Mountain States Legal Foundation 10/31/08
After Paul Newman died on September 26, news broke that, although
he contributed to environmental causes, he was also a secret
supporter of something anathema to environmentalists: nuclear
power. His interest began with filming of Fat Man and Little Boy—a
1989 movie about the Manhattan Project, where he met the nuclear
power advocate who authored the book that served as the movie’s
primary source—and continued with soirees on New York City’s Fifth
Avenue and tours of nuclear facilities from coast to coast. In
fact, when Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., tried to get Newman to oppose
the Indian Point Nuclear Station, Newman refused and instead
toured Indian Point and praised its “[clear] commitment to
safety,” generation of electricity for a million New Yorkers, and
zero greenhouse gases.
Newman’s clandestine cause was reported by William Tucker, whose
writings, for 25 years, on the environment and energy have
generated articles in publications, such as the Wall Street
Journal and Harper’s, and three books. Tucker’s fourth book is
Terrestrial Energy: How Nuclear Energy Will Lead the Green
Revolution and End America's Energy Odyssey
(Bartleby Press 2008). His timing is exquisite because a “nuclear
renaissance” is underway—there are 440 active reactors worldwide
in 30 countries (the USA has 104); 50 more countries have either
started construction of reactors or announced they are going
nuclear. In the USA, applications for 31 new reactor licenses have
been or will be filed with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Nonetheless, the “renaissance” faces a major hurtle—opposition by
environmental groups—as demonstrated by a battle now underway in
federal court in Arizona.
The Monday following Paul Newman’s death, three environmental
groups filed a lawsuit in federal district court in Phoenix
demanding that the Secretary of the Interior be compelled to
withdraw more than a million acres of federal land from uranium
mining. The lawsuit follows the refusal of the Secretary to comply
with a June 25, 2008, resolution by the U.S. House of
Representatives’ Natural Resources Committee. The Secretary argues
that the resolution failed to comport with congressional rules;
legal experts say it is unconstitutional. Whatever the case, a
federal judge could decide whether Arizona’s uranium deposits,
which boast high- grade ore, a minute surface footprint, no water
impacts, and a nearby milling facility in Blanding, Utah, will
ever be used to fuel nuclear power in America.
The resolution, which was adopted by a vote of 20-2 after
Republicans walked out of the committee in protest and is under
the auspices of Section 204(e) of the Federal Land Policy and
Management Act (FLPMA), orders the Secretary to “immediately
withdraw” 1,068,908 acres of federal land in Arizona “from all
forms of location and entry under the United States mining laws .
. . for a period not to exceed three years.” Resolution proponents
argue that 1,100 uranium mining claims are within five miles of
the Grand Canyon and past uranium mining operations had adverse
environmental consequences.
Ranking Member of the House Committee Don Young (R-AK) and Ranking
Member of the House Subcommittee on National Parks, Forest and
Public Lands, Rob Bishop (R-UT), both oppose the resolution
because of the resultant dependence on “foreign sources of
uranium.” They also argue that the resolution “short circuits the
Constitution, escapes review by both bodies of Congress and the
American people, [and] is political grandstanding at its best on
an unconstitutional resolution which will have no force of law.”
On the constitutional issue, Young and Bishop are right. In
1983, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a federal law authorizing
a “one House legislative veto” of decisions by the Attorney
General violated the Constitution’s bicameralism and presentment
requirements. The Court held that Congress may exercise its
legislative authority only “in accord with a single, finely
wrought and exhaustively considered procedure.” Even so, if the
Supreme Court must strike down the House resolution, the nuclear
revolution will continue, if at all, without Arizona uranium!
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