High Level Radioactivity in Groundwater at Santa Susana

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Excessive levels of radioactive Tritium have been found in water wells drilled near the site of a nuclear reactor, which melted down in 1959. It-s in the Santa Susanna Mountains, between the San Fernando and Simi Valleys. The federal government has promised to clean up decades of nuclear and chemical contamination, and Boeing, which currently owns the land, wants to make it available for residential development. This latest discovery highlights a dispute between two federal agencies about whether the site will ultimately be clean enough for residential development. The Environmental Protection Agency says the site won-t be safe enough. Warren Olney speaks with the head of a nuclear watchdog group and a project manager from the Department of Energy, which is responsible for the clean up.
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    The University of California Regents voted 14-to-2 today to raise undergraduate fees by 14 percent. They join the State Universities- Board of Trustees which passed a similar increase by a vote of 10-to-1. Michelle Maitre, who writes about higher education for the Oakland Tribune, says administrators acted to protect the caliber of university programs.
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UC Regents approve student fee increase

Cal State University System Trustees increase student fees

California Postsecondary Education Commission

Governor Schwarzenegger's higher education budget compromise

Maitre's article on fee hikes at CSU, UC

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on Tritium

DOE press release on cleanup of Energy Technology Engineering Center

California Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSE) report on Santa Susanna

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Credits

Host:

Warren Olney

Producer:

Frances Anderton