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Ballot dropbox ban a barrier in SD primary; former President Donald Trump says jail threat won't stop him from violating gag order; EBT 'skimming' on the rise, more Ohioans turn to food banks; new maps show progress on NY lead service line replacement.

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Watchdog Group Urges Vigilance on Great Lakes Nuclear Waste

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Monday, February 29, 2016   

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Between Canada and the United States there are 38 nuclear reactors on the Great Lakes, and a watchdog group says if something isn't done the world's largest body of surface water will become a nuclear garbage dump.

Dave Kraft is director of the Nuclear Energy Information Service.

He says energy isn't always an exciting cause to get behind as other topics, but if you want safe drinking water you need to get involved.

Kraft cites some international disasters that are examples of what could happen here.

"We have the fifth anniversary of the Japanese Fukushima disaster, which took place on March 11, 2011, but it's also the 30th anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster, the anniversary is April 26 of this year," says Kraft.

The Great Lakes supply water for more than 40 million people, and Kraft says with all the nuclear reactors on their shores, it's reasonable for Americans to demand protection.

Kraft says what's happening in Flint, Michigan, brings to mind this question, How safe is our water?

"Mistakes happen, accidents happen, so we're concerned that there's quite a cavalier attitude on the part of regulators, on the part of government officials as we have seen exemplified in Flint," he says. "That we can't afford that level of risk on the Great Lakes to have some sort of a nuclear accident."

Kraft says the government is considering creating new waste sites that would mean moving toxic materials by truck, rail and barge.

Kraft says that's a potential disaster that we need to pay attention to.

"Radioactive materials tend to reconcentrate through a lot of biological processes, through a lot of chemical processes, and particularly as we get into a more climate-stressed scenario of the future, the constraints on water are going to be different," he says.

Kraft is urging everyone to become more vigilant in the effort to protect our water.

He says we need to make sure the country and the world are moving toward a more renewable energy future.


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