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FL advocates worry about the EPA delaying an important decision on emissions; WV is a leading state in criminal justice reform thanks to national backing; CA groups are celebrating a judge rejecting a federal moratorium on offshore wind; U of MI child care workers are fighting for a livable wage; gray whales might not be bouncing back as fast as previously thought; and NY advocates are celebrating a federal ruling saying the Trump Administration's wind energy ban was illegal.

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The Senate fails to extend ACA subsidies all but ensuring higher premiums in January, Indiana lawmakers vote not to change their congressional map, and West Virginia clergy call for a moratorium on immigration detentions during the holidays.

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Farmers face skyrocketing healthcare costs if Congress fails to act this month, residents of communities without mental health resources are getting trained themselves and a flood-devasted Texas theater group vows, 'the show must go on.'

SD Hearing Scheduled in Decade-Old Uranium Mine Dispute

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Wednesday, August 28, 2019   

RAPID CITY, S.D. - A case that began in 2010 is back in the news this week, as the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board hears arguments between a uranium mining company, government regulators and the Oglala Sioux Tribe.

The hearing will decide if the mining company, Powertech, is required to conduct a cultural study at its proposed mine site near the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.

Western Mining Action Project senior attorney Jeff Parsons, who is representing the tribe, said a federal judge already ruled that the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission acted illegally when it issued the 2014 mining license because a cultural resource study was not conducted.

"It is not rocket science to conduct a cultural resources survey on a site like this," he said. "It's just that the company in this case refuses to spend the money, and the NRC staff refuses to hold the company's feet to the fire and make them comply with the federal law."

The judge's 2018 ruling found that the NRC violated the National Environmental Policy Act when it left Powertech's license in effect without a site survey, but did not vacate the license, citing "disruptive consequences" - including possible negative effects to the company's stock price.

Parsons said he believes the Powertech license to mine uranium for use in nuclear power plants should have been suspended or rescinded pending the cultural survey. Because it was not, he said, the NRC appears to care more about getting the license out the door than protecting human health and the environment.

"And the problem the tribe has with that, obviously," he said, "is that it creates the impression, if not the reality, that the issuance of a license is a forgone conclusion, regardless of impacts to culture resources."

Today's hearing, set to begin at 10 a.m. at the Hotel Alex Johnson, 523 Sixth St. in Rapid City, comes after the NRC declared a stalemate between Powertech and the Oglala Sioux Tribe and asked the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board to step in. The proposed mine site is 13 miles northwest of Edgemont and about 50 miles from Pine Ridge.

The NRC order is online at nrc.gov.


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