Tuesday, July 20, 2010

LOVELL STANNERS LESS WORRIED ABOUT POISON LEAK

POISONED WATERS

REVELATION 8:8-11
8 And the second angel sounded, and as it were a great mountain burning with fire was cast into the sea: and the third part of the sea became blood;
9 And the third part of the creatures which were in the sea, and had life, died; and the third part of the ships were destroyed.
10 And the third angel sounded, and there fell a great star from heaven, burning as it were a lamp, and it fell upon the third part of the rivers, and upon the fountains of waters;
11 And the name of the star is called Wormwood:(bitter,Poisoned) and the third part of the waters became wormwood; and many men died of the waters, because they were made bitter.(poisoned)

REVELATION 16:3-7
3 And the second angel poured out his vial upon the sea; and it became as the blood of a dead man: and every living soul died in the sea.(enviromentalists won't like this result)
4 And the third angel poured out his vial upon the rivers and fountains of waters; and they became blood.
5 And I heard the angel of the waters say, Thou art righteous, O Lord, which art, and wast, and shalt be, because thou hast judged thus.
6 For they(False World Church and Dictator) have shed the blood of saints and prophets, and thou hast given them blood to drink; for they are worthy.

THIS WAS TUES I DONE THIS NOW UPDATED.

RUTH LOVELL STANNERS MAYOR OF OWEN SOUND IS NOT SO WORRIED ABOUT THAT THIS COULD BE A POISONOUS SPILL IN OWEN SOUND HARBOUR AND KILL ANIMALS AND PEOPLE IN THE AREA IF IT FELL IN THE HARBOUR AND BROKE OPEN.I'M STILL CONCERNED BY WHAT THE BIBLE SAYS WILL CONTAMINATE THE OCEANS AND WATER FOUNTAINS IN THESE LAST DAYS.THIS COULD BE A PART OF PROPHECY ONLY TIME WILL TELL WHEN ITS SHIPPED TO SWEDEN.YOU CAN NOT TRUST ANY AGENCIES THESE DAYS BECAUSE OF STAGED EVENTS AND DECEPTION INVOLVED.

MY TUE COMMENT

RUTH LOVELL STANNERS IS THE MAYOR OF OWEN SOUND WERE I WENT UP IN FRONT OF AND WANTED AN ISRAELI FLAG FLOWN IN FRONT OF CITY HALL SINCE THE GAY FLAG WAS ALLOWED TO BE FLOWN.THE ISRAELI FLAG WAS NOT ALLOWED,THE GAY FLAG WAS ALLOWED FOR A WEEK,THEN THERE IS NO SPECIAL FLAGS TO BE ALLOWED FLOWN EXCEPT OTHER COUNTRIES AMBASSADORS ETC.AT LEAST I MADE A LITTLE DIFFERENCE FOR TRYING TO STAND UP FOR ISRAEL 4 YEARS AGO IN OWEN SOUND.NOW IF THIS RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL WOULD FALL IN THE OCEAN IT WOULD POISON ONTARIOS OCEAN.KILLING OCEAN ANIMALS AND PEOPLE IN OUR AREA.IT MIGHT HAPPEN,SO WATCH THE NEWS CLOSELY AS THE BIBLE SAYS FIRST 1/3RD OF THE OCEANS WILL BE POISONED,THEN DURING THE TRIBULATION PERIOD ALL WORLDS OCEANS WILL BE POISONED AND ALL THE LIFE IN THE SEA DIES.RUTH IS CORRECT TO WORRY ABOUT THESE BEING SHIPPED FROM OWEN SOUND TO SWEDEN.

I AM UPDATING THIS STORY YET AGAIN.ITS TUE JULY 20,10.THE HEADLINE IS MAYOR JUST TRYING TO PROTECT CONSTITUENTS BY ZIGGY KLEINAU,BINBROOK ONTARIO.

EDITOR:

Instead of attacking the mayor of Owen Sound for her concern that projects are done with proper care and safety,the writer of the editorial in the July 14,edition should first get his facts straight.

To educate and inform the public there must be informed and correct writting.Why does Bruce Power continuously stress that all openings of the steam generators are being safeguarded by welded seals to keep all dangerous radiation from escaping?

Here the writer talks about the non-radioactive material in them,some 90%,will be broken down and recycled.Those hundreds of small pipes inside,part of the primary circuit containing heavy water,having accumulated large amounts of radioactive fission products over 20-odd years of service that makes them so dangerous.Those contents have to be decontaminated in Sweden to get the worst radiation hazard out and then recycled into the consumer market. The hulls of those behemoths as he calls them contain radiation like all other parts of refurbishing waste.

I have the strong feeling that the medical officer of health has not really got a grip on the process and just takes Bruce Power's assertions for real. Has she not heard about the alpha radiation contamination of almost 200 workers where Bruce Power was sure it did'nt exist at that site. Another grossly misleading statement I find in the writer's often obnoxious reasoning for defending the need for nuclear power generation ex-ie fuel cars with rainwater and heat our homes with dirt. tellng us that two-thirds of this provinces power is nuclear.Well even the energy ministry's website calls it only about 50%(or half)and if one looks at the daily output of all of Ontario's generating sources on www.sygration.com/gendata/to day even that doesn't hold true much of the time. (At 2PM on the day this was written from a total of about 22,000 MW of all generation sources only a little more than 9,000 MW was from nuclear).

The writer blasts the mayor for fretting publicly about steam generators falling into Owen Sound's harbour and then accusing her of apparently having no knowledge of engineering equipment and resources. I for one,would tell this writer with all those false statements to get educated on the real facts in the real world before accusing someone in authority who is applying precautionary principle(if he knows what that is)to protect her constituents from harm that can not be reversed.
The Sun Times-July 20,10 by Ziggy Kleinau-Binbrook,Ont CANADA.


Mayor less worried about cargo -Lovell Stanners wants to hear from CNSC officials about plans to ship steam generators through city Posted By Denis Langlois
JULY 16,10


Owen Sound's mayor is backing away from her opposition to Bruce Power's plan to ship 16 low-level radioactive steam generators out of the city this autumn. But many issues are unresolved. Ruth Lovell Stanners said Thursday that after investigating the matter further, she has decided that the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission might be able to convince her that the shipment is safe. The federal regulator said Wednesday that the 100-tonne decommissioned generators do not present a risk to people or the environment.CNSC officials have accepted an invitation to speak at city council's July 26 meeting.If I get a comfort with their saying that it's safe, then I will have a comfort with that as well, Lovell Stanners said in an interview.

But then there remains the other extraneous issues, such as the security and the conversations that must go on with our police about closing roads — 16 days of closing roads — and security at the site itself . . . and insurance.At a council meeting Monday, Lovell Stanners told Bruce Power officials that she is concerned about the health and safety risk the shipments pose to residents of Owen Sound. She said accidents do happen, pointing to an incident in October 2008 when two 107-tonne turbines fell off a barge and to the bottom of Saint John Harbour. She questioned what would happen if a steam generator fell into Owen Sound Harbour. The more that I have learned, the less I am comfortable with this plan at all,she said during the meeting. Lovell Stanners said after Monday's meeting she spoke with her husband, Dr. Bruce Stanners, who referred her to a highly respected doctor of nuclear medicine.The doctor said the best thing to do to get sound information was to go to the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission. So, given that that was the advice of this man, I thought it's exactly what I will do,Lovell Stanners said.Bruce Power says the plan is safe. So does Dr. Hazel Lynn, Grey-Bruce's medical officer of health.

Council has also invited Lynn to speak July 26.Lynn issued a statement Tuesday, in which she said she does not think the steam generators pose any risk to the public.
She said the boilers will be sealed and emit a very low level of gamma radiation that will not be measurable from two metres away. Lovell Stanners said it has been very difficult to get a true understanding of the issue because information is from one end of the spectrum to the other.Nuclear watchdog and environmental groups, along with Sarnia Mayor Mike Bradley, are opposing the shipments, saying they pose too much of a risk to the Great Lakes. The CNSC is considering an application from Bruce Power to transport the school bus-sized steam generators through the Great Lakes and to Sweden for recycling. The steel vessels will be loaded one by one onto a docked ship — about the same size as the Chi-Cheemaun — over three weeks, starting in mid-September. About 90% of the metal will be recycled. The CNSC said in its statement that those concerned by Bruce Power's proposed shipment of used steam generators can be confident that no licence will be issued unless the regulator is convinced that the shipment will be completed safely, without risk to the health, safety or security of Canadians or the environment.Bruce Power needs only a heavy load permit from Owen Sound, which cannot be denied due to health and safety concerns unrelated to the actual transportation of the components on city streets.
Article ID# 2670854

REMEMBER THE NAMES OF THE COUNCILLORS THAT SAID IT WAS SAFE TO SHIP IT IF A ACCIDENT OCCURS.THEN SHIP THEM OUT OF GOVERNMENT IN THE NEXT ELECTIONS.

Councillors don't share high level of concern
Posted By DENIS LANGLOIS, SUN TIMES STAFF JULY 16,10


The majority of Owen Sound councillors said Thursday they do not share the mayor's level of concern about Bruce Power's plan to ship 16 low-level radioactive steam generators out of Owen Sound Harbour. Coun. Tom Pink said he is not convinced the health concerns addressed by Mayor Ruth Lovell Stanners are valid. For me, I use my intellect and not my innards to make a decision, he said in an interview. He said in everything that I've read and seen Bruce Power is trying to alleviate concerns in a reasonable and responsible manner. And yet we still act in, I would say, an unreasonable manner.He cited as an example Bruce Power's decision to alter its plan to store the steam generators by the harbour for five weeks until the ship arrives. The company now plans to pay for the ship to be docked in Owen Sound for three weeks and have each generator loaded within a day of its arrival in the city.Lovell Stanners expressed concerns to The Sun Times and Toronto media about the potential risks of storing the school bus-sized components by the harbour for weeks.Pink said Owen Sound enjoys relatively cheap power thanks to Bruce Power, so it must also accept the consequences of that benefit -- playing a part in getting rid of waste.

Despite assurances by Bruce Power, Lovell Stanners said earlier this week that she is concerned a steam generator could fall into the harbour, which is near the city's water treatment plant. On Thursday, she said she will feel comfortable with Bruce Power's plan if the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission can convince her it is safe.
Coun. Bill Twaddle said council had not been involved in any discussions about the shipments before Monday night's meeting, even though the mayor had prior meetings with Bruce Power.He said he is not jumping to conclusions about the safety of the shipments, saying it is the responsibility of every elected politician to be as informed as possible before forming a decision.f the scientists -- the knowledgeable, educated people -- are comfortable and believe what is happening is safe, then I can't see that I can have any reason to vote against it,he said. Coun. John Christie said he believes the appropriate precautions are being taken by Bruce Power to ensure the shipments are safe.I think if we're going to develop our port more effectively as a commercial shipping point and a transshipping point for goods, then we need to face the fact that as far as wear and tear on the streets are concerned that that's one of the prices you pay for that, he said.

I'm not concerned about the hazardous element of this.Coun. Arlene Wright, Grey County's warden, said she sees no fault in the mayor's position, but does not share her concerns. If the nuclear agency says there isn't a problem with it, then that's fine, she said.She said it's unfortunate, however, that Bruce Power has not yet consulted with Owen Sound Police Services about the transportation of the vessels through the city. The company said Monday it will speak to the city police force.

Coun. Jim McManaman said he has no problem with Owen Sound Harbour being used as the port of choice for the shipments, as the city and region have enjoyed a lot of benefit from Bruce Power. I don't have the same level of concern as the mayor has expressed, he said.City staff will review Bruce Power's security and safety plan, he said. Coun. Deb Haswell said she has some concern about the stability of the harbour wall and wants assurance from Bruce Power that the company will pay for repairs if something goes wrong. I'm not convinced that there is a high risk of contamination. There's also the fact that Bruce Power is essentially our neighbour and sometimes it would be helpful to be a good neighbour, she said. Attempts to reach Coun. David Adair and Coun. Peter Lemon Thursday were unsuccessful.Article ID# 2671631

Radioactive cargo worries mayor Posted By DENIS LANGLOIS, SUN TIMES STAFF
JULY 13,10


Mayor Ruth Lovell Stanners is dead against a plan by Bruce Power to load 16 low-level radioactive steam generators onto a ship in Owen Sound Harbour and ship them to Sweden, but it seems unlikely she can stop it. The Tiverton-based nuclear generation company requires only a heavy load permit from the city, which cannot be denied based on health and safety concerns unrelated to the actual transportation of the 100-tonne vessels through Owen Sound, said city manager Jim Harrold. Bruce Power has already secured the support of Transport Canada, which owns the harbour, conditional upon the approval of a licence from the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission. An application is now before the CNSC. It would be the first time a licence has been issued to ship nuclear waste across the Great Lakes. Bruce Power spokesman Ross Lamont suggested to council that the city would be in a legal fight if it refuses to issue the heavy-load permit, based on concerns with storing the steam generators by the harbour and shipping them out of Owen Sound.I find life is a lot simpler when we don't use lawyers. I would hope we would have a fulsome discussion as to why,he told council after being asked what would happen if the city said no. He said Bruce Power has no alternate plan to shipping the generators out of Owen Sound Harbour. Other harbours, including one in Goderich, have been ruled out.

Lovell Stanners would also require the support of her council colleagues to stop the plan. Owen Sound councillors Peter Lemon and Tom Pink said they support Bruce Power's proposal.Lemon said he is more concerned about invasive aquatic species, such as zebra mussels, hitching a ride on the ocean-going vessel and remaining in harbour than the risks of the low-level radioactive waste.Other councillors wanted more information.Lamont laid out for council Bruce Power's plan to ship the school bus-sized, decommissioned generators from its Tiverton site to the Owen Sound harbour. The steel vessels will be loaded one by one onto a docked ship -- about the same size as the Chi-Cheemaun -- over three weeks, starting in mid-September, and then shipped to a recycling facility in Sweden.Lovell Stanners said she is concerned about the impact the steam generators might have on the health and safety of Owen Sound residents. She questioned what would happen if one were to fall into the harbour.The more that I have learned, the less I am comfortable with this plan at all,she said during the meeting. Lamont said Bruce Power has chosen to ship the steam generators to Sweden to reduce the amount of waste that will be stored at the Bruce site property. About 90% of the generators' metal will be melted down in Sweden for reuse and the rest will be shipped back to Canada and stored as low-level nuclear waste. He said the generators will be welded shut and will not pose a danger to the public or environment. There will be a protected, guarded staging area in Owen Sound, he said.Bruce Power changed its plan to store the generators at the harbour for five weeks. Now, the plan is to load them on an awaiting ship over three weeks. The longest one will be stored along the harbour will be one night, Lamont said. He said standing next to one of the generators for two hours will deliver no more radiation than a chest X-ray.Bruce Power plans to ship another 16 generators across the Great Lakes, as part of the refurbishment of Units 1 and 2, in a few years. More will be shipped through Owen Sound as other units are refurbished.

Bruce Power is holding a public meeting July 27 at 5 p.m. at the Grey Bruce Health Unit building. It is also holding meetings in Saugeen Shores and at its visitor centre. The only decision council made on Bruce Power's plan Monday was to approve a motion by Coun. Bill Twaddle to invite medical officer of health Dr. Hazel Lynn to speak to council about it. Lamont said she is supportive. Bruce Power must submit its application for a heavy load permit to Owen Sound within 30 days of the shipments. Several anti-nuclear and environmental groups are circulating a petition to oppose Bruce Power's plan. Sarnia Mayor Mike Bradley and two state representatives from Michigan are among the people who have signed so far. Gordon Edwards, president of the Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility, said it is foolish to ship the steam generators, which have 5,000 corroded pipes inside, on the Great Lakes.The danger is that accidents do happen, he said. There's lots of radioactive junk inside those steam generators. In fact, Bruce Power doesn't even know the complete inventory of the radioactive material inside because it's impossible to measure from the outside and no one wants to go inside because it's too dangerous. If this material were to somehow find a pathway out into the environment, through either a puncture or a crack or just to corrosion, then you have this material leaking into the Great Lakes.Shipping the generators across the Great Lakes also sets precedence, he said, for larger and more dangerous shipments.
Article ID# 2665733

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