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Lunn told in September about Chalk River mess
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David Akin, CTV News
Date: Thu. Jan. 10 2008 11:15 AM ET
OTTAWA The federal auditor general informed Natural Resources Minister Gary Lunn last September that the Chalk River Nuclear Laboratory housing the world's most important medical isotope producer was a mess needing hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funding to eliminate safety and security deficiencies.
Lunn's response, his office said today, was to order, on Nov. 29, a broad review of the structure of AECL, setting the stage for the possible privatization of all or part of the business.
The audit, quietly released last night on Atomic Energy of Canada Limited's website, four months after it was given to Lunn, concluded that AECL faces a "significant deficiency" that has put its ability to deliver on its corporate mandate at risk.
AECL was forced to shut down its reactor at the Chalk River, Ont. site in early December after it could not satisfy the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC) that it was operating according to the safety standards of its licence.
Because the Chalk River facility is the world's leading producer of medical isotopes used to diagnose cancer and other diseases, the reactor's shutdown provoked a public health crisis.
Parliament was forced to pass emergency legislation overriding the safety concerns of the CNSC, Canada's nuclear safety watchdog, allowing AECL to fire up the reactor and resume the production of medical isotopes.
Pointing fingers
Lunn has blamed CNSC president Linda Keen for the shutdown, threatening in a letter written Dec. 27 to fire her unless she could give him a good reason why she ought to remain on the job.
This week, Keen fired back, saying that, as she was the head of a quasi-judicial independent body, Lunn had overstepped his authority with his threats.
That prompted Lunn's political opponents to call for his resignation.
The auditor general's report is sure to add more fuel to the political fire. The audit is only now coming to light after Liberal MP Omar Alghabra pressed Auditor General Sheila Fraser late last year to review AECL's operations after the Chalk River reactor was shut down.
But a spokesperson for Lunn's office says the Liberals had nothing to do with its release. AECL did not want to release the audit until its new board of directors had reviewed the document. Coincidentally, that board met for the first time yesterday afternoon in Mississauga, Ont.
Yesterday, the Liberals distributed the reply they received from Fraser. She said that her office had just finished an audit or special examination of AECL's books and had, in fact, presented that audit to AECL's old board of directors on Sept. 5.
"Although there is no statutory requirement that federal Crown corporations [like AECL] make special examination reports public, there is an expectation that they do so," Fraser wrote in a late-December letter to Alghabra. "To the best of our knowledge, AECL has yet to release its special examination report."
On Dec. 14, Michael Burns resigned as chairman and chief executive officer of AECL and was replaced by two individuals: Glenna Carr became the chair and Hugh MacDiarmid became CEO. Those appointments were made by Prime Minister Harper.
'Significant deficiency'
Though AECL's books are audited and published by the Crown corporation annually, the auditor general does a "special examination" of Crown corporations at least once every five years. The auditor general's office completed its review of AECL in March and presented it in September.
"We would like to draw your attention to a significant deficiency related to the unresolved strategic challenges that the Corporation faces," Assistant Auditor General Nancy Cheng writes in her cover letter to AECL's board of directors. "It is our view that this report contains information that should be brought to the attention of the Minister of Natural Resources. Accordingly, following consultation with the Board, we will be forwarding a copy of the report to the Minister."
Cheng notes that her office did not do a technical assessment of the safety and security of AECL's nuclear research facilities as that is the responsibility of the CNSC.
But, the auditor did have this to say:
"Our examination found a significant deficiency with respect to the risk that the Corporation may be unable to resolve three strategic challenges that, in particular, entail long-term funding requirements and that together would impair its ability to achieve its mandate.
"These challenges are the completion and licensing of the Dedicated Isotope Facility, the development and licensability of the Advanced CANDU Reactor in time for the market requirement, and the replacement of aging facilities at Chalk River Laboratories."
The reactor that produces medical isotopes at Chalk River, known as the National Research Universal or NRU reactor, went into service in 1957 based on designs that were first drawn up in 1949.
The auditor general told AECL's board -- and Lunn -- that the aging infrastructure at the facility was an increasing risk to public safety. "Limited funds threaten AECL's ability to manage the Canadian nuclear platform responsively and cost-effectively and to properly safeguard its assets. In our 2002 special examination, we reported that until AECL could resolve how to fund the replacement of the aging buildings, the risks to public safety were likely to increase."
In its report, the auditor general notes that AECL has spent a pittance of what was required to maintain the safety and security of its facilities.
"AECL has made limited investments in its infrastructure in recent years. Over the last five years, it obtained a total of $34 million in incremental funding from the federal government to deal with urgent heath, safety, security, and environmental requirements at the Chalk River site.
"AECL has identified a need to increase its operating and capital investment by some $600 million in the next 5 years (about $850 million in the next 10 years) to address fire and building code deficiencies as well as licensing, health, safety, and security issues at the Chalk River Laboratories site. We understand that these amounts will not be included in AECL's operating and capital budgets until the government provides direction on future funding."
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I applaud the budget, even though Health Care and education may stay unscathed. Sadly this cannot last and I worry to later this year where cuts will become enviable. If anything, this provides the Wildrose Alliance plenty of ammo when an election is called.


Please Add Comments( )
gerald mee
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Maggie
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So what is Dion complaining about? Why didn't his gov't check this?
Bluenose
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Thank God the current government in power is taking responsiblity to look after Canadians, because the opposition is only concerned about looking after themselves.
Shamaro
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Ian - Milton
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All political parties are equally to blame.
We in Canada tend to think that our wonderful, democratically elected government is way above those "third-world", "rife-with-corruption" governments but deception always begins in the heart of prideful men (and women).
"Save your own butt" is the call of the day by all parties and it makes me sick.
LR
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Peter
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Jake Malone
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I await the typical response of: If it's bad, it's the all Liberals fault. If it's good the Liberals had nothing to do with it, it was all thanks to your can never do wrong Conservative wonder party.
Lunn was in charge when Fraser reported this and did nothing, therefore Lunn is responsible.
Eventually the Conservatives will run out problems to blame on the Liberals and who will they blame then? Al Queda?
Man up and own up. It happened on your watch, suck it up, take the punishment and fix it now.
Ron
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For a government and PM who thrives on say that they/he is big on accountability and responsibility, they don't walk the talk..
Lunn should resign for interfering and threating an arm's length agency that deals with public safety.
Harper, walk your talk and tell Lunn to resign. Lunn stepped over the line. But it probably won't happen as we all know that no one in the conservative government does anything without Harper's permission. So Harper can't make Lunn resign because Harper would have to resign for telling Lunn to do it.
Denis (Ottawa)
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David A. Cooke
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The current government has had this file for two years now, but rather than admitting to their own negligence, they answer to Canadians on this file as they do all others....by blaming past governments. I wonder what will happen when the currrent economic downturn becomes a full blown recession....they will probably find a way to link Mackenzie King's administration to the cause.
The fact is, that Minister Lunn's reaction, as well as yours Gerald is to try to create a scapegoat so that the person that is truly responsible, ie the minister himself, can attempt to absolve himself of his errors. The problem is, that as we now find out and you admit to yourself, Chalk river has been a deteriorating situation for years, and if the current government was willing to take extraordinary steps to supercede the authority of an independent watchdog in the face of a health crisis, why were they not willing to do the same to avoid said crisis. Gerald, the time has come for good governance, and what this government has shown over and over on files like environment, Afghanistan, economy, and the current manufacturing crisis, is that they simply are not up to the task.
Larry
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Rob
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Ray Jacques
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My question would rather be why it was that the Conservatives always seem to mis-manage everything and never seem to have to be accountable always the Liberals fault (didn't our genius PM blame a Liberal appouintee for the problem and further accused the Liberals of trying to protect that appointee ? All American style partisan BS and All 100% untruths !) and yet are still are supported by an astonishing number of Canadfians
Possible solution: Why don't the Conservatives provide AECL with the cash required to fix the safety issue of missing back-up equipment so as to be sure that the reactor doesn't melt-down in case the primary equpmnet does fail ? This is a nuclear reactor Surely a melt-down possibility is more important to prevent than making political points ?
larry
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Sometimes the auditors reports recommend more than reasonably needs to be done.. but since this is a sensitive topic, the government should have acted sooner. The auditors have brought up tons of mismanagement from Liberals as well in the past, so Dion should maybe keep his head down a little.
Allan Eizinas
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And Ontario is looking to build more nuclear facilities with these clowns in charge?
Earl Robert
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KL
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ET
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MRM
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Gus
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Wendy
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JUST FIX THE DAMN PROBLEM!
I realize that closing the facility until repairs are made will put the medical community at a disadvantage but, they are the ones who should be demanding the situation be fixed. My heart goes out to all of those who depend on Chalk River being open for business but the reality is, the fallout will be much greater if there is an issue.
As for Lunn and all the others who have slammed Linda Keen (and have said she has no business being where she is)at least she stepped up to the plate and brought this to the forefront by closing Chalk River. Good for her. Now maybe something will be done since we all know there is a grave problem. Pressure is being put on the government.
All parties need to work together instead of against each other to deal with this.
Does Chernobyl ring any bells. Why can't we learn from the mistakes of others.
Truenorth
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And how do we explain Gary Lunn's questionable behavior in this matter. Although he knew from Fraiser's report in September that things weren't right at Chalk River, he feigned ignorance to Parliament having done nothing to correct the situation. He then turns around and threatens to fire CNSC president Linda Keen, blaming her for the shutdown. Perhaps Lunn should submit a letter to Parliament explaing why HE shouldn't be fired.
Perhaps part of the problem is that there isn't enough money in the coffers for the upgrade to such a critical facility. But if this is the case then it would be because of misplaced government priorities. One of Harper's first actions was to give large tax breaks to the corporate sector. The Finance Minister has the gall to say to the Canadian public that there is no money for tax cuts for them or money for upgrading the Chalk River reactor but there is plenty of money for their corporate backers.
If anyone doubts the close connection between the Conservative Party and the corporate world, just look at the relationship the Conservatives have with the oil industry in Alberta. The Conservative Party in Alberta is simply an appendage of the oil patch. The Alberta Tories have never taken any kind of significant action to reign in the demands of the oil industry. When pressed to impose higher royalties, the government reluctantly did so, but at a much reduced rate from what their own commission had recommeded.
If any further prove is necessary, look at the new report from the Pembina Institute and the World Wildlife Fund which gave a failing grade to nine out of 10 oilsands producers in Alberta when comparing their different environmental records. This could never have happened without the willing connivance of the provincial government. The entire Harper government's head in the sand attitude towards climate change is designed to protect the oil industry no matter what the cost to the country in environmental terms.
J-F (Ottawa)
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Nevermind who's to blame. Just fix the problem, clean up the mess ASAP and get the isotopes to those who need it.
I'm sick and tired of people looking to blame the Liberals or Conservatives. It's like saying "Who's resposible, DUMB or DUMBER?"
Tom
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All of the regulatory structures exist to ensure that the inherent risk of a nuclear accident remains within the design limits. That is a technical business in which politicians of any party are simply incompetent meddlers who have self-interested agenda. All the grandstanding about tough leadership decisions in the face of a public health crisis seems a charade.
It seems beside the point that all parties ruin the public sector by using appointments to regulatory boards as retirement sinecures for party hacks. There is a regulatory board, and it has to regulate. That is the law.
The law also provides for fines of the millions of dollars for each day of operation in violation of an operating license. There also is a procedure for dispute resolution between the CNSB and AECL. As far as I know fines were never levied nor the dispute procedures initiated.
It seems that the law was not followed by any senior participant, which includes members of the government. One interpretation is that we have a nuclear reactor operating outside its license and managed by law breakers. That is not a particularly comforting thought since I live less than 50 km from the reactor. Oh yes, and we had a 3.4 magnitude earthquake epicentered a few km from the reactor the evening of 23 December.
I believe the facility has experienced earthquakes in the 6.0 range, and I think the facility is designed to withstand 8.0 quakes. The technical risk management question is whether the earthquake tolerance standards are compromised and if so how much greater public risk is present. The political question might be whether a party’s approval rating can be increased and is a possible privatization agenda furthered. Harper should fly by the seat of pants elsewhere.