Thu
Dec 20 2007
02:11 pm
By: R. Neal
Check out Rikki Hall's excellent front-page feature story in this week's Metro Pulse.
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Topics:
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Discussing:
- Are Chat bots a waste of time? (1 reply)
- Smith & Wesson noise problem (1 reply)
- Musicians dropping out of President's Freedom Concert Series (1 reply)
- It's time for new blood in Congress, Barnett in - Burchett out (1 reply)
- Burning Down The House... (2 replies)
- Behind Lege Lies (1 reply)
- Peace (1 reply)
- Speak your truth, fight and believe. (1 reply)
- Large banks have too much AI data center debt? (1 reply)
- GOP misleading on federal health care funding (1 reply)
- Feds indict civil rights group (3 replies)
- Georgia issues burn ban, first time in state history (2 replies)
TN Progressive
- Smith & Wesson not a good fit for Blount County (BlountViews)
- Pellissippi Parkway extension delayed again (BlountViews)
- Blount County early voting record turnout (BlountViews)
- Louisville, TN, town center coming soon? (BlountViews)
- WATCH THIS SPACE. (Left Wing Cracker)
- America As It Is Right Now (RoaneViews)
- A friend sent this: From Captain McElwee's Tall Tales of Roane County (RoaneViews)
- The Meidas Touch (RoaneViews)
- Massive Security Breach Analysis (RoaneViews)
- (Whitescreek Journal)
- My choices in the August election (Left Wing Cracker)
- July 4, 2024 - aka The Twilight Zone (Joe Powell)
TN Politics
- Local election officials reel over ‘logistical nightmare’ of Trump’s vote-by-mail order (TN Lookout)
- Shelby County Clerk Tami Sawyer indicted by U.S. DOJ for using $44k in public funds for personal use (TN Lookout)
- After One Big Beautiful Bill Act, 100,000 Tennesseans’ lose SNAP food aid (TN Lookout)
- Trousdale Turner guards to wear body cameras at privately-run prison (TN Lookout)
- Kennedy Center facade blocked from public view by tarp after Trump’s name removed (TN Lookout)
- Will Tennessee Republicans’ next move be to purge Democrats entirely? (TN Lookout)
Knox TN Today
- War time drive at Knoxville High School (Knox TN Today)
- TDOT outperforms on Alcoa Highway; Snowden new director (Knox TN Today)
- Abby Ham reflects on journalism career and new journey (Knox TN Today)
- Wallace Real Estate expands with Bristol-based historic property specialist (Knox TN Today)
- Smoke alarms: What every household should know (Knox TN Today)
- Above & Beyond: Libraries let readers “Check Out” a person instead of a book (Knox TN Today)
- 6/16 HEADLINES: News and events from Knox, World, USA, Tennessee & Historic Notes (Knox TN Today)
- MC Computer Programming Team earns success in competition (Knox TN Today)
- How an automatic savings plan can help you reach financial goals (Knox TN Today)
- The necktie started with French nobility (Knox TN Today)
- Famous DGG is out there, DeSean Bishop is here (Knox TN Today)
- Thomas Cole: New KFD Asst. Chief, 134th Wing’s Chief Master Sergeant (Knox TN Today)
Local TV News
- Knoxville pro golfer tees up for sixth straight Women's PGA Championship (WATE)
- University of Tennessee professor fired over Charlie Kirk comments amends lawsuit (WATE)
- 'Great relief' Cocke County receives $1 million reimbursement from FEMA as Helene recovery continues (WATE)
- Quantum computer at Oak Ridge National Lab opening new doors in research (WATE)
- Weeklong ICE operation in East Tennessee nets 117 arrests (WATE)
- I-75 North reopened in Loudon County after crash involving pedestrian, semi-truck (WATE)
News Sentinel
State News
- Amazon to create 300 new jobs with new Chattanooga delivery station - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Lawyer Meredith Mochel launches campaign for Red Bank city judge - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Teen charged in connection with disappearance of Collegedale man - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Vols’ new strength coach may play key role in Baylor star DGG’s decision - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
Wire Reports
- Dangerous flash flooding continues as Louisiana braces for what could be Tropical Storm Arthur - WDSU (US News)
- Shooting reported inside Wilmington Hospital in Delaware | Chopper 6 LIVE - 6abc Philadelphia (US News)
- DOJ charges 15 people it says impeded agents during Minnesota immigration crackdown - NBC News (US News)
- FBI thwarted attack targeting UFC event at White House, director says - The Washington Post (US News)
- EV-maker Rivian cuts hundreds of jobs after launching new SUV - Fox Business (Business)
- Dow climbs above 52,000 for first time as oil prices fall, but tech sell-off knocks down S&P 500: Live updates - CNBC (Business)
- SpaceX valuation balloons to $2.6T, briefly passes Amazon - TechCrunch (Business)
- One-year-old killed and another person injured after Mississippi police shot at car - The Guardian (US News)
- B-52 on test flight plunged at nearly a mile a minute before crashing, killing 8 - AP News (US News)
- SpaceX options debut pulls record demand as investors chase rocket stock - Reuters (Business)
- Federal Judge Blocks Idaho Law Criminalizing Transgender Bathroom Use - The New York Times (US News)
- Struggling Pizza Hut chain to be sold for $2.7bn - BBC (Business)
- The White House’s capricious controls on Anthropic - Financial Times (Business)
- Exclusive | GM in Talks to Supply Weapons Parts to Lockheed Martin - WSJ (Business)
- Israel went to war with Iran, but Netanyahu may be the loser - Al Jazeera (US News)
Local Media
Lost Medicaid Funding
To date, the failure to expand Medicaid/TennCare has cost the State of Tennessee ? in lost federal funding. (Source)
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coal ash
I thought this is relevant to the conversation of nuclear power and the report comes from Oak Ridge.
(link...)
Here's an excerpt:
By burning away all the pesky carbon and other impurities, coal power plants produce heaps of radiation
By Mara Hvistendahl
The popular conception of nuclear power is straight out of The Simpsons: Springfield abounds with signs of radioactivity, from the strange glow surrounding Mr. Burn's nuclear power plant workers to Homer's low sperm count. Then there's the local superhero, Radioactive Man, who fires beams of "nuclear heat" from his eyes. Nuclear power, many people think, is inseparable from a volatile, invariably lime-green, mutant-making radioactivity.
Coal, meanwhile, is believed responsible for a host of more quotidian problems, such as mining accidents, acid rain and greenhouse gas emissions. But it isn't supposed to spawn three-eyed fish like Blinky.
Over the past few decades, however, a series of studies has called these stereotypes into question. Among the surprising conclusions: the waste produced by coal plants is actually more radioactive than that generated by their nuclear counterparts. In fact, fly ash—a by-product from burning coal for power—contains up to 100 times more radiation than nuclear waste.
At issue is coal's content of uranium and thorium, both radioactive elements. They occur in such trace amounts in natural, or "whole," coal that they aren't a problem. But when coal is burned into fly ash, uranium and thorium are concentrated at up to 10 times their original levels.
Fly ash uranium sometimes leaches into the soil and water surrounding a coal plant, affecting cropland and, in turn, food. People living within a "stack shadow"—the area within a half- to one-mile (0.8- to 1.6-kilometer) radius of a coal plant's smokestacks—might then ingest small amounts of radiation. Fly ash is also disposed of in landfills and abandoned mines and quarries, posing a potential risk to people living around those areas.
In a 1978 paper for Science, J. P. McBride at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) and his colleagues looked at the uranium and thorium content of fly ash from coal-fired power plants in Tennessee and Alabama. To answer the question of just how harmful leaching could be, the scientists estimated radiation exposure around the coal plants and compared it with exposure levels around boiling-water reactor and pressurized-water nuclear power plants.
The result: estimated radiation doses ingested by people living near the coal plants were equal to or higher than doses for people living around the nuclear facilities. At one extreme, the scientists estimated fly ash radiation in individuals' bones at around 18 millirems (thousandths of a rem, a unit for measuring doses of ionizing radiation) a year. Doses for the two nuclear plants, by contrast, ranged from between three and six millirems for the same period. And when all food was grown in the area, radiation doses were 50 to 200 percent higher around the coal plants.
McBride and his co-authors estimated that individuals living near coal-fired installations are exposed to a maximum of 1.9 millirems of fly ash radiation yearly. To put these numbers in perspective, the average person encounters 360 millirems of annual "background radiation" from natural and man-made sources, including substances in Earth's crust, cosmic rays, residue from nuclear tests and smoke detectors.