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NARRATOR
Tonya Kleuskens
Region: Panhandle
Topics: Agriculture, Groundwater, Aquifer, Ogallala
Ms. Kleuskens is a farmer based in Dawn, Texas who
was part of a successful citizens' effort involving a coalition of the
Nuclear Waste Task Force, Serious Texans Against Nuclear Dumping, the
Texas Energy Alliance, Texas Corn Growers, Texas Wheat Growers, Texas
Sugar Beet Growers, and a number of food processors such as Frito-Lay,
Holly Sugar and Arrowhead Mills, that managed to dissuade the
Department of Energy from siting the nation's first high-level
civilian radioactive waste disposal facility in the Panhandle. Mrs.
Kleuskens and other opponents to the disposal plan pointed out the
poor characterization and understanding of the local geology and
aquifers, the questionable design of the waste shaft and storage bins,
the risks of transport to the site, the heavy regional reliance on
groundwater reservoirs, and the national importance of the agriculture
based in the Panhandle.
In 2002, Mrs. Kleuskens again became involved in
waste issues, this time concerning a proposed unlined 103-acre
municipal landfill facility for the City of Hereford. She and other
critics of the plan were successful in persuading the City to withdraw
their permit application by showing that the proposed site had flowing
springs and possible aquifer recharge routes within it.
Interviewed
October 15, 2002
Dawn, Texas
Reels 2247 and 2248
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