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Media Centre

News
Flash
The Canadian Press
December 18, 2007
Tory cabinet tried to order nuclear regulator to bend rules
for Chalk River
OTTAWA _ The
Conservative government issued a cabinet order last week to
federal nuclear regulators in an apparent effort to pressure
them into letting medical isotope production resume at the
Chalk River nuclear reactor.
But the directive, dated Dec. 10, failed to resolve a
dispute between Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd., which operates
the reactor, and the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission
which sets licensing, health and safety rules.
The government brought in emergency legislation the next day
that made a temporary end run around the rules to enable
isotope production to resume.
Tory insiders cite the earlier order as proof that the
government had tried to solve the problem through normal
bureaucratic channels but was rebuffed by the commission.
``This was a confrontation between incompetence and
intransigence,'' said one Conservative who asked not to be
named. ``The incompetence was on the AECL side and the
intransigence was on the regulatory side.''
The Dec. 10 cabinet order was drafted in broad policy terms
for legal reasons, but it was clearly aimed at getting the
Chalk River reactor back into operation after it had been
shut down because of concerns that it lacked a backup system
for cooling pumps designed to prevent a core meltdown in the
event of an accident.
The text of the cabinet order, made public only this week,
directs the safety commission ``in regulating nuclear
substances to take into account the health of Canadians who
for medical purposes depend on nuclear substances produced
by nuclear reactors.''
The shutdown at Chalk River had cut off about half the
world's supply of radioactive isotopes used in the diagnosis
of cancer and heart ailments, provoking what the government
viewed as a public health crisis.
The Tories tried at first to get opposition consent for an
all-party motion in the House of Commons calling for a
resumption of operations at Chalk River, but the Liberals
balked at that approach.
Omar Alghabra, the party's critic on the issue, said Tuesday
the Liberal position was that politicians couldn't intervene
in a specific case on which an independent regulatory body
had already ruled.
``Instead of working with AECL to accommodate the
commission's requirements, they felt the way to do it was to
pressure the regulator,'' said Alghabra.
``We felt that it was inappropriate . . .It would be like
picking up the phone and calling the judge (in a court
case).''
Alghabra acknowledged that it's permitted, under the federal
Nuclear Safety and Control Act, for the government to issue
broad policy directives without referring to specific cases.
But he maintained that, under the circumstances, it was
still wrong for the Conservatives to put out the cabinet
order they eventually devised.
``They chose to put the blame, wrongly, on the commission to
cover for the failures of AECL and the government's
mismanagement of this file.''
Aurele Gervais, a spokesman for the safety commission, said
it appears the directive issued by cabinet was a proper one
under the law governing the regulatory body.
But he couldn't explain why that wasn't enoughy to resolve
the issue without recourse to emergency legislation and
couldn't say exactly what impact the directive will have on
future regulatory operations.
``We're still in the process so studying it,'' said Gervais.
The commission required AECL, as a condition of its last
licence renewal, to upgrade safety systems at the 50-yer-old
reactor. Gervais said AECL later notified the regulators, in
a letter sent in December 2005, that all the upgrades had
been completed.
But when the rector was shut down for routine maintenance
last month, inspectors found the backup system for the
cooling pumps had not actually been installed. AECL then
decided not to re-start the reactor, a move that would have
put it in violation of its operating requirements.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper, during heated debate last
week in the Commons, blamed the ``Liberal-appointed'' safety
commission for refusing to recognize the overriding need to
resume isotope production.
Other Tories pointed out that Linda Keen, chair of the
commission, was a senior bureaucrat at the Natural Resources
Department when Liberal Ralph Goodale was minister there.
Keen retorted that as a civil servant she was non-partisan.
Ironically, Harper has since appointed a new chair of AECL,
Glenna Carr, who held senior bureaucratic posts in the
Ontario government under former NDP premier Bob Rae and
Liberal David Peterson. The Prime Minister's Office has
offered no explanation of why that work record was
acceptable but Keen's was not.
Carr replaces Michael Burns, a former fundraiser for the
Canadian Alliance, a predecessor of the present
Conservatives. He resigned abruptly last Friday in the wake
of the furor over Chalk River.
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