Current Activities

Japanese NGO Nihon Hidankyo to Receive Nobel Peace Prize

The 2024 Nobel Peace Prize will be awarded to the Japanese non-governmental organization, Nihon Hidankyo, for its 68-years of education and advocacy.  The Nobel Peace Prize Committee recognized Nihon Hidankyo “for its efforts to achieve a world free of nuclear weapons and for demonstrating through witness testimony that nuclear weapons must never be used again.”  Nihon Hidankyo is the  Japanese Confederation of A- and H-Bomb Sufferers Organizations.  https://www.ne.jp/asahi/hidankyo/nihon/english/

The formal ceremony will be held on Tuesday, December 10th, at the Oslo City Hall in Norway beginning at 13:00 Central European Time, or 5 am Mountain Standard Time in New Mexico.  It will be broadcasted on YouTube.  https://www.nobelpeaceprize.org/laureates/2024

Eleven years after the U.S. bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Hidankyo was founded by Hibakusha, “the bomb-affected people,” on August 10, 1956, during the Second World Conference Against A- and H- bombs.  The World Conference had formed in 1955 in response to the mounting public outrage against the A- and H- bombs following the largest U.S. hydrogen bomb test, called Castle Bravo, on March 1, 1954 over the Marshall Island Atolls.  https://nsarchive.gwu.edu/briefing-book/nuclear-vault/2024-02-29/castle-bravo-70-worst-nuclear-test-us-history

After the Castle Bravo test, the U.S. prohibited the Hibakusha from writing or speaking about the bombings.  The Hibakusha were deprived of their health by the radiation exposures from the bombs and suffered serious discrimination.

Nihon Hidankyo persisted and sent delegations of Hibakusha to international conferences and events to provide testimonies about the damage and human sufferings caused by the use of nuclear weapons.  A core principle of their work is to ensure no more Hibakusha would be created anywhere in the world.  They call for a nuclear weapons-free world.

In 1957, the Japanese Council Against A- and H- bombs organized a visit for Hidankyo to the former Soviet Union, China and Mongolia.  Hidankyo sent its own delegations on speaking tours to the U.K., France, Germany, Austria, India and Sri Lanka.

Fast forward to 1975 when Hidankyo petitioned the United Nations (UN) to conclude an international treaty for a total ban on nuclear weapons.  In support, Hidankyo submitted “A Report to the UN Secretary General:  The Damage and Aftereffects from the Atomic Bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki” and asked for the UN to hold an international sumposium in Japan.  The request was not granted but in 1978 the First UN Special Session on Disarmament was held in New York followed by other Special Sessions on Disarmament.  https://www.ne.jp/asahi/hidankyo/nihon/english/about/about2-01.html

In summary, Nihon Hidankyo have been an instrumental force to prevent the use of nuclear weapons and the creation of new Hibakusha.


  1. Friday, December 6th at noon at the intersection of West Alameda and Sandoval for the weekly one-hour peaceful protest for nuclear disarmament. Join the weekly peaceful protest with Veterans for Peace, CCNS, Nuclear Watch NM, Loretto Community, New Mexico Peace Fest, Pax Christi and others. Bring your flags, signs and banners!

 

 

  1. JUST RELEASED ON YOU TUBE: “Tom Clements of Savannah River Site Watch: Profiteering from Planning for Nuclear War,” presented on Nov. 19th in Columbia, SC, to Carolina Peace Resource Center (CPRC) gathering.   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1APooraLgzo

Tom Clements of Savannah River Site Watch: Profiteering from Planning for Nuclear War

 

 

  1. Friday, December 6, 2024 at 1 pm MT on zoom – Hanford Watch’s Scholar Series – with Jim Werner about Long-term Stewardship of Nuclear Materials & Other Contaminated Sites. register here Even if you can’t make it, register for a link to the recording.

Jim Werner has worked for more than 40 years as a field environmental engineer; a policy analyst; in leadership positions for state and federal agencies, and an environmental NGO (NRDC); as a consultant for states, DOE, and EPA; and on Capitol Hill for the U.S. Congressional Research Service (CRS).

As Director of the Strategic Planning and Analysis Office for the DOE Office of Environmental Management, Jim led efforts to publish Linking Legacies, Closing the Circle on the Splitting of the Atom and From Cleanup to Stewardship, as well as the Baseline Environmental Management Report and Plutonium: The First Fifty Years. At CRS, Jim was awarded a fellowship at the Library of Congress Kluge Center to study long-term stewardship issues.

 

 

  1. Saturday, December 7th and Sunday, December 8thThe Second Atomic Age Cinema Fest in Hollywood at the Crescent Theater, co-presented by the “Kat Kramer’s Films That Changed the World” and the “International Uranium Film Festival.” The Second Atomic Age Cinema is the final destination of the 2024 International Uranium Film Festival tour across North America that began in March 2024 in Window Rock at the Navajo Nation Museum.  For more information:  https://uraniumfilmfestival.org/en/atomic-age-cinema-fest-in-hollywood-2025
 

After a Four-Year Journey LANL May Not Need to Vent Four Flanged Waste Tritium Containers

In an embarrassing turn of events, independent scientists Bernd Franke and Dr. Arjun Makhijani have provided Tewa Women United and the public with the analyses that the Department of Energy, National Nuclear Security Administration, Los Alamos National Laboratory and the Environmental Protection Agency would not – that the four flanged waste tritium containers may not need to be vented because they may not contain explosive materials.  DOE, NNSA and LANL did not follow the regulations to determine whether the venting was necessary and EPA, as a regulatory agency, did not either.  Community members downwind and downstream of the proposed venting have been traumatized by four years of maybe yes, maybe no, mixed DOE messages whether it would vent the tritium containers to be able to move them to a safer location.


ACTION ALERT:  Stop Tritium Venting and Protect the Most Vulnerable at https://tewawomenunited.org/2024/11/action-alert-stop-tritium-venting-and-protect-the-most-vulnerable and for more information:

PRESS RELEASE:  NEW REPORT REVEALS LANL TRITIUM VENTING COULD HAVE TRIPLE THE RADIATION EXPOSURE TO INFANTS COMPARED TO ADULTS – Tewa Women United Commissioned Two Reports to Study Impacts/Finding:  LANL Omitted Dose Calculations to Infants and Children in Their Compliance Application  –  https://tewawomenunited.org/2024/11/press-release-new-report-reveals-lanl-tritium-venting-could-have-triple-the-radiation-exposure-to-infants-compared-to-adults

 

 

 

 


Tritium is a complex and dangerous radionuclide that, depending on changing conditions, may be found in various forms ranging from radioactive hydrogen and radioactive water to tritiated water.  Without knowing the exact contents of the four tritium containers, DOE’s application to EPA stated it wanted to vent an enormous amount of trititum immediately, about three times more tritium than Japan was proposing to dump into the Pacific Ocean from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant disaster.  Depending upon the weather conditions, the harm of such venting to much smaller watersheds, for instance, the Rio Grande watershed, would be tremendous.

Further, in his paper, Out of Order:  An evaluation of the regulatory aspects of Los Alamos National Laboratory’s proposal to vent tritium from waste containers, Dr. Makhijani stated his finding that tritium “is the most ubiquitous radioactive pollutant associated with nuclear weapons and nuclear power.  Tritium, once in the body in the form of water, pervades every cell.  It crosses the placenta and impacts the embryo and the fetus at every stage, producing risks of early failed pregnancies, organ malfunctions, and neurological damage.”

DOE continued its long-standing practice to ignore the significantly greater harm to infants and children from trititum exposures.

Joni Arends, of CCNS, said, “DOE, NNSA, LANL and EPA have not done their due diligence to prevent the harm. I keep seeing the little red wagons and tricycles on the driveways and sidewalks of the new housing developments downwind and downstream of Area G, where the tritium containers are stored in a metal shed.

‘We are eternally grateful to Tewa Women United, Franke and Dr. Makhijani for their excellent scientific work to protect infants, children and families of Northern New Mexico.”


  1. Friday, November 29th at noon at the intersection of West Alameda and Sandoval for the weekly one-hour peaceful protest for nuclear disarmament. Join the weekly peaceful protest with Veterans for Peace, CCNS, Nuclear Watch NM, Loretto Community, New Mexico Peace Fest, Pax Christi and others. Bring your flags, signs and banners!

 

 

  1. Monday, December 2, 2024 at 6 pm – Community Meeting & Celebration of  Santa Fe County Commissioner Anna Hansen at the Nancy Rodriguez Community Center, One Prairie Dog Loop, Santa Fe, NM  

The Agua Fria Village Association invites you to a special community meeting and celebration honoring Commissioner Anna Hansen. This will be Commissioner Hansen’s last meeting representing District 2 at the Agua Fria Village Monthly meeting.

Join the Association as they celebrate Commissioner Hansen’s dedication and service to our community. Light refreshments will be served.

 

 

  1. Tuesday, December 3, 2024 ALL DAY – GIVING TUESDAY! If you appreciate receiving the weekly CCNS News Update and the Did You Know? listings of events, please financially support CCNS’s work. 

In 2024, we uncovered DOE’s hidden strategies and untruths.  As one important example that others missed: 

 

Last fall, when DOE released the draft Environmental Assessment for the 173 MW Electrical Power Capacity Upgrade Project across the Caja del Rio for a third electrical line, DOE was secretly negotiating for a 170 MW Foxtail Flats Solar + Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) project at or near the former coal-fired San Juan Generating Station.  The renewable solar energy would be transmitted on the existing lines LANL has used for decades to receive power from the now defunct San Juan Generating Station.

CCNS discovered the plan by attending the Los Alamos Board of Public Utilities and Los Alamos County Council zoom meetings. Our comments to DOE and objections to the USFS documented what we learned about the Foxtail Flats Solar + BESS project and was publicly revealed through a series of CCNS News Updates.

We are awaiting word from the USFS whether CCNS and our colleagues will be invited to the negotiating table about the proposed Caja del Rio line and the Foxtail Flats Solar + BESS line.

 

 

  1. Friday, December 6, 2024 at 1 pm MT on zoom – Hanford Watch’s Scholar Series – with Jim Werner about Long-term Stewardship of Nuclear Materials & Other Contaminated Sites. register here Even if you can’t make it, register for a link to the recording.

Jim Werner has worked for more than 40 years as a field environmental engineer; a policy analyst; in leadership positions for state and federal agencies, and an environmental NGO (NRDC); as a consultant for states, DOE, and EPA; and on Capitol Hill for the U.S. Congressional Research Service (CRS).

 As Director of the Strategic Planning and Analysis Office for the DOE Office of Environmental Management, Jim led efforts to publish Linking Legacies, Closing the Circle on the Splitting of the Atom and From Cleanup to Stewardship, as well as the Baseline Environmental Management Report and Plutonium: The First Fifty Years. At CRS, Jim was awarded a fellowship at the Library of Congress Kluge Center to study long-term stewardship issues.

 

 

  1. Saturday, December 7th and Sunday, December 8thThe Second Atomic Age Cinema Fest in Hollywood at the Crescent Theater, co-presented by the “Kat Kramer’s Films That Changed the World” and the “International Uranium Film Festival.” The Second Atomic Age Cinema is the final destination of the 2024 International Uranium Film Festival tour across North America that began in March 2024 in Window Rock at the Navajo Nation Museum.  For more information:  https://uraniumfilmfestival.org/en/atomic-age-cinema-fest-in-hollywood-2025
 

Call to Action! Stop LANL Tritium Venting and Protect the Most Vulnerable

On Monday, Tewa Women United released two independent scientific reports about the harm that would be done to public health and the environment should Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) be allowed to vent radioactive tritium from four Flanged Tritium Waste Containers stored at LANL’s Area G radioactive and hazardous waste dump.  It is another important step taken by Tewa Women United to hold LANL and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) accountable to the law.

The two new reports reveal that the proposed venting of tritium, a form of radioactive hydrogen, into the environment would not meet the current EPA or Department of Energy (DOE) regulations.

Tewa Women United collaborated with German scientist Bernd Franke, a Director of the Institute für Energie und Umweliforschung (IFEU), and Dr. Arjun Makhijani from the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research. The first report, Review of LANL Radiation Dose Assessment for the Venting of Flanged Tritium Waste Containers (FTWC) at TA-54 at LANL, authored by Franke, contains results from computer models used to assess the possible range of radiation doses to the public across various weather scenarios.

Dr. Makhijani stated, “According to the EPA regulatory radiation standards, Title 40 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) 61 Subpart H, require[s that] the radiation dose to ‘any member of the public’ should be less than 10 millirem per year.” Dr. Makhijani noted, “EPA allowed LANL to ignore children and infants in its dose calculations.”

Further, the second report, authored by Dr. Makhijani and titled Out of Order:  An evaluation of the regulatory aspects of Los Alamos National Laboratory’s proposal to vent tritium from waste containers, similarly assessed LANL’s compliance with the Clean Air Act regulations and DOE Order 458.1 to keep public exposure to “as low as reasonably achieveable.”

Over the past four years DOE and EPA have ignored repeated requests from Tewa Women United to release their 53 alternatives to the proposed venting.

Kathy Wan Povi Sanchez, member of Pueblo de San Ildefonso and one of Tewa Women United’s co-founders, said, “Tritium makes water, our sacred source of life, radioactive. We were shocked to learn that LANL’s compliance calculations did not take infants and other children into account.”

Talavi Cook, the Environmental Justice Program Manager at Tewa Women United, explained:  “…Tewa Women United believes … radiation protection should extend to pregnant women due to fetuses comprising of 70% – 90% water; pregnant members of the public are not currently protected by the Clean Air Act or any other radiation protection regulation….  It is a matter of simple environmental justice for future generations.”

For more information, please visit https://tewawomenunited.org/2024/11/press-release-new-report-reveals-lanl-tritium-venting-could-have-triple-the-radiation-exposure-to-infants-compared-to-adults


  1. Friday, November 22nd at noon at the intersection of West Alameda and Sandoval for the weekly one-hour peaceful protest for nuclear disarmament. Join the weekly peaceful protest with Veterans for Peace, CCNS, Nuclear Watch NM, Loretto Community, New Mexico Peace Fest, Pax Christi and others. Bring your flags, signs and banners!

 

 

  1. Friday, November 22nd from 3 to 5 pm, in NAS Classroom MVH 3080 – Tommy Rock (Diné) and Dr. Jonathan Credo (Diné/Filipino) as they share their groundbreaking work on the critical study of Uranium and Oil and Gas Contamination in the Navajo Nation. An Environmental Justice Speaker Series, “What You Do to the Earth, You Do to the People,” hosted by the Native American Studies Indigenous Research Group (NASIRG).

Join Zoom Meeting https://unm.zoom.us/j/98709571676

Meeting ID: 987 0957 1676

 

 

  1. Friday, December 6, 2024 at 1 pm MT on zoom – Hanford Watch’s Scholar Series – with Jim Werner about Long-term Stewardship of Nuclear Materials & Other Contaminated Sites. register here Even if you can’t make it, register for a link to the recording.

Werner has worked for more than 40 years as a field environmental engineer; a policy analyst; in leadership positions for state and federal agencies, and an environmental NGO (NRDC); as a consultant for states, DOE, and EPA; and on Capitol Hill for the U.S. Congressional Research Service (CRS).

As Director of the Strategic Planning and Analysis Office for the DOE Office of Environmental Management, Jim led efforts to publish Linking Legacies, Closing the Circle on the Splitting of the Atom and From Cleanup to Stewardship, as well as the Baseline Environmental Management Report and Plutonium: The First Fifty Years. At CRS, Jim was awarded a fellowship at the Library of Congress Kluge Center to study long-term stewardship issues.

 

 

  1. Saturday, December 7th and Sunday, December 8thThe Second Atomic Age Cinema Fest in Hollywood at the Crescent Theater, co-presented by the “Kat Kramer’s Films That Changed the World” and the “International Uranium Film Festival.” The Second Atomic Age Cinema is the final destination of the 2024 International Uranium Film Festival tour across North America that began in March 2024 in Window Rock at the Navajo Nation Museum.  For more information:  https://uraniumfilmfestival.org/en/atomic-age-cinema-fest-in-hollywood-2025
 

United Nations to Study Impacts of Nuclear War

For the first time since the end of the Cold War in 1989 and with the increasing threat of nuclear war, early this month the First Committee on International Peace and Security of the United Nations passed a resolution to study the impacts of nuclear war for the first time in 35 years.  https://reachingcriticalwill.org/images/documents/Disarmament-fora/1com/1com24/resolutions/L39-.pdf

In support of the study were 144 countries,  France, the Russian Federation and the United Kingdom voted no.  Thirty countries abstained, including the United States.

United Nations Secretary General António Guterres will appoint a panel of 21 scientific experts tasked to ““engage and receive inputs from the widest possible range of stakeholders, including civil society, affected communities, and peoples from around the world” to truly understand the effects of a nuclear war at different scales, including global, regional, individual levels.

While there is already a wealth of robust research on the effects of nuclear weapons, it has not been brought together in 35 years. During this time, there has been major progress in climate and scientific modeling. There have also been major societal and planetary changes, and the resolution recognizes “today’s level of interconnectedness and the likelihood of global events having complex, cascading impacts on global systems and societies,” as well as “the fragility of those systems and our planetary boundaries.”

The UN-mandated panel will be tasked with “examining the physical effects and societal consequences of a nuclear war on a local, regional and planetary scale, including, inter alia, the climatic, environmental and radiological effects, and their impacts on public health, global socioeconomic systems, agriculture and ecosystems, in the days, weeks and decades following a nuclear war.”

Having passed the First Committee, the resolution will pass to the Fifth Committee for a review of its budgetary implications.  In December, the resolution will be submitted again to the full United Nations General Assembly for a vote.  Once the panel is appointed, work will be carried out during 2025 and 2026 with a final report expected in 2027.

Melissa Parke, Executive Director for the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) welcomed the study.  She said, “This new study is an opportunity to bring our understanding of the impact of nuclear war out of the 1980s and into the 21st century.  As the world becomes increasingly more interconnected, we need to make sure that policy decisions are based on science- not dogma and scaremongering.  This study is a chance to bring that science together and guide us towards the future we want.”  https://www.icanw.org/un_approves_new_study_on_effects_of_nuclear_war


  1. Friday, November 15th at noon at the intersection of West Alameda and Sandoval for the weekly one-hour peaceful protest for nuclear disarmament. Join the weekly peaceful protest with Veterans for Peace, CCNS, Nuclear Watch NM, Loretto Community, New Mexico Peace Fest, Pax Christi and others. Bring your flags, signs and banners!

 

 

  1. Wednesday, November 13th through Friday, November 15thThe International Uranium Film Festival (IUFF) has been invited by the G20 Summit in Rio de Janeiro to present films during the meetings. Its involvement will also be part of a documentary covering the summit that is being shot by Academy Award-nominated David Lynch as executive director.

 To listen to the interview by Libbe HaLevy, Host of Nuclear Hotseat, with IUFF Founders Norbert Suchanek and Marcia Gomes de Oliviera, go to https://nuclearhotseat.com/podcast/g20-iuff-films-un-science-panel-nuke-war/

 BIG SHOUT OUT TO ADAM HOROWITZ AND HIS FILM “NUCLEAR SAVAGE:  The Islands of Secret Project 4.1” being shown.  To learn about the other films being shown, go to:  https://uraniumfilmfestival.org/en/uranium-film-festival-rio-g20-summit-2024-program

See DYK? No. 8 below about another IUFF event – this time in Hollywood!

 

 

  1. Tuesday, November 12th – Friday, November 15thPFAS Rulemaking Hearing by the NM Oil Conservation Commission (OCC), a division of the Energy Minerals & Natural Resources Department. For more information, https://www.emnrd.nm.gov/ocd/wp-content/uploads/sites/6/Notice-of-Public-Meeting-and-Rulemaking-hearing.pdf.

 Take action at:  https://action.wildearthguardians.org/page/57741/petition/1 ; https://www.defendnmwater.org/

 

 

  1. Friday, November 15th beginning at 8:30 am to 5 pm – NM Radioactive and Hazardous Materials Committee meeting at State Capitol, Room 317, in Santa Fe. See agenda at:  https://www.nmlegis.gov/agendas/RHMCageNov15.24.pdf  LANL topics to be covered include plutonium pit production, off-site plutonium migration, chromium plume cleanup and other env’l issues, uranium reclamation, Radioactive Waste Consultation Task Force, State Emergency Response Commission Report, Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board (nuclear facility infrastructure and projects), Weapons-Grade Plutonium Transport, and Public Comment. 

 During the 8:35 am to 10:15 am session, Joni Arends, of CCNS, will present about the LANL Radioactive Liquid Waste Treatment Facility.

 You can attend in person or view through the Webcast link at https://sg001-harmony.sliq.net/00293/harmony

 

 

  1. Thursday, November 21st from 3 to 5 pm at UNM SUB Santa Ana A&B – Gail Evans, Esq. will lead an enlightening Teach-In about the profound impact of the Indigenous Peoples led Atencio et al. v. The State of New Mexico constitutional lawsuit. An Environmental Justice Speaker Series, “What You Do to the Earth, You Do to the People,” hosted by the Native American Studies Indigenous Research Group (NASIRG).   

 Join Zoom Meeting https://unm.zoom.us/j/98709571676

Meeting ID: 987 0957 1676

 

 

  1. Friday, November 22nd from 3 to 5 pm, in NAS Classroom MVH 3080 – Tommy Rock (Diné) and Dr. Jonathan Credo (Diné/Filipino) as they share their groundbreaking work on the critical study of Uranium and Oil and Gas Contamination in the Navajo Nation. An Environmental Justice Speaker Series, “What You Do to the Earth, You Do to the People,” hosted by the Native American Studies Indigenous Research Group (NASIRG).

 Join Zoom Meeting https://unm.zoom.us/j/98709571676

Meeting ID: 987 0957 1676

 

 

  1. Friday, November 22nd by 5 pm Mountain Time – Public Comments and Suggestions due to DOE/WIPP about the annual Community Relations Plan. The Plan is designed to inform communities and interested members of the public about the New Mexico Environment Department Hazardous Waste Facility Permit for the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) activities and opportunities for public participation in those activities.  To assist you in preparing your comments, please visit  https://stopforeverwipp.org/   A sample public comment letter you can use will be posted over the weekend. 

 For more information:  https://wipp.energy.gov/community-outreach.asp   Make comments on the 2025 draft Community Relations Plan at: https://wipp.energy.gov/WIPPCommunityRelations/documents/2025_CR_Plan_FINAL_DRAFT.pdf

 

 

8. Saturday, December 7th and Sunday, December 8thThe Second Atomic Age Cinema Fest in Hollywood at the Crescent Theater, co-presented by the “Kat Kramer’s Films That Changed the World” and the “International Uranium Film Festival.”  The Second Atomic Age Cinema is the final destination of the 2024 International Uranium Film Festival tour across North America that began in March 2024 in Window Rock at the Navajo Nation Museum.  For more information:  https://uraniumfilmfestival.org/en/atomic-age-cinema-fest-in-hollywood-2025

 

New Film – “Half-Life of Memory: America’s Forgotten Atomic Bomb Factory”

The title of the new film may make you think it is about Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) located in northern New Mexico.  But you would be wrong.  “Half-Life of Memory: America’s Forgotten Atomic Bomb Factory,” a film by Jeff Gipe, is about the dangerous legacy of the Rocky Flats atomic bomb factory, located near Denver, Colorado.  The world premiere will take place in early November at the Denver Film Festival.  Trailer here:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5TbsTy1KcbQ  ; https://www.imdb.com/title/tt33308692/

You would be right that both LANL and Rocky Flats fabricated the plutonium triggers for nuclear weapons.  But the numbers from each are staggeringly different.

Over its four decades of secret operations, Rocky Flats fabricated 70,000 triggers costing many workers their lives.  Radioactive and hazardous waste was illegally dumped, released in deadly fires at the site, and contaminated the Denver metro area with long-lived radioactive toxins that continue to spread through the air, water, soils and bodies.

In 1989, the FBI raided the Rocky Flats for environmental violations and it was closed and “cleaned up.”  http://www.rockyflatshistory.org/history.html

For nearly 80 years, radioactive and hazardous waste at LANL has been released into the canyons whose waters flow to the Rio Grande.  It has been buried in unlined dumps.

In 2011, LANL fabricated a total of 11 plutonium triggers – a high point in production.  LANL is currently tasked with fabricating 30 triggers a year.

The main thrust of Gipe’s film exposes the dark past and enduring impact of the Rocky Flats operations.  The filmmaker observes, “The [Department of Energy] does not want to acknowledge the history of the plant.  Colorado instead wants to create a success story out there.”  Similarly, DOE is working to create a LANL story of success.  https://coloradocommunitymedia.com/2024/10/27/new-film-tackles-the-dangerous-legacy-of-rocky-flats/

The interpretation of the Rocky Flats story is critical right now because of the nation’s renewed nuclear weapons buildup and the ongoing expensive construction of a new plutonium trigger factory at DOE’s Savannah River Site in South Carolina.  https://srswatch.org/

Many of the newcomers to the Denver metro area are not aware that continuing dangers exist at the Rocky Flats site.  Reporter Monte Whaley began his October 27, 2024 article with a quote from longtimers there:  “One of the biggest ailments caused by the abandoned Rocky Flats nuclear weapons plant is a dangerous form of amnesia, say residents and government officials.”  https://coloradocommunitymedia.com/2024/10/27/new-film-tackles-the-dangerous-legacy-of-rocky-flats/

Of course, amnesia is not necessarily a concern for the 2,000 newly-hired workers at LANL’s Plutonium Facility.  https://cdn.lanl.gov/files/2024-housing-demand-and-demographics_0504a.pdf

But for those who have lived around these nuclear weapons facilities, their memories resist forgetting. The harms have been too great.  https://www.energy.gov/ehss/energy-employees-occupational-illness-compensation-program


  1. Friday, November 8th at noon at the intersection of West Alameda and Sandoval for the weekly one-hour peaceful protest for nuclear disarmament. Join the weekly peaceful protest with Veterans for Peace, CCNS, Nuclear Watch NM, Loretto Community, New Mexico Peace Fest, Pax Christi and others. Bring your flags, signs and banners!

 Friday, November 8th from 4 to 5 pm, the New Mexico Peace Fest will gather at the corners of St. Michael’s Drive and Pacheco in Santa Fe in preparation for Armistice Day.  The location is below the LANL on-boarding offices for new employees and workspaces.  Bring your flags, signs and banners.

 

 

  1. Monday, November 11th from 10:30 am to noon on the Santa Fe Plaza – Armistice Day. Join Veterans for Peace to celebrate Armistice Day.  There will be singing and speakers.   

Over one hundred years ago, in 1918, the world celebrated peace as a universal principle.  The first World War had just ended and nations mourning their dead collectively called for an end to all wars.  Armistice Day was born and was designated as “a day to be dedicated to the cause of world peace and to be thereafter celebrated.”

 

 

  1. Tuesday, November 12th – Friday, November 15thPFAS Rulemaking Hearing by the NM Oil Conservation Commission (OCC), a division of the Energy Minerals & Natural Resources Department. For more information, https://www.emnrd.nm.gov/ocd/wp-content/uploads/sites/6/Notice-of-Public-Meeting-and-Rulemaking-hearing.pdf.

 Take action at:  https://action.wildearthguardians.org/page/57741/petition/1 ; https://www.defendnmwater.org/

 

 

  1. Friday, November 15th, NM Radioactive and Hazardous Materials Committee meeting at State Capitol in Santa Fe. https://www.nmlegis.gov/Committee/Interim_Committee?CommitteeCode=RHMC   Check back for more information as it is posted. 

 

 

CCNS Submits Comprehensive Comments in Opposition to Proposed LANL Electrical Line

This week Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety, individuals and NGOs  submitted comments opposing the U.S. Forest Service’s plan to approve a Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) proposal to install a companion electric transmission line through the heart of the Caja del Rio traditional cultural landscape, an area sacred to Pueblos.   wo addresses CCNS et al. Objections to USDA USFS re DOE NNSA f EPCUP (1) 

Progression of events and supportive documentation:


02/07/2024

240207 LAC BPU Agenda

240207 LAC BPU Minutes

240207 Agenda No.4.A. FFS+BESS Presentation Addl Slides


02/21/2024

20240221 LAC BPU Agenda, FFS+BESS Agenda Item No. 7.C

20240221 LAC BPU Minutes FFS+BESS

A – DESRI Foxtail Flats Presentation for LAC_022124

B – Foxtail Flats Solar PPA-ESA Presentation_022124

C – Foxtail Flats – Solar Power Purchase Agreement_022124

D – Foxtail Flats – Energy Storage Agreement_022124


02/27/2024

20240227 LAC Council Agenda FFS+BESS

20240227 LAC Council Minutes FFS+BESS

A – DESRI Foxtail Flats Presentation for LAC_022724

B – Foxtail Flats Solar PPA-ESA Presentation_022724

C – Foxtail Flats Solar – Power Purchase Agreement_022724

D – Foxtail Flats Storage – Energy Storage Agreement_022724


From the Caja, located in southwest Santa Fe, the line would follow the path of two existing electric lines above the Rio Grande and connect to Department of Energy (DOE) electric substations on the Pajarito Plateau to the west.  LANL’s proposed project is called the Electrical Power Capacity Upgrade Project and would carry 173 megawatts per day.  https://environment.lanl.gov/resources/epcu/

The big questions are:  Why is the line needed?  Why is LANL tripling its capacity?  For the last 30 years, LANL energy use has remained steady at 90 megawatts per day. Is the extra energy needed to fabricate 30 plutonium pits, or the triggers, for nuclear weapons?  https://discover.lanl.gov/news/1002-diamond-stamps-plutonium-pit/  LANL is not saying.

The National Environmental Policy Act, or NEPA, requires federal agencies to prepare analyses of the alternatives to its preferred project.  In this case, DOE said there were two choices:  build the Electrical Power Capacity Upgrade Project or do nothing.

In February 2024, CCNS discovered that Los Alamos County was pursuing construction and operation of a 170 megawatt solar project located in the area of the now defunct coal-burning San Juan Generating Station.  For decades, the coal-fired energy from the northwest corner of New Mexico flowed across existing electricity lines to LANL.

The new solar project, called the Foxtail Flats Solar + Battery Energy Storage System, would use the existing lines to deliver carbon free energy to LANL.  https://www.losalamosnm.us/Initiatives/Foxtail-Flats-Solar-Power-and-Battery-Storage

Even though DOE has been involved in the Foxtail Flats Project through a 1985  energy pooling agreement with Los Alamos County (the Los Alamos Power Pool), DOE neglected to include the Foxtail Flats Project in its NEPA analyses as a valid alternative to the Caja line.  That omission is one of the topics addressed in the objections CCNS submitted to the Forest Service.

Further, the Honorable Mary Geiger Lewis, a US District Court Judge in South Carolina, recently ruled in the NEPA plutonium pit case that “an ‘agency’s elimination of an alternative from detailed study . . . [is] arbitrary and capricious [when] its explaination for doing so [is] inconsistent with its stated purpose.”

Similarly, DOE eliminated the alternative of the Foxtail Flats Project from detailed study in its Caja line NEPA documents in an arbitrary and capricious manner.

See NEPA plutonium pit case:  Savannah River Watch, Tom Clements, The Gullah/Geechee Sea Island Coalition, Nuclear Watch New Mexico and Tri-Valley Communities Against a Radioactive Environment v. United States Department of Energy, Jennifer Granholm, in her Official Capacity as the Secretary; the National Nuclear Security Administration; and Jill Hruby, Administrator.

https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/south-carolina/scdce/1:2021cv01942/265178/207/


  1. Friday, November 1st at noon at the intersection of West Alameda and Sandoval for the weekly one-hour peaceful protest for nuclear disarmament. Join the weekly peaceful protest with Veterans for Peace, CCNS, Nuclear Watch NM, Loretto Community, New Mexico Peace Fest, Pax Christi and others. Bring your flags, signs and banners!

 

 

 

  1. Sunday, November 3rdDaylight Savings Time ends.

 

 

 

 

  1. Tuesday, November 5thElection Day. If you haven’t voted, CCNS urges you to go to the polls to vote.

 

 

 

  1. Monday, November 11th from 10:30 am to noon on the Santa Fe Plaza – Armistice Day. Join Veterans for Peace to celebrate Armistice Day.  There will be singing and speakers.   

 Over one hundred years ago, in 1918, the world celebrated peace as a universal principle.  The first World War had just ended and nations mourning their dead collectively called for an end to all wars.  Armistice Day was born and was designated as “a day to be dedicated to the cause of world peace and to be thereafter celebrated.”

 

 

  1. Tuesday, November 12th – Friday, November 15th – PFAS Rulemaking Hearing by the NM Oil Conservation Commission (OCC), a division of the Energy Minerals & Natural Resources Department. For more information, https://www.emnrd.nm.gov/ocd/wp-content/uploads/sites/6/Notice-of-Public-Meeting-and-Rulemaking-hearing.pdf.

 Take action at:  https://action.wildearthguardians.org/page/57741/petition/1 ; https://www.defendnmwater.org/

 

 

  1. Friday, November 15th, NM Radioactive and Hazardous Materials Committee meeting at State Capitol in Santa Fe. https://www.nmlegis.gov/Committee/Interim_Committee?CommitteeCode=RHMC   Check back for more information as it is posted. 
 

Caja Peace and Prayer Pilgrimage AND Objections to Proposed LANL Electrical Power Capacity Upgrade Project

 

 

Caja Peace and Prayer Pilgrimage on Friday, October 25th at Noon

You are invited to participate in a transformative walk in downtown Santa Fe beginning at noon on Friday, October 25th.  Organized by the Caja del Rio Coalition, the walk will begin at the Santa Fe County Administration Building, located at 240 Grant Avenue, and go to the Department of Energy (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) Office, located at 104 North Guadalupe Street.  https://cajadelrio.org/

The walk will show opposition to the U.S. Forest Service’s recent proposed approval of the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) Electrical Power Capacity Upgrade Project (EPCU).  https://www.fs.usda.gov/project/?project=63199  A 115-kilovolt electric transmission line would be constructed through the heart of the Caja del Rio traditional cultural landscape, an area sacred to Pueblos.  From the Caja, the line would follow the path of two existing electric lines above the Rio Grande and connect to DOE electric substations on the Pajarito Plateau.

DOE claims the energy is needed to run its new Venado AI supercomputer.  https://discover.lanl.gov/publications/connections/2024-may/supercomputers-electricity/  But for the last three decades, LANL energy use has remained steady at 90 MW.

 

Submit Your Objections to Proposed LANL Electrical Power Capacity Upgrade Project by Monday, October 28th

At the DOE office, the Coalition will hand-deliver its formal objections to the Forest Service’s proposed approval and hold a press conference urging the permanent protection of the sacred Caja del Rio.

You can also submit your objections to the Forest Service’s proposed approval.  A sample objection letter is available below.

 

 

 

 


PLEASE USE AND SHARE THESE INSTRUCTIONS AND SAMPLE LETTER WITH FRIENDS AND FAMILY, WE CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE!

Instructions for LANL EPCU Opposition Ltr

f Sample LANL Electrical Line Comment Letter


Submit your comments by Monday, October 28th, 2024 at 11:59 pm Mountain Time.

You can submit your objection and any attachments online at the following link:

US Forest Service NEPA Projects Home

Or, you can email them:  objections-southwestern-regional-office@usda.gov

Or, mail them in to the Forest Service Regional Office:

Reviewing Official, Michiko Martin, Regional Forester

333 Broadway Blvd SE

Albuquerque, NM 87102

The Forest Service rules state that unless you were one of the 22,000 people who submitted comments previously, you are not eligible to submit objections – UNLESS there is new information that was not available during an earlier comment period.

And there is new information so everyone may object.  https://usfs-public.app.box.com/v/PinyonPublic/file/1647092161317, see p. 11, first paragraph under Administrative Review and Objection Rights:

Objections to the draft decision on the Special Use Permit or to the Forest Plan amendments will only be accepted from those who have previously submitted timely and specific written comments regarding the project during any designated opportunity for public comment period, unless based on information not available during an earlier comment period.

The EPCU Project would bring 173 megawatts into LANL.  Under the 1985 Los Alamos Power Pool (LAPP) Agreement, all available energy is shared by DOE at 80 percent and Los Alamos County at 20 percent.

On February 21, 2024, the day AFTER the EPCU comment period ended, Los Alamos County Board of Public Utilities (BPU) considered a proposal for a 170 megawatt solar project, called  Foxtail Flats Solar + Battery Energy Storage System (BESS), in San Juan County. Later, the BPU and Los Alamos County Council approved the Foxtail Flats proposal.  Agenda Item 7.C. https://losalamos.legistar.com/LegislationDetail.aspx?ID=6518240&GUID=00184A75-3E8D-4C09-B2EB-2C2D5AA1154C

During the first EPCU Project comment period, on December 11, 2023, the LAPP Operating Committee approved the Foxtail Flats Solar + BESS as LAPP Approved Resources, pending additional approvals by the new Electric Coordination Agreement (ECA), the Board of Public Utilities, Los Alamos County Council and DOE/NNSA. See p. 3 of A – DESRI Foxtail Flats Presentation for LAC  For more information, A – DESRI Foxtail Flats Presentation for LAC

The Board declared:

“Alternatives

There are currently no identified carbon-free generation alternatives at similar power and energy levels, or planned operational date. DPU has been and will continue to pursue generation resources to achieve the 2040 carbon neutral electricity provided goal[,]. If these agreements are rejected, then DPU will pursue a larger power capacity of alternative generation resources, at unknown terms.”

https://losalamos.legistar.com/LegislationDetail.aspx?ID=6518240&GUID=00184A75-3E8D-4C09-B2EB-2C2D5AA1154C&FullText=1

The Board voted 4 to 1 to approve it.  Planned delivery of energy would begin in Fall 2026.

Six days later, on February 21, 2024, the seven member Los Alamos County Council, under Agenda Item 10.C, p. 5 of 7, considered

Approval of the Power Purchase Agreement between Foxtail Flats Solar, LLC, and the Incorporated County of Los Alamos, New Mexico, and approval of the Energy Storage Agreement between Foxtail Flats Storage, LLC, and the Incorporated County of Los Alamos, New Mexico

The Los Alamos County Council unanimously approved the Power Purchase Agreement and the Energy Storage Agreement.  Minutes, pp. 5 and 6.

In conclusion, DOE, through the Los Alamos Power Pool Agreement, did not disclose in the EPCU draft Environmental Assessment that it was negotiating for similar amounts of  power (approximately 170 megawatts) from the Foxtail Flats project.

Under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), DOE was required to include the Foxtail Flats project as an alternative to the proposed EPCU Project Caja Line.

Once again, DOE has violated NEPA, as a United States District Court Judge in South Carolina recently found in her ruling in the plutonium pit case.  https://nukewatch.org/press-release-item/court-rules-u-s-nuclear-weapons-production-plan-violates-federal-law/

Get your objections in!


  1. Thursday, October 17th – Sunday, October 27thstream the documentary Dark Circle on its 40th Anniversary! MORE INFO HERE.  WATCH the trailer.

Dark Circle covers what Oppenheimer left out—both the beginnings and its aftermath of nuclear weapons R&D and production, providing a scientific primer on the catastrophic power of nuclear energy and weapons while also relating tragic human stories detailing the devastating toll radioactive toxicity has taken on people and livestock—focusing in large part on Rocky Flats, Colorado, whose plutonium processing facility infamously contaminated the surrounding area.

“Dark Circle is one of the most horrifying films I’ve seen, and also sometimes one of the funniest (if you can laugh at the same things in real life that you found amusing in Dr. Strangelove). Using powers granted by the Freedom of Information Act, and sleuthing that turned up government film the government didn’t even know it had, the producers of this film have created a mosaic of the Atomic Age. It is a tribute to the power of the material, and to the relentless digging of the filmmakers, that the movie is completely riveting. Four Stars!” – Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times

 

  1. Thursday, October 24th from 4 to 6 pm at Highlands University, Student Union Building, Room 320, 800 National Avenue, Las Vegas, NM – WIPP Community Forum and Open House. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Carlsbad Field Office and Salado Isolation Mining Contractors will host an in-person and virtual meeting to provide a short update on the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant. Following the updates, an extended question and answer period will be held. An open house is scheduled following the meeting to allow stakeholders to spend one-on-one time with the WIPP Leadership Team.  https://wipp.energy.gov/Library/documents/2024/Oct24CommunityForum.pdf

 

 

  1. Thursday, October 24th from 6 pm to 8 pm – DOE Office of Environmental Management, Los Alamos Field Office (EM-LA) and its contractor, N3B Community Meeting about the fiscal year 2024 Year in Review and a community conversation on the legacy waste cleanup, including Q&A. https://losalamosreporter.com/2024/10/14/doe-em-la-and-n3b-to-discuss-cleanup-progress-at-environmental-management-cleanup-forum-oct-24/

For meeting information, including login details, visit: https://n3b-la.com/emcf_oct_24_2024/

When: Thursday, October 24, 6:00 – 8:00 P.M. MDT

Where: In-person and virtual

In-person—SALA Event Center, 2551 Central Avenue, Los Alamos, NM

Virtual—ViaMicrosoft Teams  –  Click here to join the meeting.

Join By Meeting Number 

Meeting ID: 284 616 926 592

Meeting Password: UgBMtX

Or Call In (audio only)  – (323) 486-1924

Phone Conference ID: 842 206 352#

 

 

  1. You may ask: Why did DOE schedule two meetings one after the other in two different locations – one about WIPP in Las Vegas, NM, and the other about LANL in Los Alamos, NM – on the same day?

CCNS commentary.  CCNS has asked DOE on more than one occasion to establish a public electronic event calendar for its three sites in NM (LANL, Sandia and WIPP) so that DOE staff and contractors can check it to before booking an event to ensure that another DOE site has not scheduled a public event. It is embarrassing that DOE is not more together and coordinated in its efforts to host and invite the public to its events.

 

 

  1. Friday, October 18th at noon at the intersection of West Alameda and Sandoval for the weekly one-hour peaceful protest for nuclear disarmament. Join the weekly peaceful protest with Veterans for Peace, CCNS, Nuclear Watch NM, Loretto Community, New Mexico Peace Fest, Pax Christi and others. Bring your flags, signs and banners!

 

 

  1. Tuesday, October 29th at 6 pm – DOE/NNSA, Sandia National Laboratories, Kirtland Air Force Base virtual Semiannual Public Meeting on Microsoft Teams. For more information and connection information, https://www.sandia.gov/app/uploads/sites/194/2024/10/AGENDA-Public-Meeting-October-2024.pdf

 

 

7. From Sunday, October 13th, 2024:  Statement from President Biden Congratulating Nobel Peace Prize Winners, Members of Nihon Hidankyo for their historic work to ensure nuclear weapons are never used again. https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2024/10/13/statement-from-president-biden-congratulating-nobel-peace-prize-winners/

 

Objections to Proposed LANL Electrical Power Capacity Upgrade due Monday, October 28th

The U.S. Forest Service is accepting public objections to the draft Decision Notice, Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) and Final Environmental Assessment (EA) for the proposed Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) Electric Power Capacity Upgrade (EPCU) Project and Associated Land Management Plan (Forest Plan) Amendment.  Only those who submitted comments during the scoping period that occurred between April 19, 2021 and May 21, 2021 and during the two comment periods for the draft EA beginning December 19, 2023 and ending January 17, 2024 and beginning January 22, 2024 and ending February 20, 2024 are eligible to submit objections.  As evidence of public concern, over 22,000 public comments were submitted during these comment periods.  https://www.fs.usda.gov/project/?project=63199

The deadline to submit objections to the Forest Service is Monday, October 28th, 2024, by 11:59 pm Mountain Time.

On September 11th, 2024, the Forest Service released its draft Decision Notice and FONSI for the proposed project that would amend the Forest Plan with the establishment of  a new management area, known as the S/N Transmission Line Utility Corridor Management Area, along with other associated amendments relating to construction of new utility infrastructure and changes to scenery and recreation classification systems.  The Forest Service decision would also include a special use permit for the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), a semi-autonomous part of the Department of Energy (DOE), to construct and operate a 115-kilovolt (kV) electric line across National Forest System lands.  The proposed route cuts through the heart of the Caja del Rio traditional cultural landscape, an area sacred to Pueblos.  https://cara.fs2c.usda.gov/Public//ReadingRoom?Project=63199

On June 27th, 2024, the All Pueblo Council of Governors (APCG) passed APCG Resolution 2024-01, which called on DOE and NNSA to pause the planning process so that a Pueblo-led ethnographic study could be conducted across the entire Caja del Rio.  Tribes and the public have also urged the agencies to conduct a full environmental impact study.  https://apcg.org/

In early 2025, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and NNSA will issue their own decisions. BLM and NNSA will each provide comment periods.

The public is challenged to navigate the convoluted administrative processes that  involve six federal agencies with at least four different sets of administrative rules and procedures, all under the rubic of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA).  The primary question is:  Did these agencies fully comply with NEPA and NHPA?  Tribes and the public continue to say,  “No, they haven’t;” clearly demonstrating that the Caja del Rio deserves permanent protection.

 


  1. Friday, October 18th at noon at the intersection of West Alameda and Sandoval for the weekly one-hour peaceful protest for nuclear disarmament. Join the weekly peaceful protest with Veterans for Peace, CCNS, Nuclear Watch NM, Loretto Community, New Mexico Peace Fest, Pax Christi and others. Bring your flags, signs and banners!

 

 

  1. Saturday, October 19th after 10:30 am Get Out the Vote March and Rally. March from East Alameda and Paseo de Peralta to the east side of the NM Roundhouse (Capitol).  At 11:30 am there will be speeches by Senator Heinrich, Representatives Stansbury and Leger Fernandez, VP Harris surrogate Tina Smith (Senator from Minnesota), former Zuni Pueblo Governor, state senators, and others.  Bring signs and flags.  In the alternative, join the Raging Grannies at 11 am for a sing-along on the east side of the Roundhouse.  Free parking at the PERA Building, 413 Old Santa Fe Trail.

 

 

  1. Saturday, October 19thTrinity Site Open House. https://home.army.mil/wsmr/contact/public-affairs-office/trinity-site-open-house

 

 

  1. Monday, October 21st from 4:30 pm to 6:30 pm – Virtual Public Training for LANL’s Electronic Public Reading Rooms (EPRRs) and IntellusNM on WebEx. The LANL EPRR and the Los Alamos Legacy Cleanup EPRR are LANL information repositories for environmental and administrative information and correspondence. http://eprr.lanl.gov  The IntellusNM is the data portal providing continuous public access to environmental data collected on and around LANL.  https://IntellusNM.com    

 Unfortunately, the link provided by DOE, Triad National Security and N3B, the LANL Cleanup Contractor, doesn’t work.  To get the links, go to page 3 of the LANL document at:  file:///Users/ccns/Downloads/LA-UR-24-29716-7.pdf

 

 

  1. Thursday, October 24th from 4 to 6 pm at Highlands University, Student Union Building, Room 320, 800 National Avenue, Las Vegas, NM – WIPP Community Forum and Open House. https://wipp.energy.gov/Library/documents/2024/Oct24CommunityForum.pdf

 

 

  1. Thursday, October 24th from 6 pm to 8 pm – DOE Office of Environmental Management, Los Alamos Field Office (EM-LA) and its contractor, N3B Community Meeting about the fiscal year 2024 Year in Review and a community conversation on the legacy waste cleanup, including Q&A. https://losalamosreporter.com/2024/10/14/doe-em-la-and-n3b-to-discuss-cleanup-progress-at-environmental-management-cleanup-forum-oct-24/

For meeting information, including login details, visit: https://n3b-la.com/emcf_oct_24_2024/

When: Thursday, October 24, 6:00 – 8:00 P.M. MDT

Where: In-person and virtual

In-person—SALA Event Center, 2551 Central Avenue, Los Alamos, NM

Virtual—ViaMicrosoft Teams  –  Click here to join the meeting.

Join By Meeting Number 

Meeting ID: 284 616 926 592

Meeting Password: UgBMtX

Or Call In (audio only)  – (323) 486-1924

Phone Conference ID: 842 206 352#

 

 

  1. You may ask: Why are there three DOE meetings in the same week?  Poor planning by the DOE nuclear weapons and waste programs. 
 

Are DOE and NNSA Complying with the National Environmental Policy Act?

On Monday, September 30th, United States District Court Judge Mary Geiger Lewis ruled that the Department of Energy (DOE) and its National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) violated the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) because the federal agencies failed to take a “hard look” at the alternatives to fabricate plutonium pits, or the triggers, for nuclear weapons at two of its sites.  Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) was created to design and fabricate the atomic bombs used during World War II.  The Savannah River Site in South Carolina has never fabricated pits for nuclear weapons.

In the late 2000s, DOE released for public review and comment its Complex Transformation Supplemental Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement stating that pit production would take place exclusively at LANL.  https://www.energy.gov/nepa/doeeis-0236-s4-complex-transformation-supplemental-programmatic-environmental-impact-statement  Yet in 2019 DOE expanded its proposal to improve the resiliency, flexibility and redundance of the nuclear security enterprise to also fabricate plutonium pits at the Savannah River Site in South Carolina. DOE failed to prepare a new NEPA document for public review and comment detailing how the two sites would interact to fabricate up to 80 plutonium pits per year.

A coalition of non-governmental organizations challenged DOE’s action in the United States District Court of South Carolina.  The plaintiffs are the Gullah/Geechee Sea Island Coalition https://gullahgeecheenation.com/gullahgeechee-sea-island-coalition/ , Nuclear Watch New Mexico https://nukewatch.org/home/ , Savannah River Site Watch https://srswatch.org/ , and Tri-Valley Communities Against a Radioactive Environment, or Tri-Valley CARES https://trivalleycares.org/ ,  and individual Tom Clements.  They are represented by Ben Cunningham of the South Carolina Environmental Law Project https://www.scelp.org/ .

The Court found the DOE’s plan had fundamentally changed from the one site plan to its two site plan.  DOE did not consider alternatives while moving forward and spending tens of billions of taxpayers’ dollars.  The Court found that the plaintiffs had standing to challenge DOE’s two-site plan.

Cunningham said, “This is a significant victory that will ensure NEPA’s goal of public participation is satisfied.  Public scrutiny is especially important because the activities at issue here, by their very nature, result in the production of dangerous weapons and extensive amounts of toxic and radioactive waste.  I hope the public will seize the upcoming opportunity to review and comment on the federal agencies’ assessment.”

The Court ordered the parties to confer and present the Court with a joint proposal about appropriate remedies to resolve the case, including “Plaintiffs’ request for injunctive relief.”  The proposal is due to the Court on Friday, October 25th.

To access the Court documents, go to:  https://nukewatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Court-Rules-U.S.-Nuclear-Weapons-Production-Plan-Violates-Federal-Law.pdf

Also see the October 10, 2024 article in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists:  The Energy Department just made one plutonium pit. Making more is uncertain

By Dylan Spaulding , a Senior Scientist at the Union of Concerned Scientists

https://thebulletin.org/2024/10/the-energy-department-just-made-one-plutonium-pit-making-more-is-uncertain/

 


  1. Thursday, October 10th from 5 to 7 pm and Friday, October 11th from 9 to 1 pm – Join the Community Painting of the “I am Life (Creator of Worlds)” Mural Painting at the Lena Wall, 1805 Second Street at the corner of Second and Lena Streets. This project is brought to you by the Three Sisters Collective, the Lena Wall, Dunn Edwards Paints and Artisan Santa Fe. Come with water, weather-appropriate gear and painting clothes. https://threesisterscollective.org/murals/

 

 

  1. Friday, October 11th at noon at the intersection of West Alameda and Sandoval for the weekly one-hour peaceful protest for nuclear disarmament. Join the weekly peaceful protest with Veterans for Peace, CCNS, Nuclear Watch NM, Loretto Community, New Mexico Peace Fest, Pax Christi and others. Bring your flags, signs and banners!

 

 

  1. Saturday, October 12th at 11 am MDT – White Mesa Ute Community Spiritual Walk & Protest: Protecting Our Communities, Health, Environment & Indigenous Sacred Lands, beginning at the White Mesa Community Center between Bluff and Blanding, Utah, followed by the walk to the White Mesa uranium mill. For more information, call White Mesa Concerned Community (435) 459-2461.  https://protectwhitemesa.org/  

 

 

  1. Saturday, October 12 through Monday, October 14th from 9 am to 4:30 pm on the Santa Fe Plaza – Indigenous Peoples’ Day on Santa Fe Plaza. https://www.santafe.org/indigenouspeoplesday/

 

 

  1. Monday, October 14th from 9 am to 4:30 pm – Indigenous Peoples’ Day 2nd Annual Honoring Native Nations Powwow on the Santa Fe Plaza. The Santa Fe Indigenous Center invites you to join them on the Santa Fe Plaza for the 2nd Annual Honoring Native Nations Powwow.  They welcome all Native nations to participate in a day of intertribal dancing and celebration the rich diverse culture.  Bring your tribal flag for the Parade of Nations at noon.  Guest drums are welcome.  https://santafeindigenouscenter.org/events/

On the website there is a New! two-minute Powwow Etiquette Video for viewing. 

 

 

  1. Saturday, October 19th – Trinity Site Open House. https://home.army.mil/wsmr/contact/public-affairs-office/trinity-site-open-house

 

 

  1. Monday, October 21st from 4:30 pm to 6:30 pm – Virtual Public Training for LANL’s Electronic Public Reading Rooms (EPRRs) and IntellusNM on WebEx. The LANL EPRR and the Los Alamos Legacy Cleanup EPRR are LANL information repositories for environmental and administrative information. and correspondence.  http://eprr.lanl.gov   The IntellusNM is the data portal providing continuous public access to environmental data collected on and around LANL.  https://IntellusNM.com

Unfortunately, DOE, Triad National Security, and N3B, the LANL Cleanup Contractor, have not posted the meeting information with links in an easily accessed place on the website.  Nevertheless, here is the latest:

Updates

October 1, 2024:

Public virtual training on general use of the LANL Electronic Public Reading Room and IntellusNM.com will be offered on October 21st from 4:30-6:30 pm MT via Webex.  Information on how to participate in the training can be found at the following link:

2024 Notice of Public Training for the Electronic Public Reading Room and IntellusNM Los Alamos National Laboratory Hazardous Waste Facility Permit EPA ID No. NM0890010515

 

Join Three Sisters Collective to Paint the “I am Life (Creator of Worlds)” Mural in O’Ga P’ogeh Owingeh

The Three Sisters Collective is painting a new and colorful “I am Life (Creator of Worlds)” mural on the Lena Wall in O’Ga P’ogeh Owingeh, the White Shell Water Place, or Santa Fe.  https://threesisterscollective.org/  You are invited to make your mark on the wall on Thursday, October 3rd through Saturday, October 5th during the community paint hours.  The new mural is adjacent to the mural by artist Chip Thomas about stopping expanded production of plutonium pits, or the triggers, for nuclear weapons at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL). https://www.santafenewmexican.com/news/local_news/an-artists-nuclear-reaction/article_b3d64a7a-506a-11ef-8baf-bbe1a5aa1efb.html

Autumn Dawn Gomez, the Art Director of the Three Sisters Collective, sees the mural as “an opportunity to give a place and platform to the voices of nuclear abolitionists and to build solidarity across Northern New Mexico.”

Further, Gomez explained, “I am Life” is made to be in conversation with Chip Thomas’ artwork, referencing and inverting Oppenheimer’s famous quote [taken] from the Bhagavad Gita ‘I am become death, destroyer of worlds.’  The mural inverts this as: ‘I am life, Creator of worlds.’”

The Three Sisters Collective is shifting the conversation away from destruction to life.  In contrast, this week LANL announced its certification of a new design “diamond-stamped” plutonium pit for use in the W87-1 nuclear bomb warhead.  https://www.energy.gov/nnsa/articles/nnsa-completes-and-diamond-stamps-first-plutonium-pit-w87-1-warhead

The mural holds the intentions for a nuclear-free future so many around the world are working for.  Gomez explained, “The artwork questions the promise [versus] the reality of nuclear energy and weaponry, and serves as a critique of the bomb factory being built in Los Alamos and as a call-to-action for the Santa Fe community to rally together in opposition to this imminent reality.”

Further, “The new mural honors and prioritizes local Pueblo/Indigenous culture and values. It elucidates the differences between these values and the settler colonial nuclear bomb production currently happening in Los Alamos, which is increasing soon. Additionally, it highlights the ever-expanding nuclear industry, such as the nuclear corridor in southeastern New Mexico, a source of job creation and economic stability for New Mexicans.”

This project is brought to you by the Three Sisters Collective, the Lena Wall, Dunn Edwards Paints and Artisan Santa Fe.  Join their efforts on Thursday, October 3rd from 9 am to 1 pm; on Friday, October 4th from 10 am to 1 pm; and on Saturday, October 5th from 5 to 7 pm.  Come with water, weather-appropriate gear and painting clothes. The Lena Wall is located at the former Cloud Cliff Bakery on Lena and Second Streets.


  1. Friday, October 4th at noon at the intersection of West Alameda and Sandoval for the weekly one-hour peaceful protest for nuclear disarmament. Join the weekly peaceful protest with Veterans for Peace, CCNS, Nuclear Watch NM, Loretto Community, New Mexico Peace Fest, Pax Christi and others. Bring your flags, signs and banners!

 

 

  1. Saturday, October 12th at 11 am MDT – White Mesa Ute Community Spiritual Walk & Protest: Protecting Our Communities, Health, Environment & Indigenous Sacred Lands, beginning at the White Mesa Community Center between Bluff and Blanding, Utah, followed by the walk to the White Mesa uranium mill. For more information, call White Mesa Concerned Community (435) 459-2461.  https://protectwhitemesa.org/  

 

 

  1. Saturday, October 12 through Monday, October 14th from 9 am to 4:30 pm on the Santa Fe Plaza – Indigenous Peoples’ Day on Santa Fe Plaza. https://www.santafe.org/indigenouspeoplesday/

More information about the October 14th Indigenous Peoples’ Day 2nd Annual Honoring Native Nations Powwow on the Santa Fe Plaza.  https://santafeindigenouscenter.org/events/

 

 

  1. Saturday, October 19th – Trinity Site Open House. https://home.army.mil/wsmr/contact/public-affairs-office/trinity-site-open-house