S-4818.2

SENATE JOINT MEMORIAL 8018

State of Washington
66th Legislature
2020 Regular Session
BySenators Brown, Schoesler, Honeyford, Lovelett, and Short
Read first time 01/16/20.Referred to Committee on Environment, Energy & Technology.
TO THE HONORABLE DONALD J. TRUMP, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, AND TO THE PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE AND THE SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, AND TO THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES, IN CONGRESS ASSEMBLED, AND TO THE SECRETARY OF THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY, AND TO THE ADMINISTRATOR OF THE UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY:
We, your Memorialists, the Senate and House of Representatives of the State of Washington, in legislative session assembled, respectfully represent and petition as follows:
WHEREAS, In 1945, the first nuclear weapons were produced by the United States; and
WHEREAS, In 1954, the atomic energy act was passed by Congress directing the federal government to promote the peaceful use of atomic energy with the understanding that disposal of the highly radioactive waste produced would be the responsibility of the federal government; and
WHEREAS, In 1956, the national academy of sciences recommended deep geologic disposal of the long-lived, highly radioactive wastes from nuclear reactors, suggesting that buried salt deposits and other rock types be investigated for permanent repositories; and
WHEREAS, During the 1970s, the federal government began screening sites to be developed for a high-level radioactive waste repository; and
WHEREAS, Congress passed the nuclear waste policy act of 1982, which established a repository site screening process and a schedule leading to federal waste acceptance for disposal beginning in 1998; and
WHEREAS, During the 1980s, the department of energy named potentially acceptable repository sites only to postpone the authorization for site development; and
WHEREAS, In 1987, Congress adopted the nuclear waste policy amendments act; and
WHEREAS, In 1989, the secretary of energy determined that the nuclear waste program would not succeed and developed a new strategy that called for waste acceptance beginning at a repository in 2003; and
WHEREAS, Throughout the 1990s, Congress, the department of energy, and the environmental protection agency all worked to develop a successful nuclear waste repository program; and
WHEREAS, The Yucca mountain nuclear waste repository was designated to be a deep geological repository storage facility for spent nuclear reactor fuel and other high-level radioactive waste; and
WHEREAS, Federal funding for the development of the Yucca mountain nuclear waste repository ended in 2010; and
WHEREAS, The blue ribbon commission, established by the secretary of energy, released a final report on January 26, 2012, that contained many recommendations for nuclear waste repository development; and
WHEREAS, The United States general accounting office reports that within the United States there are ninety thousand metric tons of nuclear waste needing disposal; and
WHEREAS, The United States general accounting office reports that nuclear waste from spent nuclear fuel from the commercial power industry, stored across the United States at the eighty different sites where it was generated, is expected to increase; and
WHEREAS, The United States general accounting office states there are sixteen department of energy sites that remain to be cleaned up across the nation; and
WHEREAS, Decades and billions of dollars have been spent to research potential sites for a permanent disposal site; and
WHEREAS, For over fifty years, the citizens across the United States have not had any long-term storage site for the high-level radioactive waste that is currently stored on-site at various nuclear facilities around the country;
NOW, THEREFORE, Your Memorialists respectfully pray that Congress, the department of energy, and the environmental protection agency establish and develop a site for the permanent siting and development of a federal nuclear waste repository.
BE IT RESOLVED, That copies of this Memorial be immediately transmitted to the Honorable Donald J. Trump, President of the United States, the President of the United States Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and each member of Congress from the State of Washington, and to the Secretary of the United States Department of Energy, and to the Administrator of the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
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