Markey Urges Governors to Distribute Potassium Iodide to Residents Near Nuclear Power Plants, and Requests Implementation of 2002  Law to Protect More People
 
WASHINGTON, D.C. (March 25, 2011) – With today’s announcement that the evacuation zone around the site of the Fukushima meltdown would be expanded to 19 miles, and news of a possible dangerous breach of containment at one reactor, today Congressman Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) wrote ten state governors urging them to join 22 other states who have already taken advantage of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s (NRC’s) policy of providing a free supply of potassium iodide to states that request it for residents that live within ten miles of an operating nuclear power plant. Potassium iodide, also called KI, has been found to protect individuals, especially young children, from the cancer-causing releases of radioactive iodine contained in the fallout that would be discharged in the event if a nuclear disaster occurred in the U.S. Thyroid cancer was the biggest negative health impact caused by the Chernobyl nuclear reactor disaster. More than 6,000 Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian residents who were children at the time of the Chernobyl nuclear reactor disaster developed thyroid cancer. The Japanese and American governments have already distributed KI to those living near Fukushima or participating in the emergency response. Congressman Markey also sent a letter to the National Governors Association requesting its assistance in urging the Obama Administration to implement the 2002 Markey law requiring the distribution of KI to a larger 20-mile radius around operating nuclear power plants.
 
I urge the Governors and the Obama Administration to take all necessary steps to protect residents living near nuclear power plants,” said Rep. Markey. “It does not make sense to wait for a catastrophic accident at or a terrorist attack on a nuclear reactor in this country to occur to implement this common-sense emergency preparedness measure.”
 
Markey-authored Section 127 of the 2002 Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Act directed the President to establish a program to make potassium iodide available free to state and local governments for distribution to residents living within 20 miles of a nuclear power plant. Previously, distribution was limited to just those living within 10 miles, and todate, ten states have not yet requested this free medication from the NRC. The Bush administration improperly waived the law requiring distribution of the pharmaceutical safeguard to occur within 20 miles, and the Obama Administration has not yet reversed that action. 
  
An example copy of the letters to the ten Governors urging them to request potassium iodide for residents living within 10 miles of a nuclear power plant can be found below.
 
A copy of the letter to the National Governor’s Association requesting that they urge the Obama Administration to allow residents living within 20 miles of a nuclear power plant to receive potassium iodide can be found below.
 
Since the Japanese earthquake, tsunami and power outage that caused the nuclear meltdown in Japan, Rep. Markey has also written to Presidential Science Advisor John Holdren asking him to fully implement his 2002 law. Additionally, Rep. Markey wrote to the Department of Health and Human Services urging them to call on the Obama administration to reverse the Bush Administration’s decision to remove HHS’s authority to implement it.
 
Rep. Markey, the top Democrat on the House Natural Resources Committee and a senior member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, has served on the Committees that have oversight over the NRC and the nuclear utility industry since 1976.  For more than three decades, Rep. Markey has worked to secure nuclear power plants and ensure the public safety in the event of a nuclear disaster. In 1979, before the Three Mile Island accident occurred, Rep. Markey introduced legislation providing for a three year moratorium on licensing of new nuclear power plants until a top to bottom safety analysis on nuclear reactors could be performed.  In the early and mid-1980s, Rep. Markey chaired hearings on the lessons of the Three Mile Island accident, including a March 1982 hearing on the need to make KI available to those living around U.S. nuclear power plants. In 1986, he chaired hearings on the causes and consequences of the disaster at Chernobyl. Following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Rep. Markey passed a law to strengthen security for nuclear reactors and materials, and a law providing for distribution of potassium iodide to those living within 20 miles of a nuclear reactor. And before the catastrophe in Japan, Rep. Markey raised concerns of the seismic resiliency of our reactors.
 
List of nuclear power plants located in states that have not yet requested free potassium iodide from the NRC:

AR  London, AR
Arkansas Nuclear One, Unit 1
AR  London, AR
Arkansas Nuclear One, Unit 2
GA  Baxley, GA
Edwin I. Hatch Nuclear Plant, Unit 1
GA  Baxley, GA
Edwin I. Hatch Nuclear Plant, Unit 2
GA  Waynesboro, GA
Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Unit 1
GA  Waynesboro, GA
Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Unit 2
IA  Palo, IA
Duane Arnold Energy Center
KS  Burlington, KS
Wolf Creek Generating Station, Unit 1
LA  St. Francisville, LA
River Bend Station, Unit 1
LA  Killona, LA
Waterford Steam Electric Station, Unit 3
MO  Fulton, MO
Callaway Plant
NE  Brownville, NE
Cooper Nuclear Station
NE  Fort Calhoun, NE
Fort Calhoun Station, Unit 1
TX  Glen Rose, TX
Comanche Peak Steam Electric Station, Unit 1
TX  Glen Rose, TX
Comanche Peak Steam Electric Station, Unit 2
TX  Bay City, TX
South Texas Project, Unit 1
TX  Bay City, TX
South Texas Project, Unit 2
WA  Richland, WA
Columbia Generating Station, Unit 2
WI  Kewaunee, WI
Kewaunee Power Station
WI  Two Rivers, WI
Point Beach Nuclear Plant, Unit 1
WI  Two Rivers, WI
Point Beach Nuclear Plant, Unit 2