Tuesday, March 19, 2019

Massachusetts State Police In illegal Alien or Terrorism Alert On I-91?

The Boston Globe front page article on the quota system: 

"State Police had a quota system for issuing tickets, prosecutors allege

The Massachusetts State Police has repeatedly denied the existence of ticket quotas in recent years, but federal prosecutors outlined such a system last week."
Did I give the feds this tip? 
5) Does the staties have a violation quota system? Do they gain incentives for mass stops and violations? Do they have a minimum number violations and stops, say per month, or they would be disciplined? 

Reposted from 3/19/2018

***Note to the Mass AGO office

Was the senior officer on this site like the other overtime inflating officers. Was this stop just a excuse to inflate the senior officers income or a no show type of job. 

Update: 


Here we are out almost a year later... The Massachusetts State Police has just about imploded.
 
John Tlumacki/Globe staff

By Mark Arsenault, Travis Andersen and Shelley Murphy Globe Staff  March 20, 2018
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FRAMINGHAM — In another black eye for the scandal-ridden Massachusetts State Police, 20 active troopers face potential sanctions for the apparent theft of overtime pay, with the most egregious alleged offenders putting in for as many as 100 no-show shifts, officials said Tuesday.
In a state agency where 245 troopers — about 12 percent of the force — made more than $200,000 last year, an internal audit of Troop E, a division that covers the Massachusetts Turnpike, found “apparent discrepancies between overtime paid and actual patrols worked,” State Police Colonel Kerry A. Gilpin, superintendent of the force, said at a morning news conference.
Nineteen troopers face internal duty status hearings in the coming days to determine whether they’ll be suspended, Gilpin said. Another trooper who was already suspended for another matter and a retiree are also being investigated.
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Gilpin said that she couldn’t put a dollar figure on the amount of disputed overtime, but that the number of questionable overtime shifts per trooper ranged from one to “as high as 100.”
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State Police officials said they have reported their findings, which stemmed from an investigation launched last fall, to Attorney General Maura Healey’s office for review and potential prosecution.

Coming on the heels of several other high-profile controversies in recent months, news of the purported overtime scheme quickly stirred outrage.
Governor Charlie Baker, who appointed Gilpin to head the agency last November, said the superintendent “made a pretty clear statement that this sort of activity and this sort of behavior is not going to be tolerated.”
Baker said that overall the State Police are “a strong, good, well-trained unit.”
“But clearly there’s some people here who broke the rules, allegedly, and got way beyond the bounds of what anyone would consider to be appropriate behavior,” Baker said. “And for those who are found to have committed what’s been alleged, they should face the music.”
The department’s previous superintendent, Richard McKeon, and his deputy, Francis Hughes, retired in November after revelations that McKeon had ordered an arrest report changed to remove embarrassing information about the daughter of Judge Timothy Bibaud. A lawyer for McKeon has said he ordered the deletions to remove unnecessary information.
Baker and Healey have each announced investigations into the handling of the police reports.
Two more high-ranking officials linked to the redactions – Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Risteen and Major Susan Anderson — retired suddenly in February. Their retirements came a day after the Globe reported that Trooper Leigha Genduso had been hired despite having been a coconspirator in a 2007 drug case and having avoided charges by testifying. Genduso, whom multiple sources said was Risteen’s former girlfriend, was suspended after the disclosure.
On Tuesday, the union that represents troopers, the State Police Association of Massachusetts, said it does not condone any actions that may have violated the public’s trust.
“The department has been in turmoil over the last several months,” Dana Pullman, president of the union, said in a statement. “We believe the customs and culture that was allowed to flourish under the previous state police leadership has compromised the public’s perception and calls into question the integrity of the hard-working men and women of the Massachusetts State Police. Colonel Gilpin has been given the unenviable task of dealing with a myriad of untenable issues.”…

Reposted from 4/5/17

So here I sit with both eyes having a cataract operation. Even though I got no speeding ticket, I suspected widespread corruption with the state police system. I got a pretty good sniffer for detecting corruption.   

reposted from 2/23

Update April 5

Got my cataract operation two weeks ago. Unbelievably better sight in my right left eye. Working on doing my right eye.

Update Feb 28

I had that phone interview with the state police complaint interviewer. He was a very pleasant person to talk with. We agreed there was no issues with the officer who gave me the complaint. I told him the office was very courteous to me who gave me the warning.

The interviewer was kind of like a typical black and white police officer. His job was to just evaluate if a member of the public had a issues with a police officer. The officer basically didn’t have a issue with staging SUVs on a interstate to give the opportunity to search a car. I said it was piss poor with doing this in rush hour and in the dark. Why couldn’t you send a message during daylight? He said crimes occur in the dark and during rush hour. I just wanted the facts. He thought that area of I 91 might have traffic accident reputation. I asked him does the move over law work. He ask me for facts as we spoke, he kept throwing at me one speculation after another. He had no idea if the move over law reduces officer deaths.


The big remaining issues, big picture:

1) What was the state trooper strategy with all troopers on the highway on my day of the warning?

2) Does the move over law work as intended. Does it reduce officer fatalities?

3) He blew me off with, does the move over law favor the police officer’s life better than a member of the public?

He talked about all accidents of the road and the highways being so dangerous. Right, just tell me the facts. The highways are extraordinary dangerous. Just saying, our overall accident and fatality rates have drastically declined from twenty year ago.








Questions for interview. I am a science and data guy! I never have any confidentiality or anonymity needs!!


1) Why is one life valued more than another life. Why is a police officer's life valued more than another other life? Why isn't there a requirement when any car is in the breakdown lane, all cars must move to the outside lane? I'll bet you there are much more public fatalities and injuries with a car in the breakdown lane than all police offer's injuries fatalities and injuries.



2) It's a federal highway. I never heard anything about the move over law before this incident. How many other states have the move over law? If this is such a life saving law, why isn't it mandatory on all federal highways? The vast majority of states have a move over law.



3) There is always unintended consequences with rules and laws. Is anyone keeping track of traffic accidents and incidents associated with the move over law? Say a car moving to the outside lane and hitting another vehicle or going into a side?

4)I'd like to see all the data associated from this state police project. The offence happened at 6:15 pm on 2/22/17. Say 12 hours before and 12 hours after offence. 10 miles before and after citation on I 91. Like all violations, citations, warnings, arrests, times, models of cars and vehicles and maybe even nationality. I'd like to analyzes commonalities.

5) I was driving my son's car. It's a tiny tiny Mazda car associated with a particular segment of society. Basically young people. Was a small segment of our population targeted for a move over stop because it more fruitful to the police.

6)They could be severely abusing a legitimate law to do a illegal search. Was all move over violators stopped and given citation including warnings? Are they picking and choosing move over violators? Mindfulness: If the troopers intentionally set-up/staged those cruisers in that I-91 spot to selectively stop move over violators, then all the stops and violations are unconstitutional. Was the police cruisers staged on the road for a hidden agenda?  The intent of the project was to do searches and stops, not to protect police officers. If the Staties chose that area because of poor visibility, around corners and obscuring terrain...the intent was to create stops for a hidden agenda.


update March 19 2019
Feds disclose there was a quota system and the Mass state police have been lying to us all saying there wasn't a quanta system.
 "Were Mass. State Police troopers in OT scandal told to fill ticket quotas? Agency denies new allegation in federal court filing" 


By Scott J. Croteau | scroteau@masslive.com 

Massachusetts State Police troopers working specialized overtime patrols – the patrols authorities say were part of the overtime abuse scandal – were expected to write at least eight citations per shift, federal prosecutors wrote in a recent filing.

A state police spokesman told MassLive in a statement that the department “has no policy or operating procedures that establish quotas, and does not endorse a quota system.


“Under the leadership of Colonel Gilpin, the Department has implemented several reforms, including the elimination of Troop E and AIRE Patrols, and has referred 46 troopers to federal prosecutors for alleged overtime abuse," state police spokesman David Procopio said.

In a sentencing memorandum for former Trooper Eric Chin, one of several troopers who were charged in the overtime abuse investigation, federal prosecutors Mark Grady and Dustin Chao said troopers working Accident and Injury Reduction Effort patrols – known as AIRE – were “expected to issue a minimum of 8-10 citations for each AIRE shift.”

“Any failure to issue the required number of citations had to be explained to supervisors and command staff,” prosecutors wrote. “Repeated failures to meet this quota often resulted in a trooper being blocked from receiving such overtime opportunities.”

The memorandum does not mention how the prosecutor attained this information. MassLive reached out to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for clarification.

Eight troopers were charged in federal court on embezzlement charges in connection with the overtime investigation. Chin is one of several troopers who pleaded guilty.ted 9:17 AM; Posted Mar 18, 5:34 PM


5) Does the staties have a violation quota system? Do they gain incentives for mass stops and violations? Do they have a minimum number violations and stops, say per month, or they would be disciplined?

6) Why was the two cruisers, all police lights flashing, bumper to bumper in the breakdown lane...what was their stated and hidden purpose on the highway? There was no other vehicle in the area in the breakdown lane.

7) What message was state police management trying to send to the greater public during this project with all these police vehicles and officers and troopers.
8) How many police vehicles was involved in this project? I count at least five. The two cruiser position who cited me, another cruiser in the breakdown about three miles north of the first position in the breakdown lane with police flasher lights on (no vehicles near him pulled over), then another cruiser in the breakdown lane in another three miles. I seen a state police flasher also on the opposite side(southbound)of I 91. I count at least five vehicles.   

9) Basically the whole project was effectively entrapment...

10) I am telling you with any complex and high consequence organization...the direct road to perdition is mindlessly meeting minimal intent of the law or any rule for a secret or hidden agenda. We would be a destructively chaotic and ungovernable nation if everyone just met the minimum intent of any rule or law. All moral people have a much higher calling...   


11) I am shocked I didn't know about the move over law. My 21 year old son can be astonishingly stupid. I asked him, on I-91, do you know what the move over phrase means? He immediately recognized the phrase. He scoffingly responded to me, you can't be in the furthest
right hand lane with a police officer's car in the breakdown with flashing lights. We had a very difficult period with roundabouts when he had his learners permit.

12) Has the law been effective at reducing police officer fatalities and injury? Basically paid organizations supporting the troopers have pushed the law into being. Is it a scam law allowing the organizations to show the police officers they are getting their monies worth?            



Update Feb 24



Amazingly quick response? Thanks Spfld Union newspaper.

MSP Citizens Response Reports (POL) <citizensresponsereports@MassMail.State.MA.US>

To Michael Mulligan
Today at 9:03 AM

We are in receipt of your citizen response report. A complaint intake officer will contact you within the next few days to discuss your concerns. Thank you.
Update

Sent a complaint to the state police through this link. 

Citizensresponsereports@pol.state.ma.us
I travel I91 from Northfield to Springfield often to visit my old home neighborhood and my brother. I am having cataract surgery in the coming weeks. It has been getting more problematic driving in the night. In a scale of 1 to 10 my cataracts are at 4. I spend 99.9% of my time driving in rural roads. My rush hour big interstate road skills are waning. But think I am safe. I doubt I will be safe in a year without the eye operation. I know my limitations and the only answer is to slow down my driving.

See, something is fishy with the wholesale police stops last night? A ruse to stop people. He spoke as if it was a new law. 


Move Over Law Protects First Responders



In Massachusetts the Move Over Law aims to make police, firefighters, paramedics, tow truck drivers, and all roadside emergency and maintenance professionals safer on the job. The Move Over Law, which took effect March 22, 2009, requires drivers approaching a stationary emergency or maintenance vehicle with flashing lights to move to the next adjacent lane if it is safe to do so, and, barring that, to reduce their speed. Failure to comply could result in a fine of up to $100.

Every year, first responders across the country are injured or killed on the job while providing emergency help and, this summer six Massachusetts state troopers were injured in as many weeks. One trooper died from his injuries. All citizens are asked to make a personal pledge to always move over to make Massachusetts roadways safer for everyone.

So at about 11 am I am driving down to Springfield. I notice state police positioned in many areas down the interstate. A police helicopter is patrolling the roads for speeders or something worst like terrorism. It is way abnormal. That is when I pose to myself...are we in some kind of terrorism alert.

Springfield Massachusetts and Holyoke are probably the largest Mecca for illegal aliens in the state per population. 

I am heading home in the dark at about 6:30 pm. I am a bit nervous…well, I am on a heightened state of alert because of my vision and my rusty driving skills on the interstate. I am driving very conservative. By the Holyoke Mall, on the far side of a curve,  I see a police car with lights flashing ahead of me. I think he pulled somebody or is helping a community member stuck on the breakdown lane. There was police lights flashing big time abnormally. There is two police cruisers next to each other on the breakdown lane. I am doing about 60 MPH and in the right lane. I am a truck driver. Typically I am in the habit of moving over to the left lane with any car on the shoulder of the road especially as a curtesy to the police  The highways are extremely dangerous territory. You are risking your life pulling over to the breakdown lane. I have spent a lot of time driving tractor trailers and being broken down on the highways. You have to be in a extreme state of alert when walking around your truck in the breakdown lane. There are a lot of crazies on the road. The stories I got...
A mile past the two flashing light cruisers, I am being pulled over by the cops. I wait for a open area where I can safety stop for the cop. I get passed the breakdown tar and onto the dirt and mud for the protection of the statie.  I put the dome light on and turn the off the car. I open my driver window. I put my hands on the top of my steering wheel. I don’t fool around with any cop…I want him to feel comfortable with me from the get-go. I teach my children this. A few extra seconds pass by, I don’t see the cop in my side mirror. I hear somebody yelling at me to open my window. What the hell? He is standing aside my passenger window. This seems to be a highly abnormal stop procedure. I am thinking, where is the cop who’s supposed to be on my side?
He was a decent cop. He opens with, didn’t you see us pulled over on the side of the road? I knew I wasn’t spending. I thought a tail light was burnt out. He told me Massachusetts has a new law where you are required get in the outside lane when any car is pulled over in the breakdown lane. I said, I seen your flasher on ahead of me, its heavy traffic...I didn’t want to make any quick moves to the outside lane.  I said with stern voice, this whole deal is unsafe. This isn’t a good stop.  I get a strong verbal tone, Well, Mr. Mulligan, it is the law. He asked for my papers and license…then took them to the cruiser. I am thinking I am getting a $150 ticket because I got a bit mouthy with the cop before the decision of the ticket was made. He gave me a warning.
I said sir, either we are under a secret national security alert or you are fishing for heroin. That is what you are doing here. I sincerely thanked him for doing his dangerous job. He scoffingly laughed at me as he left. As I was coming up to speed, I noticed another statie positioned on the other side of the road in their breakdown lane. Three miles up the interstate on my side was another state police officer with flashers in the breakdown all by himself. Then another one in another three miles? I have never seen this level of state police activity on I 91.
I think the Ma police safety law is on the books.  Personally I think in this situation with the “police officer safety law” is a ruse to do a illegal search and seizure on large numbers of citizens.  I am terrible concern with this. It’s the gaming of the legitimate law and the slippery slope I am worried about. Why is the first instincts of the bureaucrats to prevent needless injury and deaths to police officers... is to infringe on my constitutional rights with illegal search and seizure? Where is all the big signs on the interstate warning us of this new law. Why are’t the airways flooded with the notification of this law?
I think this is a government system issues, not a driver issues. I think the breakdown lanes are too small. Why haven’t they mandated the police use the passenger window and then see if this limits state police interstate injuries and deaths? If this stop really was driver training on the driver, why do this in rush hour and in the dark? If this was really safety related they would do it this way. Why not do a stop like happened to me without checking any data base? Is the game really not wanting to raise taxes of infrastructure projects, so the cheaper way to protect the cops is to infringe on our constitutional rights. Right the slippery slope...
Possibilities
1)     It is a illegal alien trap? Look at the media background with Trump’s presidential order on illegal aliens and there are police traps to catch them? I agree with Trump’s policies on illegal aliens. Traps like this certainly would make all illegal aliens nervous. Will there be unintended consequences with this?   

2)     The trap is a illegal fishing expedition for heroin.

3)     We are in a national security alert and they are looking known terrorist.
I am a big picture man. I agree for the police to intrude on my constitution guarantees on fighting threats to the public, my family and me on all three of these possibilities. Honestly heroin is such a big threat, I would agree for the government to monitor all phone and media traffic for the express purpose of fighting heroin. As far as heroin/gang counties like Mexico and Columbia, I would threaten total embargo and financial catastrophe if they can’t control the gang or heroin production within their boarder.      

Power At 48%: Cooper Nuclear Plant Flooding Is Seriously Worsening, Commencing Shutdown

update

"My mistake". The chart is a lot smaller on the NRC page.

March 19

Comanche Peak 1 100
Comanche Peak 2 100
Cooper 100
Diablo Canyon 1 48
Diablo Canyon 2 100
Grand Gulf 1 100
Palo Verde 1 100
Palo Verde 2

***Upstream dam about to collapse?

The US nuclear industry could "end" right at Cooper.

Is Cooper Plant Going To Flood Like Fort Calhoun in 2011?


Update March 25

Got out of the UE yesterday. 

Update March 21

The characteristics of the Missouri River have change since the Cooper plant has been built due to climate change. The plant now is not designed to be safe with a river system running out of control for the foreseeable future.

The Cooper plant now is a ticking nuclear time bomb out to destroy the nuclear industry and horribly damage out economy. The scenario I worry is if the plant melts down in just the right political environment. The meltdown could be so politically ugly it would cause us to shutdown all the nuclear plants in the USA in a extremely short period of time. We would quickly lose 20% of our electricity. The prolonged power shortages and price spikes and elevated cost of electricity would throw us into a depression. This is not a far fetched scenario, Japan shutdown all their nuclear plants in the aftermath of Fukushima. It would take us a decade or more to replace 20% of our electricity.    

The Fight to Tame a Swelling River With Dams Outmatched by Climate Change

Along the Missouri, John Remus controls a network of dams that dictates the fate of millions. ‘It was not designed to handle this.’

By Tyler J. Kelley

March 21, 2019

There were no good choices for John Remus, yet he had to choose.

Should he try to hold back the surging Missouri River but risk destroying a major dam, potentially releasing a 45-foot wall of water? Or should he relieve the pressure by opening the spillway, purposefully adding to the flooding of towns, homes and farmland for hundreds of miles.

Mr. Remus controls an extraordinary machine — the dams built decades ago to tame a river system that drains parts of 10 states and two Canadian provinces. But it was designed for a different era, a time before climate change and the extreme weather it can bring.

“It’s human nature to think we are masters of our environment, the lords of creation,” said Mr. Remus, who works for the United States Army Corps of Engineers. But there are limits, he said. And the storm last week that caused him so much trouble was beyond what his network of dams can control.

“It was not designed to handle this,” he said.

The storm, the “bomb cyclone” that struck the upper Midwest, dumped its rain onto frozen soil, which acted less like dirt and more like concrete. Instead of being absorbed, water from the rain and melted snow raced straight into the Missouri River and its tributaries…

Update March 19

I thinking flooding debris is overwhelming the intake cooling water trash racks or the big transmission towers around the plant are compromised due to flooding?  

The flooding is worsening or Cooper is having equipment problem. Power is now at 48% power(still at 100% power). So the NRC and industry is drastically restricting information to outsiders. They are going to get use to just not saying anything. A bad accident is going happen, the NRC is still going to still play this disclose nothing game, and public credibility is going to crater and wreck the industry.

I really don't get this. Just shutdown the plant in the beginning when a big flood is lapping at your feet. I'll bet most of the shutdown cost is tax deductible.

Reposted from 3/15  

***Update March 17


So here it is Sunday and they are still at 100% power. The river has been lapping right up to it shutdown limit. How long are they going to operate like this with the water so high? It could be three months before the water recedes, god knows what weather will show up in three months. 

Remember, right after shutdown, the decay heat is putting out 10% power with the plant shutdown. A few days or a week they are still putting out a lot of heat. Would you like to get into a jam with the core putting out 10% power or .2 percent power?  

Update March 16

Heading for shutdown!

This plant has the highest risk of a meltdown or terrible accident for the next month in the USA 

This is going to be a long lasting flooding...probably still flooded during the summer. At least Fort Calhoun is permanently shutdown. It is setting up to be worst than 2011. The problem with flooding is the potential of a so called unexpected dam collapse. It could quickly overrun the plant with flooding.
These rising river levels mean the unthinkable is possible: that 2019 could be the year that two terrible flood years — the devastating flooding on the Elkhorn River in 2010 and the record-shattering flood of 2011 on the Missouri River — wrap into one.

“The 2011 flooding was probably one of the bigger disaster events in our history. I think we can safely say ... this event rivals it,” said Bryan Tuma, assistant director of the Nebraska Emergency Management Agency.
 Deadly, Historic Midwest Flooding Threatens Ericson Dam, Nuclear Plant in Nebraska

By Pam Wright and Ron Brackett
2 hours ago
weather.com

Flooding in parts of the Midwest has left one man dead threatens a Nebraska dam and nuclear power plant as heavy rains mixed with a melting snowpack swell waterways to historic levels.

An unidentified Nebraska farmer was killed Thursday after the tractor he was using to try and save a stranded motorist was carried away by floodwaters, the Omaha World-Herald reports. The incident occurred at Shell Creek near Columbus, in eastern Nebraska.

Ericson Dam in north central Nebraska is at risk of failing as the Cedar River continues to rise, according to a report by the National Weather Service.

Officials in Boone County, downstream from the dam, also warned of the "imminent failure" of the dam, Boone County News reported.

Both agencies are warning impacted residents to seek higher ground.

In Nebraska, a utility company was placing sandbags around a threatened nuclear power plant Thursday as the Missouri River continued to rise, the Omaha World-Journal reports.

Mark Becker, spokesman for the Nebraska Public Power District, told the newspaper that should the river hit the level of 45.5 feet as projected by the National Weather Services this weekend, the Cooper Nuclear Station, which accounts for 35 percent of NPPD's power, will have to be shut down.

(MORE: Flooding Continues in the Plains, Midwest As Snow Melts; Severe Threat Waning in Midwest, South)

Becker noted that should the plant shut down, DPPD will be able to get power elsewhere and they don't expect the closure to lead to outages.

On Thursday, DPPD lost another small electrical plant when the Spencer Dam failed at the Niobrara River and caused a large ice floe to jam a hole in the building. Workers inside the building were uninjured, Becker told the newspaper. The failure also forced the evacuation of dozens of residents along the river.

Friday, March 15, 2019

We are Heading For A Meltdown.


Nuclear industry pushing for fewer inspections at plants


FILE - In this March 16, 2011, file photo, steam escapes from Exelon Corp.'s nuclear plant in Byron, Ill. (AP Photo/Robert Ray, File)
WASHINGTON (AP) — The nuclear power industry is pushing the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to cut back on inspections at nuclear power plants and throttle back what it tells the public about plant problems. The agency, whose board is dominated by Trump appointees, is listening.
Commission staffers are weighing some of the industry's requests as part of a sweeping review of how the agency enforces regulations governing the country's 98 commercially operating nuclear plants. Recommendations are due to the five-member NRC board in June.
Annie Caputo, a former nuclear-energy lobbyist now serving as one of four board members appointed or reappointed by President Donald Trump, told an industry meeting this week that she was "open to self-assessments" by nuclear plant operators, who are proposing that self-reporting by operators take the place of some NRC inspections.
The Trump NRC appointees and industry representatives say changes in oversight are warranted to reflect the industry's overall improved safety records and its financial difficulties, as the operating costs of the country's aging nuclear plants increase and affordable natural gas and solar and wind power gain in the energy market.
But the prospect of the Trump administration's regulation-cutting mission reaching the NRC alarms some independent industry watchdogs, who say the words "nuclear safety" and "deregulation" don't go together.
For example, "the deregulatory agenda at SEC is a significant concern as well, but it's not a nuclear power plant," said Geoffrey Fettus, a senior attorney for nuclear issues at the Natural Resources Defense Council, referring to the federal government's Securities Exchange Commission.
"For an industry that is increasingly under financial decline ... to take regulatory authority away from the NRC puts us on a collision course," said Paul Gunter, of the anti-nuclear group Beyond Nuclear. With what? "With a nuclear accident," Gunter said.
The industry made its requests for change in a letter delivered by the Nuclear Energy Institute group. A "high-priority" ask is to eliminate press releases about lower-level safety issues at plants — meaning the kind of problems that could trigger more inspections and oversight at a plant but not constitute an emergency.
The industry group also asked that the NRC reduce the "burden of radiation-protection and emergency-preparedness inspections."
Nuclear plant operators amplified their requests at an annual meeting in the Washington, D.C, area this week.
Scaling back disclosure of lower-level problems at plants is "more responsible ... than to put out a headline on the webpage to the world," said Greg Halnon, vice president of regulatory affairs for Ohio-based FirstEnergy Corp., which says its fleet of nuclear and other power plants supplies 6 million customers in the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic.
When the NRC makes public the problems found at a plant, utilities get "pretty rapid calls from the press, SEC filings get impacted because of potential financial impact," Halnon said.
Requests by utilities for rate increases also can be affected, Halnon said.
Trump has said he wants to help both the coal and nuclear power industries. So far, it's the more politically influential coal industry that's gotten significant action on the regulatory rollbacks that it sought from the Environmental Protection Agency and other agencies.
In January, Trump appointees to the NRC disappointed environmental groups by voting down a staff proposal that nuclear plants be required to substantially — and expensively — harden themselves against major floods and other natural disasters. The proposal was meant to be a main NRC response to the Fukushima nuclear plant disaster after Japan's 9.0 earthquake and tsunami in 2011.
Caputo, who previously worked for nuclear plant operator Exelon Corp, told operators this week her aim was "risk-informed decision-making," concentrating regulatory oversight on high-risk problems.
"We shouldn't regulate to zero risk," said David Wright, a former South Carolina public-utility commissioner appointed to the NRC board last year.
"The NRC mission is reasonable assurance of adequate protection — no more, no less," Wright said.
Tony Vegel, a Texas-based reactor safety official for the NRC, pushed back when industry executives publicly made their case for fewer NRC inspections.
"It's difficult to come across as an independent regulator and rely on self-assessment" from plants, Vegel said.
The current review, commissioned by the new NRC panel, was looking at the inspections issues and related ones, NRC spokesman Scott Burnell said. Commissioners will decide after receiving the staff recommendations whether to adopt any of them, Burnell said