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The Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), was formed in 1946, to oversee military
control of atomic technology. Its mission was redefined in 1954 with an
impossible conflict:
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continuing development of weapons and nuclear powered
naval vessels;
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encouraging rapid construction of commercial nuclear
reactors (to maintain U.S. dominance in nuclear technology, over British and
Russian reactor programs);
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regulating the new industry and protecting public health.
Secrecy, speed, and safety rarely mix. Agencies charged with
public protection soon came under the control of Cold War interests, to conceal
rather than publicize the health risks. Dr. Bertell says, "Health effects
of radiation could [then] be classified for national security to prevent
rebellion."*
As both weapons and reactor programs expanded rapidly over the next 20 years,
public anger toward the AEC grew over rising health problems, shoddy safety and
construction oversight, and coverups of scientific findings. In January 1975,
the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) replaced the AEC as the licensing and
regulating agency for commercial reactors.
DOE: The Deadly Empire
In 1977, the Department of Energy (DOE) was
created to oversee energy development and marketing, as well as nuclear weapons.
Within a few years, weapons were the main priority. From the beginning, ‘national
security’ concerns allowed the DOE to regulate and police themselves and their
many sub-contractors, a policy unheard of in any other industry, and one that we
will pay for with our health and tax dollars for future generations to come.
In recent years, the DOE’s stated purpose is ‘cleanup’
of weapons production sites and maintaining existing weapons stockpiles.
However, technology developed for ‘maintaining’ weapons also serves for new
development, and DOE laboratories are used for all top secret science, from
suitcase bombs to human cloning.
The DOE, has, in addition to over 100,000 employees:
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real estate holdings of more than 2.4 million acres;
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more than 20,700 specialized facilities and buildings,
including 1,600 laboratories, 89 nuclear reactors, 208 particle accelerators
and 665 production and manufacturing facilities;
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about 700,000 metric tons of dangerous nuclear materials,
including about ½ of all mined uranium in the world;
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a budget of $17.4 billion in fiscal 2000, 2/3rds of which
goes to maintain nuclear weapons and attempt to deal with the "Balloon
Mortgage of the Nuclear Age": health, environmental, and safety
legacies of over 50 years of barely regulated bomb production. In 2001, the
cleanup budget has been cut substantially.
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DOE "Random
Stacking' Disposal"

According to Robert Alvarez, former senior policy advisor
to Energy Secretary Bill Richardson:
"Major elements of Energy’s complex are closing down, leaving a
huge unfunded and dangerous mess. After more than half a century of making
nuclear weapons, Energy possesses one of the world’s largest inventories of
dangerous nuclear materials and it has created several of the most contaminated
areas in the Western Hemisphere….
"The high priority assigned to nuclear weapons over the decades, combined
with secrecy and experimental latitude involving ultra-hazardous technologies,
encouraged a cost-be-damned attitude that remains deeply imbedded in today’s
Energy Department.
"At the same time, inadequate investments were made to upgrade facilities,
infrastructure, waste management, and environmental protection. The failure to
invest early in preventative measures has in recent years created a very large
environmental liability—estimated by the Office of Environmental Management at
$265 billion.
"Tens of tons of Plutonium 239 and highly enriched uranium remain in unsafe
or questionable storage containers around the country. Unresolved problems
abound—unstable nuclear solutions, residues, metals, and powders in
deteriorating containers and tanks; nuclear weapons parts in ill-suited
containers; a wide variety of fire and explosion risks; degraded equipment and
safety systems; and deteriorating storage facilities—some dating back to World
War II. Skilled personnel who can safely fix these problems are
disappearing." **
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Alvarez confirms that DOE policy prevents any real oversight
or accountability, both internally and of retained private contractors.
Cover-ups are rewarded and whistleblowers demoted, fired or prosecuted.
Congressional mandates to issue sweeping nuclear safety regulations by October
1999 have not yet born fruit.
*Bertell, R., Notarized statement
about Three Mile Island
Coverup, 7/10/1998.
**Alvarez R., "Energy In Decay", Bulletin of
Atomic Scientists, May/June 2000, Vol. 56, No. 3, pp 24-35.
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