Saturday, May 14, 2022

IT'S ILLEGAL

‘This isn’t how I imagined leaving’: Twitter boss Parag Agrawal fires top executive on paternity leave as Musk takeover looms

Twitter is shaking up its executive team and implementing a hiring freeze ahead of Elon Musk’s $44 billion takeover, with departing executives venting their disappointment on the social platform.

The company confirmed on Friday that Kayvon Beykpour, head of product, and Bruce Falck, who oversaw revenue, are leaving.

Jay Sullivan, Twitter's head of consumer product, will serve as interim leader of both departments.

Beykpour said in a Twitter thread on Thursday that he had been axed by CEO Parag Agrawal during his paternity leave, adding that he was “disappointed” with the decision.

“The truth is that this isn’t how and when I imagined leaving Twitter, and this wasn’t my decision,” Beykpour said.

“Parag asked me to leave after letting me know that he wants to take the team in a different direction.”

Falck—whose Twitter bio now describes him as “unemployed”—wrote a thread on Thursday dedicated to his coworkers at the company.

He added, "I'll clarify that I too was fired by" Agrawal. Falck later deleted the tweet.

Kayvon Beykpour is seen speaking to a reporter (who is off-screen) during an interview with Bloomberg. Beykpour's phone and a cup of coffee lay on the table in front of him.
Kayvon Beykpour, co-founder and chief executive officer of Periscope, speaks during a Bloomberg West Television interview in San Francisco, U.S., on Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2016. Periscope is a live video streaming app for iOS and Android. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Twitter has been in a state of uncertainty since Musk announced in April that his $44 billion takeover bid for the social media platform had been accepted.

Musk is still working to secure financing for his mammoth acquisition of the company, and many investors are apprehensive about whether or not the deal will really go through.

A Twitter spokesperson told Fortune on Friday that effective this week, the company was "pausing most hiring and backfills, with the exception of business-critical roles."

“We are pulling back on non-labor costs to ensure we are being responsible and efficient,” they added.

The reaction to Musk’s takeover hasn’t been overwhelmingly positive among Twitter’s existing workforce, with reports of angry messages between colleagues, crying in meetings, and warnings of a mass employee exodus.

But while there may not be much enthusiasm about a Musk-run Twitter among current employees, job interest in the company surged by 250% in the weeks following the announcement of his takeover.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

Leading medical journal warns 'women will die' if Supreme Court overturns Roe


·Senior Writer

One of the world’s oldest and most well-known medical journals published an editorial on Thursday warning that if the U.S. Supreme Court were to confirm Justice Samuel Alito’s draft opinion to overturn Roe v. Wade, “women will die.”

“The fact is that if the U.S. Supreme Court confirms its draft decision, women will die,” the Lancet said in its editorial. “The Justices who vote to strike down Roe will not succeed in ending abortion, they will only succeed in ending safe abortion. Alito and his supporters will have women's blood on their hands.”

The 199-year-old journal argues that Alito’s “shocking, inhuman, and irrational” draft opinion “utterly fails to consider the health of women today who seek abortion.”

The cover of the Lancet's May 14 issue. (The Lancet)
The cover of the Lancet's May 14 issue. (The Lancet)

“Unintended pregnancy and abortion are universal phenomena. Worldwide, around 120 million unintended pregnancies occur annually,” the editorial stated. “Of these, three-fifths end in abortion. And of these, some 55% are estimated to be safe — that is, completed using a medically recommended method and performed by a trained provider. This leaves 33 million women undergoing unsafe abortions, their lives put at risk because laws restrict access to safe abortion services.”

In the United States, the Lancet notes, Black women have an unintended pregnancy rate double that of non-Hispanic white women and a maternal mortality rate almost three times higher than for white women.

“These sharp racial and class disparities need urgent solutions, not more legal barriers,” the editorial said.

“If the Court denies women the right to safe abortion,” the Lancet concluded, “it will be a judicial endorsement of state control over women — a breathtaking setback for the health and rights of women, one that will have global reverberations.”

Demonstrators in support of reproductive rights march following a protest vigil outside Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito's home in Alexandria, Va., on May 9.
Demonstrators in support of reproductive rights march following a protest vigil outside Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito's home in Alexandria, Va., on Monday. (Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters)

The publication of the editorial comes amid nationwide protests by abortion rights advocates over the initial draft majority opinion, which was published by Politico earlier this month. The report suggested that the Supreme Court is poised to overturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 ruling that legalized abortion nationwide.

Polls show that most Americans would object to such a move.

According to a new Yahoo News/YouGov poll, just 31% of U.S. adults say Roe should be overturned. In contrast, nearly twice as many Americans see abortion as “a constitutional right that women in all states should have some access to” (56%) and say the procedure should be legal in all or most cases (55%).

Hundreds of thousands of advocates for reproductive rights are expected to take part in demonstrations in dozens of U.S. cities on Saturday.

The economic cost of abortion bans


·Senior Columnist
YAHOO FINANCE

Abortion is obviously a fraught moral issue. There are also important economic consequences states ought to consider if the Supreme Court does overturn Roe v. Wade, as expected, and most Republican-led states impose severe abortion restrictions or outright bans.

“Eliminating the right of women to make a decision about when and whether to have children would have very damaging effects on the economy and would set women back decades,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said during a Congressional hearing on May 10. Yellen said the 1973 Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision, which legalized abortion nationwide, “enabled many women to finish school. That increased their earning potential, it allowed women to plan and balance their families and careers.”

The Supreme Court is due to rule by June on a Mississippi law that would be one of the nation’s most aggressive efforts to restrict abortion, if the high court upholds it. The leak of a draft opinion indicates the court will do just that, overturning Roe and opening the door for at least half of all states to sharply curtail or ban abortion. The political implications could be explosive, but the economic consequences could be substantial, as well.

Yellen, a labor economist by training, is surely aware of numerous studies that have examined the financial impact on women unable to obtain a desired abortion, and on the broader economy. Last September, more than 150 economists filed an amicus brief in the Mississippi case before the Supreme Court, citing the negative impact on women’s educational attainment, earning potential and career success if forced to bear a child they don’t want.

“The financial effects of being denied an abortion,” they wrote, “are thus as large or larger than those of being evicted, losing health insurance, being hospitalized, or being exposed to flooding due to a hurricane.”

Nearly half of women who get an abortion in the United States are already living below the poverty level. If forced to raise a child against their wishes, they’d have to forego work or find child care if they want to work, which can easily cost $10,000 per year. The burden of raising a child explains why young mothers, not surprisingly, are less likely to finish high school or attend college, which directly correlates with lower lifetime incomes. Reluctant mothers are also more likely to receive public assistance.

The 'motherhood wage penalty'

Even for better-off women, there’s a well-known “motherhood wage penalty” that results in lower pay for women who have children, due to time off for childbearing, work-life balancing and other factors. Many women and their partners willingly accept that trade-off as they build their families. But abortion bans would force that penalty on women who don’t want to pay it.

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Generous paid family leave would reduce the motherhood penalty somewhat, but the United States is one of the few developed nations with no such program. Some companies offer paid leave, but they tend to be big firms with mostly white-collar workers, not smaller firms staffed with lower-paid workers.

Abortion opponents argue that contraception is now readily available and ought to mitigate the need for many abortions. Yet even that can be expensive for low-income women without health insurance, especially since some contraception requires a doctor’s visit and a prescription. There’s also the uncomfortable reality that some pregnancies are simply mistakes—by both the man and the woman. In that sense, abortion bans would punish women more than men for a mistake each of them makes.


People protest after the leak of a draft majority opinion written by Justice Samuel Alito, preparing for a majority of the court to overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade abortion rights decision later this year, in New York City, U.S., May 3, 2022. REUTERS/Yana Paskova

The nationwide legalization of abortion in 1973 occurred as women were increasingly joining the workforce. There were factors other than the Roe decision fueling that trend, including more women going to college, changing attitudes about women working and the need for two household incomes. But economists think Roe helped, since more women could put off starting a family to focus on education or a career, if they chose to.

“Roe v. Wade and access to reproductive health care, including abortion, helped lead to increase labor force participation,” Yellen said on May 10.

A move that would exacerbate the labor shortage

There was no labor shortage, as there is now, when the Supreme Court debated Roe in 1973. Many employers these days are desperate for workers, and one factor in the Great Resignation is the departure of women from the labor force, most likely because they’ve had more caregiving responsibilities at home during the COVID pandemic than men. Abortion bans would add one more barrier for some women to overcome if they want to work, and that would harm the overall economy. When employers can’t get all the workers they need, they produce less, demand goes unmet, there are fewer people earning and spending money than there would be otherwise, and the economy underperforms.

If states insistent on banning abortion wanted to mitigate the economic damage, they’d establish stronger support networks for reluctant mothers, and especially low-income ones, that include free or subsidized child care and health care. They’d also find new ways to impose the economic burden as equitably as possible on the fathers of unwanted children, as well as the mothers, to address the bias already working against women in the labor force and make sure men feel the same fear about becoming an accidental parent as women do.

This is unlikely to happen in most states that ban abortion, given that economic concerns are mostly an afterthought in what is mostly a cultural, political and religious battle. We already see this in another controversial issue: Immigration. Economists broadly argue that more legal immigration generates more economic activity, which benefits everybody, because more people working means more people spending and stronger economic growth. Plus, immigrants to the United States are more entrepreneurial than native-born Americans. More legal immigration, in fact, is one glaring solution to the current labor shortage.

Yet xenophobia and the conflation of legal and illegal immigration have made this a potent political weapon for Republicans, who have been able to block efforts to increase immigration or bully Democrats into sidestepping the issue, as President Biden has largely done. Republican Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas recently held up truck commerce from Mexico to the United States as part of a stunt to look for migrants, weapons and drugs sneaking into the country. He didn’t find any, but produce rotted while shipping costs and prices rose, with businesspeople and consumers paying the price for Abbott’s political spectacle. Many Americans are ambivalent about abortion, but they generally oppose burning money.

Rick Newman is the author of four books, including “Rebounders: How Winners Pivot from Setback to Success.” Follow him on Twitter: @rickjnewman.

Ukrainian volunteer fighters use a Russian tank nicknamed 'Bunny' against Russian forces


Lauren Frias
Fri, May 13, 2022,

This photograph taken on May 13, 2022, shows a damaged tank on a road near the Vilkhivka village east of Kharkiv, amid Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Sergey Bobok/AFP via Getty Images

Ukrainian fighters used a captured tank nicknamed "Bunny" against its previous owners, the Russians.


The T-80 tank has destroyed dozens of Russian vehicles and several tanks in the past several weeks.


On May 9, Ukraine mocked Moscow's "Victory Day" with a parade featuring captured Russian tanks.


Ukrainian volunteer forces have been using a captured T-80 tank nicknamed "Bunny" against the machine's previous owners — the Russian army.

The tank was built two years ago and, up until March of this year, was controlled by Russian forces, according to CNN's Sam Kiley, who met with the volunteer fighters in Ukraine.

A Ukrainian soldier identified solely as Alex, a former software engineer who used to live in the country's second-largest city of Kharkiv, said he was on a sniper mission when he discovered the abandoned tank in a field in March — just eight days into the unprovoked Russian invasion of Ukraine, Kiley reported.

"This is like my personal tank. I am [the] tank commander and tank owner," Alex told Kiley in an interview, adding that the "slightly modernized" tank features an auto-loader and can "shoot more advanced, better rounds," including guided missiles.

In March, "Bunny" destroyed two dozen Russian military vehicles and several tanks, Kiley told CNN.

Ukrainian and Western officials said earlier this week that Russian forces appear to be withdrawing from the Kharkiv region, The New York Times reported. It was a significant setback for the Russian army since its retreat from Kyiv in early April. UK defense officials cited Russia's "inability to capture key Ukrainian cities" and "heavy losses" as the reason behind the withdrawal.

Earlier this week, Ukraine mocked Russia's annual "Victory Day" military celebration in Moscow by hosting their own "parade" featuring captured Russian tanks, "ruining the holiday for the occupiers," the Ukrainian Defense Ministry wrote in a tweet.

Russian President Vladimir Putin delivered an address during the Russian "Victory Day" celebration on Monday, calling Ukraine and its leaders "Nazis" but did not mention a declaration of war following warnings from Western officials.

"The West was preparing for the invasion of Russia. NATO was creating tensions at the borders. They did not want to listen to Russia. They had other plans," Putin said in his Victory Day speech. "You are fighting for the motherland, for its future, so that no one forgets the lessons of World War II, so that there is no place in the world for executioners, punishers, and Nazis."


Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate says that Poroshenko and the Orthodox Church of Ukraine were the reason for Russia's invasion



DENYS KARLOVSKYI - THURSDAY, 12 MAY 2022, 

The Synod of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate (UOC-MP) has stated that one of the reasons for Russia's invasion in 2022 was the activity of former President Petro Poroshenko to obtain the Tomos [a decree issued by the Patriarch of Constantinople granting autocephaly] and establish a single local church for Ukrainians.

Source: Official statement of the Synod of the UOC-MP

Quote: "Instead of uniting the people in the pursuit of victory and the restoration of peaceful life, an internal religious front is being inflamed in this country. A group of people's deputies of Ukraine, on the basis of made-up and knowingly false accusations, have put forward draft laws banning the activities of our church to the Verkhovna Rada (Parliament) of Ukraine.

We note with sadness that all these facts are the result of the misguided religious policy pursued during the presidency of Petro Poroshenko and the destructive ideology of the so-called Orthodox Church of Ukraine. We are convinced that these actions of the previous government and the Orthodox Church of Ukraine were one of the reasons for the military invasion of Ukraine."

Details: The church leadership stressed that all parishes are praying for the preservation of Ukrainian statehood and for peace, but as a result of negotiations, not armed confrontation. Separately, they emphasised that the Russian invasion of Ukraine is "sinful".

In its statement, the synod noted that a ban on the activities of the UOC-MP would be "national suicide", because, they said, millions of Ukrainians who are defending Ukraine belong to this church.

The head of the UOC-MP plans to convene a meeting in the near future with priests, monks, nuns and lay people to decide the future of the church in this environment. However, the synod wants to avoid schisms and violations of church canons.

It is not clear at this time how church leaders plan to organise mass meetings when there is a war going on.

Read more: UOC-MP priest Andriy Pinchuk: The "Russian World" theory is a heresy that should be condemned by an international tribunal

Background:


On 4 May, the mayor of Konotop banned UOC-MP parishes from operating in the city due to the threat to national security. On 6 May, a similar decision was made by the mayor of Brovary.

In March, the Orthodox Church of Ukraine called on all Orthodox Ukrainians, including priests, to unite in the single national church established by the Tomos signed by the Ecumenical Patriarch [Bartholomew I of Constantinople].

On 9 May, Metropolitan Onufriy, Head of the UOC-MP, appealed to Russian President Vladimir Putin to let Ukrainian defenders leave [Mariupol] by safe routes. Moscow's Patriarch Kirill, who holds a higher position than Onufriy, insists that Russia "has never attacked anyone at any time in history".

In early April, nearly 200 priests from UOC-MP parishes demanded that Moscow Patriarch Kirill, who blesses the mass murder and torture of Ukrainians, be brought before an ecclesiastical tribunal.



In 2019, Ukraine received the Tomos from Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew that established a new single national local church - the Orthodox Church of Ukraine. Fifth President Petro Poroshenko and his team, who regularly visited Istanbul to coordinate matters, played an important role in this process. Poroshenko made use of the Tomos as a theme in his tours and speeches during the presidential race in the spring of 2019.
I saw Russians as victims of ignoble leaders. Then came the rage of their war in Ukraine.

Ross K. Baker
Sat, May 14, 2022
My dad was what was referred to in those days as a "fellow traveler." He wasn’t a card-carrying member of the Communist Party, but he followed the party line. I remember accompanying him as he delivered copies of the Daily Worker to comrades in the neighborhood. And one of the decorative touches in our house was a portrait of Joseph Stalin that hung on a bedroom wall until the period in the 1950s when Wisconsin Sen. Joseph McCarthy's well-publicized hunt for communists in various corners of American life convinced my dad that the better part of valor was to take it down.

My dad's affection was less for Stalin than it was for the people of the Soviet Union and the terrible price they paid to defeat the armies of Adolf Hitler. He revered the Russians as a heroic people, and part of that rubbed off on me even when I became old enough to understand that a noble people could be led by ignoble men and, worse, that they had the power to obliterate my country – so I accepted the reality of the Cold War while reserving a hidden corner of my heart for the brave people of Russia.
Russians deserved my sympathy

While I found the leaders of the USSR colorless and uninteresting men with the exception of Nikita Khrushchev, they never seemed especially sinister or threatening: just a bunch of stony-faced functionaries in mohair topcoats and fedoras standing on a reviewing platform in Red Square saluting columns of men and missiles.

Ukrainians' courage: Now the world must act to honor their bravery


A man holds a poster with half portraits of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and Russian President Vladimir Putin, during a protest in front of the Russian Embassy in Berlin, Germany, in 2014.

It was only when the works of Alexander Solzhenitsyn became available and the dreadful word "gulag" entered our vocabulary that I began to think of Russians more as victims than as heroes and Russia as a place that harbored terrible secrets. Nearly a million Russian citizens were executed at Stalin's behest. Many more were severely mistreated. And his campaign triggered a famine in which millions of Ukrainians starved.



Russian Communist Party supporters hold portraits of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin as they gather in Moscow in 2018.

But if their leaders were ignoble, the Russian people were long-suffering and deserving of my sympathy, not my scorn.

New face, same Russian misrule

My compassion for the Russians deepened when I visited Russia after the collapse of the Soviet Union and witnessed a once-proud people reduced to begging, and I cringed seeing soldiers and sailors of a once-mighty military selling their caps, blouses and belts in Red Square and taking bribes from foreign tourists to allow them to enter Vladimir Lenin’s tomb after visiting hours.

When Vladimir Putin came along, I thought the Russian people had finally caught a break. The fact that he was a former KGB officer I didn't find especially alarming because Russia was always honeycombed with spies and informers. Putin, moreover, was a colorless man who didn’t seem especially sinister and a great deal less embarrassing than the drunkard Boris Yeltsin who preceded him.

But when the poisonings of dissidents with polonium and Novichok began and became weapons to punish dissidents, and journalists were shot down near Red Square, Putin came to look less like a savior and more like just one more sinister figure in a long history of Russian misrule.
Unspeakable cruelty unleashed

Any residual respect I had for the Russian people withered this year when I began to see images and hear Ukrainian testimonies of the people of Irpin and Bucha under attack and occupation by the Russian army.

Whether acting under orders or as renegades, ordinary Russian soldiers unleashed a campaign of unspeakable cruelty on the innocent civilians of a country much like their own, mouthing absurd slogans in defense of their barbarism that they were hunting down Nazis. This reign of terror seemed spontaneous and not coerced by commanders.

This is when it became impossible for me to reconcile my youthful admiration for the Russian people, as Russian fighters inflicted atrocities on defenseless men, women and children. The Russians had become transformed from heroic and long-suffering victims into the very fascists their ancestors had fought against so valiantly eight decades ago.

What little affection I have for Russians is reserved for those who opposed Putin’s unjust war and fled the country. But what troubles me most deeply is that there is something in the national character of Russia that produces in large numbers of their young men a malicious impulse that leads them to inflict widespread brutality on people who never harmed them.


Ross K. Baker

I understand the rage that can come from a desire for vengeance, but this is not at issue in the dreadful carnage that they have inflicted on the blameless people of Irpin and Bucha and dozens of other towns and villages in Ukraine.

No historic injustice or humiliation inflicted on the Russian people can justify the pain and suffering their fighters are inflicting now on the innocent people of Ukraine.

Ross K. Baker is a distinguished professor of political science at Rutgers University and a member of USA TODAY's Board of Contributors. Follow him on Twitter: @Rosbake1

You can read diverse opinions from our Board of Contributors and other writers on the Opinion front page, on Twitter @usatodayopinion and in our daily Opinion newsletter. To respond to a column, submit a comment to letters@usatoday.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Russian barbaric rage of war in Ukraine changed my view of Russians
Menaced by flames, nuclear lab peers into future of wildfire
  


 

 


sSassan Darian holds his cat Cyrus as he stands in front of his family's fire-damaged home in the aftermath of the Coastal Fire Thursday, May 12, 2022, in Laguna Niguel, Calif.
(AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)More

MORGAN LEE
Fri, May 13, 2022, 

LOS ALAMOS N.M. (AP) — Public schools were closed and evacuation bags packed this week as a stubborn wildfire crept within a few miles of the city of Los Alamos and its companion U.S. national security lab — where assessing apocalyptic threats is a specialty and wildland fire is a beguiling equation.

Lighter winds on Friday allowed for the most intense aerial attack this week on those flames west of Santa Fe as well as the biggest U.S. wildfire burning farther east, south of Taos.

“We had all kinds of aviation flying today,” fire operations chief Todd Abel said at a Santa Fe National Forest briefing Friday evening. “We haven’t had that opportunity in a long time.”

In Southern California, where a fire has destroyed at least 20 homes south of Los Angeles in the coastal community of Laguna Niguel, Orange County emergency officials scaled back the mandatory evacuation area Friday from 900 residences to 131.

People who remained on alert to prepare for evacuations west of Santa Fe included scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory who are tapping supercomputers to peer into the future of wildfires in the U.S. West, where climate change and an enduring drought are fanning the frequency and intensity of forest and grassland fire.

The research and partnerships eventually could yield reliable predictions that shape the way vast tracks of national forests are thinned — or selectively burned — to ward off disastrously hot conflagrations that can quickly overrun cities, sterilize soil and forever alter ecosystems.

“This actually is something that we’re really trying to leverage to look for ways to deal with fire in the future,” said Rod Linn, a senior lab scientist who leads efforts to create a supercomputing tool that predicts the outcome of fires in specific terrain and conditions.

The high stakes in the research are on prominent display during the furious start of spring wildfire season, which includes a blaze that has inched steadily toward Los Alamos National Laboratory, triggering preparations for a potential evacuation.

The lab emerged out of the World War II efforts to design nuclear weapons in Los Alamos under the Manhattan Project. It now conducts a range of national security work and research in diverse fields of renewable energy, nuclear fusion, space exploration, supercomputing and efforts to limit global threats from disease to cyberattacks. The lab is one of two U.S. sites gearing up to manufacture plutonium cores for use in nuclear weapons.

With nearly 1,000 firefighters battling the blaze, laboratory officials say critical infrastructure is well safeguarded from the fire, which spans 67 square miles (175 square kilometers)

 


Still, scientists are ready.

“We have our bags packed, cars loaded, kids are home from school — it’s kind of a crazy day,” said Adam Atchley, a father of two and laboratory hydrologist who studies wildfire ecology.

Wildfires that reach the Los Alamos National Laboratory increase the risk, however slightly, of disbursing chemical waste and radionuclides such as plutonium through the air or in the ashes carried away by runoff after a fire.

Mike McNaughton, an environmental health physicist at Los Alamos, acknowledges that chemical and radiological waste was blatantly mishandled in the early years of the laboratory.

“People had a war to win, and they were not careful,” McNaughton said. “Emissions now are very, very small compared with the historical emissions.”

Dave Fuehne, the laboratory’s team leader for air emissions measurement, says a network of about 25 air monitors encircle the facility to ensure no dangerous pollution escapes the lab unnoticed. Additional high-volume monitors were deployed as fire broke out in April.

Trees and underbrush on the campus are removed manually — 3,500 tons (3,175 metric tons) over the course of the last four years, said Jim Jones, manager of the lab’s Wildland Fire Mitigation Project.

“We don’t do any burning,” Jones said. “It’s not worth the risk.”

Jay Coghlan, director of the environmental group Nuclear Watch New Mexico, wants a more thorough evaluation of the lab's current fire risks and questions whether plutonium pit production is appropriate.

This year's spring blazes also have destroyed mansions on a California hilltop and chewed through more than 422 square miles (1,100 square kilometers) of tinder-dry northeastern New Mexico. In Colorado, authorities said Friday one person died in a fire that destroyed eight mobile homes in Colorado Springs.

The sprawling fire in New Mexico's Sangre de Cristo Mountain range is the largest burning in the U.S., with at least 262 homes destroyed and thousands of residents displaced.

Nearly 2,000 fire personnel are now assigned to that fire with a 501-mile (806-kilometer) perimeter — a distance that would stretch from San Diego to San Francisco.

Atchley says extreme weather conditions are changing the trajectory of many fires.


“A wildfire in the ’70s, ‘80s, '90s and even the 2000s is probably going to behave differently than a wildfire in 2020,” he said.

Atchley says he’s contributing to research aimed at better understanding and preventing the most destructive wildfires, superheated blazes that leap through the upper crowns of mature pine trees. He says climate change is an unmistakable factor.

“It’s increasing the wildfire burn window. … The wildfire season is year-round,” Atchley said. “And this is happening not only in the United States, but in Australia and Indonesia and around the world.”

He’s not alone in suggesting that the answer may be more frequent fires of lower intensity that are set deliberately to mimic a cycle of burning and regeneration that may have take place every two to six years in New Mexico before the arrival of Europeans.

“What we’re trying to do at Los Alamos is figure out how do you implement prescribed fire safely ... given that it’s exceedingly hard with climate change,” he said.

Examples of intentional prescribed burns that escaped control include the 2000 Cerro Grande Fire that swept through residential areas of Los Alamos and across 12 square miles of the laboratory — more than one-quarter of the campus. The fire destroying more than 230 homes and 45 structures at the lab. In 2011, a larger and faster-moving fire burned fringes of the lab.

Atchley said the West's forests can be thought of and measured as one giant reserve that stores carbon and can help hold climate change in check — if extreme fires can be limited.

 

 

  

Land managers say expansive U.S. national forests can't be thinned by hand and machine alone.

Linn, the physicist, says wildfire modeling software is being shared with land managers at the U.S. Forest Service, as well as the Geological Service and Fish and Wildlife Service, for preliminary testing to see if can make prescribed fires easier to predict and control.

“We don’t advocate anybody using any of these models blindly,” he said. “We're in that essential phase of building those relationships with land managers and helping them to begin to make it their model as well.”
The dangerous business of dismantling America's aging nuclear plants
 


Douglas MacMillan
WASHINGTON POST
Fri, May 13, 2022

LONG READ


FORKED RIVER, N.J. - The new owner took over the Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station in 2019, promising to dismantle one of the nation's oldest nuclear plants at minimal cost and in record time. Then came a series of worrisome accidents.

One worker was struck by a 100-ton metal reactor dome. Another was splashed with radioactive water, according to internal incident reports and regulatory inspection reports reviewed by The Washington Post. Another worker drove an excavator into an electrical wire on his first day on the job, knocking out power to 31,000 homes and businesses on the New Jersey coast, according to a police report and the local power company.

All three incidents occurred on the watch of Holtec International, a nuclear equipment manufacturer based in Jupiter, Fla. Though the company until recently had little experience shutting down nuclear plants, Holtec has emerged as a leader in nuclear cleanup, a burgeoning field riding an expected wave of closures as licenses expire for the nation's aging nuclear fleet.

Over the past three years, Holtec has purchased three plants in three states and expects to finalize a fourth this summer. The company is seeking to profitably dismantle them by replacing hundreds of veteran plant workers with smaller, less-costly crews of contractors and eliminating emergency planning measures, documents and interviews show. While no one has been seriously injured at Oyster Creek, the missteps are spurring calls for stronger government oversight of the entire cleanup industry.

In the nearly three years Holtec has owned Oyster Creek, regulators have documented at least nine violations of federal rules, including the contaminated water mishap, falsified weapons inspection reports and other unspecified security lapses. That's at least as many as were found over the preceding 10 years at the plant, when it was owned by Exelon, one of the nation's largest utility companies, according to The Post's review of regulatory records.

Joseph Delmar, a spokesman for Holtec, defended the company's record, saying it takes safety and security seriously. The recent incidents "are not reflective of the organization's culture," he said, adding that the worker who knocked down the power line "did not follow the proper safety protocols." Delmar said the company has decades of experience building equipment to store nuclear waste and employs veteran plant workers to dismantle reactor sites.

"While the decommissioning organization may seem new, the professionals staffing the company are experienced nuclear professionals with intimate knowledge of the plants they work at," Delmar said in an emailed statement.

Holtec is, however, pioneering an experimental new business model. During the lifetime of America's 133 nuclear reactors, ratepayers paid small fees on their monthly energy bills to fill decommissioning trust funds, intended to cover the eventual cost of deconstructing the plants. Trust funds for the country's 94 operating and 14 nonoperating nuclear reactors now total about $86 billion, according to Callan, a San Francisco-based investment consulting firm.

After a reactor is dismantled and its site cleared, some of these trust funds must return any money left over to ratepayers. But others permit cleanup companies to keep any surplus as profit - creating incentives to cut costs at sites that house some of the most dangerous materials on the planet.



Even after reactors are shut down, long metal rods containing radioactive pellets - known as spent fuel - are stored steps away, in cooling pools and steel-and-concrete casks. Nuclear safety experts say that an industrial accident or a terrorist attack at any of these sites could result in a radiological release with severe impacts to workers and nearby residents, as well as to the environment.

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the independent federal agency tasked with overseeing safety at nuclear sites, conducts regular inspections during the decommissioning process. But state and local officials say the NRC has failed to safeguard the public from risks at shut-down plants, deferring too readily to companies like Holtec.

"The NRC is not doing their job," said Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass., who has pushed the agency to adopt stricter regulations around plant decommissioning. "We need a guaranteed system that prioritizes communities and safety, and we don't have that right now."

The NRC's leadership is divided over the role regulators should play. The agency was created in 1974, as the first generation of commercial reactors was going online, and its rules were mainly designed to safeguard the operation of active plants and nuclear-material sites. As reactors shut down, the NRC began reducing inspections and exempting plants from safety and security rules.

Last November, the NRC approved a new rule that would automatically qualify shut-down plants for looser safety and security restrictions. Christopher Hanson, a Democrat nominated by President Donald Trump and promoted to the role of chairman by President Joe Biden, has said the changes would improve the "effectiveness and efficiency" of the decommissioning process.

Commissioner Jeff Baran, also a Democrat, voted against the proposed rule and called for the NRC and local governments to play a bigger role. "Radiological risks remain at shutdown nuclear plants that must be taken seriously," he cautioned in public comments. Baran added that the agency already takes a "laissez-faire" approach to decommissioning and that the new rule "would make the situation even worse, further skewing the regulation towards the interests of industry."

Dan Dorman, the NRC's executive director for operations, said in an email that the agency lifts restrictions at plants only if it determines the plant will continue to be safe. In addition to citing Holtec for violations at Oyster Creek, the agency has required the company to take corrective measures, including external security assessments of all its nuclear sites.

"Our increased oversight and the recent enforcement actions demonstrate our concern about the situation at Oyster Creek," Dorman said.



Holtec faces mounting criticism beyond Oyster Creek. Michigan officials have said they worry Holtec will leave residents on the hook for cleanup costs at the Palisades plant on the shores of Lake Michigan. Massachusetts officials have protested Holtec's plan to take 1 million gallons of contaminated water from the defunct Pilgrim power plant and dump it into Cape Cod Bay.

While Holtec acknowledges a funding shortfall at Palisades, Delmar says the fund will appreciate in value to cover the cost of the cleanup. At Pilgrim, Holtec has said the potential radiation dose from the Cape Cod release would be far less than the average traveler receives on a typical cross-country flight.

In the Southwest, Holtec has ignited a different controversy. As the company acquires old plants, it is proposing to ship the highly radioactive spent fuel to New Mexico, where it plans to build a storage facility. Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, D, has vowed to fight the plan, telling Trump in a 2020 letter that storing radioactive material in the oil-rich Permian Basin region would be "economic malpractice."

Holtec says it is working in partnership with a group of local officials who believe the benefits of the facility - including new jobs and investment - outweigh the risks. On its website, Holtec says the facility will provide "a safe, secure, temporary, retrievable, and centralized facility for storage of used nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste until such time that a permanent solution is available."

The growing debate marks the latest twist in the tortured saga of nuclear power, which once was hailed as a miracle technology capable of producing large quantities of clean, affordable energy. In the early 1970s, the federal Atomic Energy Commission estimated that about 1,000 reactors would be built in the United States, and that nuclear sources eventually would provide at least half of the world's power.

But those ambitions soon collided with fears about nuclear radiation, especially after disastrous meltdowns at Chernobyl in Ukraine and Fukushima in Japan. Nuclear energy peaked at around 18% of global electricity production in the 1990s and now comprises about 10%, according to the U.S. Energy Information Association.

Reactors in the United States initially were licensed for 40 years, and most were renewed for another 20 years. Of 94 reactors that are still active, licenses at over half are set to expire in the next two decades, according to Julia Moriarty, a senior vice president at Callan.

Recently, worries about climate change have led some governments to embrace nuclear as a low-carbon source of power. Biden has called nuclear essential to the nation's climate goals, and Washington last year set aside $6 billion for extending the licenses of some plants and $2.5 billion for developing new nuclear technologies.

But the nation continues to puzzle over the problem of nuclear waste. This material, which emanates invisible but harmful radiation for hundreds of years, is stored in protective containers on the grounds of nuclear plants, scattered in dozens of towns across the country. A plan to build a national waste repository in Nevada's Yucca Mountain stalled amid decades of political gridlock, leaving these towns saddled indefinitely with the threat of an accidental release or terrorist attack.

Holtec is approaching those communities with an offer to clean up the mess.



Founded and wholly owned by Kris Singh, an inventor and entrepreneur, Holtec says it is pioneering a new model of "accelerated decommissioning." At the 24 U.S. reactors currently undergoing decommissioning, over half are expected to take two decades or more to complete the process, NRC data shows; Holtec pledges to return nuclear sites to safe, clean usable land in as few as eight years.

Singh did not respond to requests for comment, and Holtec did not make him available for an interview.

The company's work at Oyster Creek, its first plant, was meant to be a blueprint for the national expansion, Holtec executives said in interviews with The Post in early 2020. Instead, safety advocates argue, it has served as a warning. Cost-cutting has left employees feeling overworked and prone to mistakes, according to two former plant workers who were both laid off by Holtec. They spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss their former employer.

The company has said in regulatory filings it plans to keep about $85 million in profit from Oyster Creek's $826 million trust fund. It has already spent about one quarter of the fund.

Shortly after Holtec took over, regulators found problems with the plant's weapons program. All nuclear plants must maintain weapons, such as guns and ammunition used by security personnel, and test them on a regular basis to secure the sites from attacks. According to an NRC investigation, a Holtec manager skipped the annual tests and falsified the weapons inspection reports to give the appearance the tests were conducted. The manager said in a letter to the NRC that he made mistakes on the company's inspections report because he had been "overwhelmed" following staff cuts, though he denied that anything was intentionally falsified.

"I went from a staff of six to a staff of two, all having extra responsibilities, doubling our workload and learning new criteria of the positions," the manager said in the letter, which was posted on the NRC's website.

In a settlement with the NRC announced this year, Holtec agreed to pay a $50,000 civil penalty, hire a new corporate security director and conduct external security assessments.

Delmar, the Holtec spokesman, said the "roots" of some safety incidents "go back to when the plant was operating and under previous ownership," but declined to elaborate. The weapons manager, who was fired by Holtec last year, declined to comment.

Another incident took place in January 2020 on the reactor refueling floor - a cavernous space high up inside the building that houses the reactor, along with the gargantuan steel-and-concrete structures that protect its core. To remove these structures from the site, workers must cut them into smaller pieces.

As they were slicing the 100-ton reactor dome, the structure ​​unexpectedly swung and struck one employee, according to an internal incident report reviewed by The Post. This person was nearly knocked down a 10-story equipment hatch, according to the two former employees, who didn't witness the incident but were briefed on it afterward.

The manager overseeing the work had been responsible for three different teams that day and his "mind may have been elsewhere," according to the report, which blamed the accident on "complacency." The report described the incident as a "near miss" but did not mention the equipment hatch or the possibility of a fall.

Delmar said the accident occurred at least 100 feet from the equipment hatch, which he said had a guardrail around it. "Incidents like this are not normal, and unsafe work practices are unacceptable for any Holtec employee or contractor at our facilities," he said.

The NRC evaluated the incident, but because it did not find any violations of nuclear safety, referred the matter to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Dorman said. Holtec said the company has heard nothing from OSHA, and no record of the incident could be found on OSHA's online database. OSHA declined to comment and a request by The Post for such records is pending.

In February 2021, a faulty valve for a nuclear waste container unexpectedly flew into the air, leaking contaminated water on one worker, who took an internal dose of radiation, according to a federal inspection report. This probably means the worker ingested radioactive water through the eyes, nose, mouth or skin, nuclear safety experts said. The worker did not require medical attention because the dose was below the limits for people who work with radiation, Holtec said.

The incident could have been avoided if managers had fixed a problem with the snap rings that held the valve in place, regulators said in the inspection report. Holtec had "replaced the snap rings on prior occasions due to evidence of bending of the ring" but never recorded the action in its system so it would be fixed permanently, the NRC said. The regulators called this a very low-severity violation, because it was not willful or repeated.

Holtec has since modified the valve design and conducted new training, Delmar said.


Decommissioning is an unproven business with uncertain profits. The total saved in the nation's decommissioning trust funds is currently smaller than the estimated cost of shutting them all down, according to Callan's Moriarty.

"The gamble under all of this is you can do the cleanup for less than the amount of money that's in the fund. Nobody has proved that yet," said Gregory Jaczko, an appointee of President Barack Obama who headed the NRC from 2009 to 2012.

Some of the firms buying defunct nuclear power plants in the United States are backed by private equity, an industry with expertise in purchasing unwanted assets and improving their value, often by reducing costs. TriArtisan Capital Advisors, the investment firm that partly owns P.F. Chang's and TGI Fridays, now owns the company decommissioning Pennsylvania's Three Mile Island, site of the biggest nuclear meltdown in U.S. history.

Singh founded Holtec in the 1980s, when he saw that nuclear plants were running out of space to safely store radioactive fuel, according to Joy Russell, a senior vice president at Holtec and one of the company's longest-tenured employees. A mechanical engineer who specialized in heat transfer, Singh became a pioneer of the nuclear industry by devising new systems for safely storing spent fuel rods, including metal racks that go inside cooling pools and steel-and-concrete cylinders that can store fuel for decades, Russell said in a 2020 interview.

In 2017, Holtec opened the doors of a stately new manufacturing center in Camden, N.J., that showcases Singh's accomplishments. Employees arriving at the main office building on the Krishna P. Singh Technology Campus walk by a parking space reserved for the CEO's chauffeured Rolls-Royce and into an atrium where more than 100 patents bearing Singh's name are on display.

But the Camden campus also brought controversy. After opening the facility, Singh complained to an area paper that Camden residents "don't show up to work" and "some of them get into drugs," angering community leaders in the mostly Black and Hispanic city. Singh later apologized and said his comments were taken out of context.

The NRC has given Holtec permission to pare back safety and security requirements at its plants, including security personnel, cybersecurity, emergency planning, terrorist attack drills and accident insurance, according to documents on the agency's website. In approving these requests, the NRC has accepted Holtec's rationale that such measures are less crucial for retired plants, which experts agree do not carry the same radiological risk.

Some nuclear safety advocates say the NRC is being too deferential to Holtec and other companies. Years of research by the NRC itself shows plants are still vulnerable to a disaster after they shut down. In staff reports, the NRC has said severe accidents can result from mishandling spent fuel rods and that sites storing nuclear waste remain vulnerable to sabotage.


When Holtec announced its deal to acquire Oyster Creek, some local residents were uneasy about the plant becoming a test case for Holtec's corporate expansion, said Janet Tauro, an environmental activist who lives 20 minutes north of the plant.

"When you are dealing with highly radioactive nuclear fuel and taking apart a nuclear power plant, you have to be infallible - there is no room for mistakes," said Tauro, the New Jersey board chair of the nonprofit group Clean Water Action.

For 50 years, the plant's towering gray chimney had been one of the area's most distinctive physical landmarks. Its single reactor generated enough electricity to power 600,000 homes - roughly two New Jersey counties.

With the NRC's blessing, Holtec shrank the plant's emergency response staff, documents show. The plant lowered its on-site insurance from $50 million to $10 million and stopped providing funds to the surrounding community for emergency equipment, staff and training, because, the company said, hazards at the site had been reduced.

While rare, major accidents have occurred at nuclear waste sites with no operational reactor. In 2014, an explosion inside New Mexico's underground repository for "low level" radioactive waste items, such as contaminated clothing and tools, led to 21 workers testing positive for internal contamination and some reporting respiratory problems, according to an investigation by the Energy Department. The entire site had to close for a three-year, $2 billion cleanup.

The NRC's Dorman said the agency still requires emergency planning measures on the premises of a shut-down nuclear plant, which he said provides ample resources to respond to accidents. However, the Federal Emergency Management Agency warned the NRC last year that having no dedicated personnel or equipment in neighboring communities "could have unfortunate consequences."

Holtec's Delmar said its exemptions at Oyster Creek "are consistent with other decommissioning sites" and "reflect the reduction in risk at each of the key points in the decommissioning process."

Last summer, Holtec finished moving all of Oyster Creek's spent fuel rods from cooling pools into dry storage containers in just 32 months - a "world record," the company said in a news release. The process normally takes five years or more, but Holtec sped it up by building a fuel canister the company says can accommodate nuclear waste at hotter temperatures. After reviewing the company's calculations, the NRC concluded it was safe to reduce the mandatory minimum cooling time to one year, filings show.

In an empty cow pasture in the New Mexico desert, Holtec is attempting to write the next chapter of the American nuclear story. The company is in the final stages of getting NRC approval for an "interim" waste storage site designed to secure spent fuel from around the country in a shopping-mall-size bunker for up to 40 years.

In meetings with New Mexicans, Holtec representatives have said the facility would create jobs and fulfill an important national need. New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas, D, has sued the NRC, claiming the regulator "colluded with Holtec" by rubber-stamping its plans and ignoring potential environmental harms.

The NRC's Dorman says the agency's review of the Holtec site has been rigorous. The agency recently approved a separate, privately owned storage facility in Texas, a project that now faces legal challenges by that state. Holtec declined to comment.

"The NRC has not figured out a permanent solution" to nuclear waste, Balderas said in an interview. "They are using Holtec as a Band-Aid."

- - -

The Washington Post's Alice Crites contributed to this report.




UPDATE 2-California regulator rejects desalination plant despite historic drought

Daniel Trotta
Thu, May 12, 2022

By Daniel Trotta

COSTA MESA, Calif., May 12 (Reuters) - California regulators on Thursday rejected a $1.4 billion desalination plant on environmental grounds, dealing a setback to Governor Gavin Newsom, who had supported the project as a partial solution for the state's sustained drought.

The California Coastal Commission voted 11-0 to reject the proposal by Poseidon Water, controlled by the infrastructure arm of Canada's Brookfield Asset Management, to build the plant on a low-lying coastal site at Huntington Beach, near the town of Costa Mesa, about 30 miles (50 km) south of Los Angeles.

The plant was designed to convert Pacific Ocean water into 50 million gallons (189.3 million liters) of drinking water a day.

That is enough for 400,000 people, but the plant would use a process that staff experts at the commission said would devastate marine life and expose the plant to future risk of sea level rise while producing expensive water too costly for low-income consumers.

Environmentalists who have opposed the project for years burst into celebration after the vote in a Costa Mesa hotel conference room.

Representatives of Poseidon issued a statement expressing disappointment but made no comment on whether they would attempt to revive a project in which they have invested more than 20 years and $100 million.

Any new proposal for the site would face difficult odds or have to undergo significant redesign, so thorough was the staff report in detailing its flaws.

"It was a defining day for the for the Coastal Commission," said Susan Jordan, a plant opponent and director of the California Coastal Protection Network. "When you have a project like this that is so damaging over the next half century, you really can't allow that to move forward."

The commission's staff experts said the facility would destroy marine life in about 100 billion gallons of seawater per year, and the company's ability to mitigate that damage with wildlife habitat restoration fell far short of state requirements.

"California continues to face a punishing drought, with no end in sight," Poseidon said in a statement after the vote. "We firmly believe that this desalination project would have created a sustainable, drought-tolerant source of water."

Environmentalists have long said desalination harms ocean life, costs too much money and energy, and the plant would soon be made obsolete by water recycling.

Though the vote was unanimous, with one member abstaining, commissioners said they would be willing to support other desalination projects.

"We have a dire need for more water, but we have to do it the right way," said commissioner Effie Turnbull-Sanders, one of Newsom's four political appointees on the commission.

Days after the staff recommendation for denial was published last month, Newsom spoke publicly in favor of the project, telling the editorial board of the Bay Area News Group: "We need more tools in the damn tool kit" to produce water for a thirsty state.

Newsom, a Democrat who is up for re-election this year with the drought on many Californians' minds, disappointed environmental supporters by backing the project.

Commission Chair Donne Brownsey, also a Newsom appointee, said she did not expect to governor to dismiss the commissioners who defied him.

"He's going to be disappointed. But I'm hoping he saw that we wanted to open the door to a path to success in the future for desalination," Brownsey said.

The commission has approved 11 other desalination plants, including another one that Poseidon has operated down the coast in Carlsbad since 2015.

The Carlsbad desalination plant, the largest in the United States, turns ocean water to drinking water in 90 minutes, but it was built on more elevated geography and approved before statewide desalination regulations came into effect. (Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Chris Reese, Robert Birsel)