste out of soil ditches! Keep managing 'GTCC' as HIGH LEVEL waste!

A major TV miniseries about the Chernobyl disaster airs starting May 6. See our Chernobyl Resource Guide for accurate information about the disaster and its impacts. And follow our commentary on twitter and facebook.

"Attorney General Maura Healey has asked the U.S. Appeals Court to put the Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s approval of t...
11/05/2019

"Attorney General Maura Healey has asked the U.S. Appeals Court to put the Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s approval of the license transfer for Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station on hold until her pending suit against the commission has been settled."

BOSTON — Attorney General Maura Healey has asked the U.S. Appeals Court to put the Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s approval of the

"Despite opposition from the region’s legislators and even the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Nuclear Regulato...
11/05/2019

"Despite opposition from the region’s legislators and even the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has voted to allow the owners of Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station to shrink the plant’s emergency planning zone from the current 10-mile radius down to its own property line."

NRC decision to exempt plant draws heated response.

10/02/2019

HINGHAM — Several nuclear watchdog groups will host an event titled “The Road From Pilgrim to New Mexico” from 3 to 6 p.m.

10/01/2019

Action Item: Contact your State Legislators and ask them to support S. 1992 and S. 1984, two identical bills to require a $25M annual fee to act as an insurance policy if money runs out to decommission Pilgrim.

1) Both the Commonwealth & Pilgrim Watch’s Motion to Intervene in the license transfer showed conclusively that there is not enough money - leaving us the payers of last resort.

2) There were objections to the bill in the legislature - believing it applied to Yankee Rowe also. There is a simple fix to resolve that issue. We suggest that the definition of nuclear power station in these two bills be amended by adding the following phrase: "'Nuclear power station', shall mean any commercial facility that uses, or on or after January 1, 2018 used, nuclear fuel to generate electric power."

The Joint Committee on Telecommunications & Entergy will set a hearing date for both bills sometime this Fall.

Thank you.

Thank you, AG Healey! "State Attorney General Maura Healey has filed a federal court appeal that seeks to vacate the Nuc...
10/01/2019

Thank you, AG Healey! "State Attorney General Maura Healey has filed a federal court appeal that seeks to vacate the Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s order to transfer Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station’s license from Entergy Corp. to Holtec International, and its $1.1 billion trust fund along with it."

Filing with federal appeals court asks that matter be sent back to NRC.

Address

Duxbury, MA

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