I Wednesday! vv JJ ro rb) i February 2, 1033 University of Nebraska-Lincoln Vol. 82, No. 95 J t m ro Cuoim.dfl (Waste iniwdteair waste safety By Kevin Hanken Questions about safety guidelines for the proposed shipment of spent radioac tive materials through Lincoln stirred a de bate at the City Council meeting Monday. On Jan. 24, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission approved the Nebraska Pub lic Power District's route for shipping spent nuclear fuel from the Cooper Nu clear Station near Brownville to General Elcctric's storage facility near Morris, 111. The outlined route runs through 17 south cast Nebraska towns, including Lincoln. Lincoln City Councilman Eric Young berg has proposed a city ordinance that would set guidelines intended to make these shipments safer to Lincoln residents. Youngberg told the council the ordi nance is based on the premise NPPD offi cials should prove that such shipments via Burlington Northern Railroad are as safe as possible. A national policy for such trans portation routes is needed desperately and has been resisted by the federal govern ment, Youngberg said. Jay Pilant, NPPD division manager for licensing and quality assurance, outlined opposition to tour major areas of the ordi nance: -The ordinance discriminates against the commercial shipment of nuclear waste, but concedes that safety measures for mili tary and medical research shipments are adequate. -Reasonable alternatives to shipping spent fuel cannot be reached. -Requirements to obtain a permit, and the fee, are viewed as unacceptable. -Further notification of shipment de tails, other than the seven-day advance no tice to the governor of the state, must come from state officials, not NPPD. Representatives of the Nebraska Safe Energy Committee, which showed a slide presentation to the council, said that be cause only a few commercial facilities have shipped such waste, NPPD's experience should not be used as a reason for trusting their capabilities. The committee also pointed out that the 65-to-70-ton casks, which hold three tons of spent fuel, have been tested only by computer simulation and scale models. Therefore, it was argued, the tests were misleading unrl objectionable. 3 r f i W i : 4: s. ii vv ...... ... i r i ,J M i f Staff photo by Craig Andresen G ft r U A major snow storm hit Lincoln Tuesday . Clockwise from top: Pam Merkle shields herself against the blowing snow with a scarf. Tim Norlan, left, takes a spill near 13 th and R streets while walking with John Regan. Pilant said the current NRC and U.S. Department of Transportation regulations that NPPD operates under, adequately pro tect residents of Lincoln and surrounding areas. In addition, NPPD has voluntarily implemented special safety measures. A "chase vehicle," a separate train with mod erating equipment and effective personnel on board, will be in constant radio contact, and within minutes, of the shipment train. Special speed limits will be set for BN trains during the 30-hour trip from Coop er Station to Morris, Pilant said. Accidents occurring at speeds up to 30 mph would not result in forces exceeding the cask's damage resistance, he said. Eugene Voiland, GE's manager of the nuclear fuel and services division at the Morris operation, said severe testing of casks at the Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico showed no evidence of any failure in the actual container. Voiland said the accident scenarios sug gested in the SEC slide were speculative. After 31 years in the nuclear industry, he said, he believes real risks are limited. The Morris facility has received 500 shipments of spent fuel, 450 in casks, dur- ing the last 1 1 years without any accidents releasing radioactivity, Voiland said. The SIX" said that building dry-storage facilities could handle the spent fuel until a permanent waste depository is complet ed. Such a depository is scheduled to begin operation before 1998 under the recently passed Waste Policy Act. Joe Flash, NPPD information coordina tor, said no sudi facilities have been built in the United States, and that if one was built, there would be no guarantee that the NRC would grant it a license. Construction and licensing could cost up to $(() million, lie said. "If we ship it (the waste) now, it costs NPPD roughly S2 million, but only in transportation costs because GE is storing it in their facility without charging," Flash said. "Ji we elected to wait, we run the risk of not having GE wait for us, which means we'd have to search for another facility, which at current storage costs for the amount of material we want stored, would cost $30 million. Continued on Page 7 approved b Li 1 new umraire usoTtLeir: r A, move awantis reseiniis Oil Staff photo by John Zoz By Ward W. Triplett III It took almost two hours for members of the Culture Center Task Force and other students to convince Nebraska Union Board members that the center's activities should be moved to the Terrace Hall an nex, 425 University Terrace. It took less time for the Committee for Fees Allocation to approve an additional $13,000 in the union's 1983-84 budget to operate the Terrace Hall building. But, according to a university regent, the decisions were made too quickly, and another option should be considered be fore $180,000 in bond funding is approved to renovate Terrace Hall. "If we acquire Whittier school," Regent Ed Schwartzkopf of Lincoln said, "there would be a number of possibilities for it. I think it could lend itself to the kind of activities the Culture Center wants to have now." Schwartzkopf said the Whittier option could be more feasible than spending the $180,000 needed to remodel a building that is "insufficient and mediocre." Schwartzkopf's contention that Whit tier's potential space advantages should be explored nearly echoed the argument Un ion Board President Laura Meyer gave at the Jan. 19 board meeting. Meyer and several other board members had suggested bypassing the Terrace Hall option until other options, such as a new building, could be examined. Culture Center Task Force members had answered no, saying a new building was too much of a long shot and their stud ies had determined that Terrace Hall, cur rently occupied by Tau Kappa Epsilon, was the best option available. The building al ready is owned by the university, and is closer to the middle of campus - an impor tant factor for the center. In the end, the board voted 64 to approve the Terrace Hall option. Schwartzkopf voiced his objections, af ter CFA voted on the union budget. Schwartzkopf said Whittier has not been considered carefully enough as a potential site for the center. The building's location at 22nd and Vine streets, would not have to be a factor if the programs offered were strong enough, he said. "In Whittier, there is plenty of office space, a cafeteria, an auditorium,. a stage and plenty of open space to hold any type of function they could have," Schwartz kopf said. Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs Richard Armstrong said the Terrace Hall building cannot accommodate more than 50 persons in one room. It will also not be accessible to handicapped students without major renovations. "But 1 tend to agree with the students who say it (Whittier) js far from the center of campus. Since that was a prominent consideration for moving the center, for that reason it would appear to be not as attractive as the other options," Armstrong added. ; Center Director Ennio Quevedo agreed. The present Culture Center at 1016 N. 16th St. has stood for 10 years, serving as a meeting place for the African People's Un ion, the Mexican-American Student Asso ciation and the Native American Student Association. Last year, a study by the University's Physical Plant determined the building was in unsatisfactory condition and was too poorly constructed to justify projected re novation costs. Late last semester, Armstrong appoint ed the task force to find another location for the center. Terrace Hall was identified, and a feasibility study completed in No vember. Most of the student groups who use the center believed Terrace Hall was prefer able to the present building, which will be demolished for parking-lot space. Whittier, which was never considered by the task force, is not feasible because it is further from campus than the present structure, Perez said. "If (Schwartzkopf) has ever walked from the union to the Culture Center, he should know that's a long hike," she said. Wardell Smith, a graduate assistant at the Culture Center for two years, said the move would defeat the purpose and objec tive of the students on campus who chose the Terrace Hall building. "It's always convenient for people in power to pick our location for us. It should be understood that the students and what they want should be considered more," Smith said. Continued on Page 3