**Note:
For those of you who read this and are not local let me explain. A
small town in the southeastern corner of VT houses a nuclear power plant
called Vermont Yankee. It has been the center of debate for years.
Maybe always. This debate has risen to the boiling point in that past
few years as the plant ages. In August the plant, after winning a
controversial legal battle, announced they would be closing the plant
down due to financial issues. More can be read about it here on the Wikipedia page and here on the VY Website**
Authors note: I am not writing this to start a debate. I am writing this to try and show that sometimes
opposite
sides of the coin actually look very much the same if you step back and
really take notice. I am not taking the side of the pro or anti. I am
taking the side of the area of the world I call home and love so very
deeply. Thanks for reading. -Michelle
I
try to avoid the big debates in our area. We live in a place where
emotions run high and everywhere you turn something is splitting people
apart. Everyone has an opinion and rarely are they willing to listen to
the other side long enough. I try to side with hard evidence and
science. Things that are not easily disproved. I also try to avoid
getting into a debate with someone over many of these issues.
After
mulling it over I have decided to dust off the megaphone, step up onto
my juicebox and spread some opinions. Will I make friends? Maybe. Will I
make enemies? Maybe. Will I make sense? Doubtful. However, all that
aside, I feel like someone needs to say this and it might as well be me.
Buckle up, folks. Juicebox Confession is about to take on Vermont Yankee.
I
am going to assume you all are familiar with the nuclear power plant
that currently resides in Vernon (which just so happens to be my
hometown). I am also going to assume that you do not live under a rock
since you are reading this. That would mean that you know all about the
major announcement a few weeks ago that Vermont Yankee is to close their
doors for good next year. And, if you know all that then you most
definitely know that there is a very visible line that divides the great
folks of this area. The pro-VYers and the anti-VYers. Ok, now that we
are all on the same page, let’s get into it.
I
will start by saying that my personal opinion of this matter bears no
weight into what we are about to discuss. I will, however, for the sake
of transparency tell you that the plant makes me slightly uneasy. I
don’t fully understand nuclear power and therefore, the whole fear of
the unknown takes control. I am, however, a big fan of electricity,
local jobs, a healthy economy, and lower taxes for my mom. (Hi, Mom!!)
When I first heard the news of the closing my knee-jerk reaction was
“Oh, good.” Then I started thinking. All those jobs, those families,
those children……
I
read everything I could online. I chatted with pro and anti-VY folks. I
held a debate in my head for a solid week or more. This is what I came
up with:
No one wins.
VY
closing their doors is a win for no one. (Well, maybe except for the
companies who make their billions from fracking. That topic may need a
whole new juicebox, though, folks.) The anti-VYers didn’t win. The doors
will close, yes. The plant will shut down, yes. But, the radioactive
material that is sitting in the ground will remain. It will stay there
for an undetermined amount of time. The danger that the anti folks see
will not be resolved.
The
pro-VYers didn’t win. They are all facing unemployment and an uncertain
future. They lost their jobs after fighting a lengthy legal battle with
the state of VT. Just when it seemed like things were looking up for
them, they lost everything. They didn’t lose to the anti-Vyers either.
They lost to fracking. They lost to a practise that they can not compete
with financially. A practice that I am going to go out on a limb and
guess that most anti-VYers are opposed to.
So
here we are. The plant is closing. The local economy will be hit, only
time will tell how hard. More than 630 individuals and their families
will be forced to relocate or stay here and tap into resources that are
already at their financial breaking point. Resources that, ironically,
VY was a major donor to. On the other hand, VY states that the
decommissioning process is likely to take decades. They say they “will
continue to be a good corporate citizen” to the local economy and
charities. They also state they will “treat their employees fairly and
assist them through this transition.”
Either
way, the way I see it is, no one “won”. The anti VYers lost to spent
fuel being stored on-site potentially for decades, or longer.The
pro-VYers lost uncertain future. They both lost to an injured economy
and to fracking. We all lost something the day that VY announced that it
would close regardless of side or stance.
The
line dividing the sides are still visible. They always will be. But
now, those sides, they don’t look quite so different anymore.

Ugh, that is heart-breaking. That is a LOT of jobs. I know thoughts about nuclear power have changed on a global level, but I never thought about the local thoughts on the matter. I'm so sorry, that sounds awful.
ReplyDeleteI won't even pretend to understand these concepts, I've only read a few articles here and there, but I know that the overall feeling about fracking used to be "very bad" and lately I'm seeing articles with a tone of "less bad" which is neither scientific, nor very comforting I'm sure. I also suck at understanding comforting people :) but here is one article touching on it a little bit:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/09/18/fracking-may-not-be-as-bad-for-the-climate-as-we-thought/