Low-level nuclear waste piles up at hospitals

Storage raises security fears

For years, truckloads of low-level nuclear waste from most of the U.S. were taken to a rural South Carolina landfill. There, items such as the rice-size radioactive seeds for treating cancer and pencil-thin nuclear tubes used in industrial gauges were sealed in concrete and buried.

But a South Carolina law that took effect July 1 ended nearly all disposal of radioactive material at the landfill, leaving 36 states with no place to throw out some of ... Full Story »

Posted by Dwight Rousu
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Posted by: Posted by Dwight Rousu - Sep 26, 2008 - 2:08 PM PDT
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Dwight Rousu
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by Dwight Rousu - Oct. 1, 2008

Concern about medical nuclear waste can be added to the worries about nuclear wastes from attempts to explode the construction of nuclear power plants under the platform of the republican party and republican McCain. The article adds background awareness.

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