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Canadian Nuke Watchdog Fired Hours Before Testimony
Nuclear Safety Watchdog Head Fired for "lack of leadership": Minister
by CBC News
Federal Natural Resources Minister Gary Lunn defended his decision to fire the head of Canada's nuclear safety watchdog Wednesday, arguing she lost the government's confidence over the way she handled the shutdown of a medical isotope-producing nuclear reactor late last year.
The former head of the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission, Linda Keen, will remain a member of the commission. (CBC)
Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission president Linda Keen was let go hours before she and Lunn were set to appear before a House committee in Ottawa on Wednesday. Keen subsequently backed out.
An e-mail sent to the natural resources committee from a CNSC
official said that since Keen is no longer the president, she wouldn't
be appearing.
Lunn appeared before the committee Wednesday
morning in what was his first time speaking publicly about the issue in
more than a month.
"The extended
shutdown of the reactor threatened a national and international health
crisis," he said at the start of his speech.
'People invariably would have died'
The
minister took aim at Keen's management of the crisis, accusing her of a
"lack of leadership" and saying she failed to resolve an impasse
between the commission and the Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd., the Crown
corporation that operates the facility, located in Chalk River, Ont.
Natural Resources Minister Gary Lunn blamed the CNSC head
Linda Keen for the reactor shutdown that caused the shortage of medical
isotopes. (CBC)
He suggested Keen tried to obstruct efforts to quickly resolve the growing crisis.
"It
became very clear very quickly [to] even her own officials and AECL and
independent experts that, in fact, this was not about safety. This was
a potential difference in opinion between the two agencies with respect
to licensing," Lunn said.
He said the government consulted with
800 health-care facilities across Canada, including nearly 250 nuclear
medicine facilities, to understand the impact of the shortage.
"From
the government's discussion with medical experts, it was obvious the
isotope shortage was potentially very serious," said Lunn.
"It
was also clear, Mr. Chair, had we not acted, that people invariably
would have died We could not let that happen. We had to act, and we
did," said Lunn.
Decision to fire Keen made on Tuesday
The
commission ordered the reactor to close on Nov. 18 over safety concerns
about the emergency power system not being connected to cooling pumps,
as required to prevent a meltdown during disasters such as earthquakes.
The
reactor facility in Chalk River, Ont., is pictured in this photograph[.] Medical isotopes produced there are key to diagnosing and
treating various cancers.
The closure of the
50-year-old reactor, which generates two-thirds of the radioisotopes
used around the world in medical procedures and tests, prompted a
worldwide shortage of the crucial medical material.
In December, Parliament ordered the facility to reopen, and Lunn and Keen have been at odds ever since.
Lunn
said that even CNSC's director general of nuclear cycle and facilities
regulation indicated the reactor was as safe as ever, even without the
additional safety requirements for the cooling pump system.
The
minister added that the decision to fire Keen was made on Tuesday, days
after she publicly accused him of interfering with the independence of
the arm's-length watchdog.
In a Dec. 27 letter to Keen leaked to
the Ottawa Citizen newspaper, Lunn questioned her judgment for
recommending the reactor be shut down and informed her he was
considering having her removed from the post.
Keen responded
with an eight-page letter accusing Lunn of improper interference and
threatening to fight in court any attempt to remove her from her job.
She also said she had asked the privacy commissioner and the RCMP to
investigate how Lunn's letter was leaked to the media.
'Blatant political interference'
Liberal
Natural Resources critic Omar Alghabra said Lunn was making history by
"crossing the line" with his "blatant political interference" in a
quasi-judicial tribunal.
Another Liberal MP, Lloyd St. Armand,
questioned whether Lunn had gone against the government's code of
conduct by making two phone calls to Keen about the situation.
The
code states that ministers should not intervene or appear to intervene
in quasi-judicial tribunals on issues requiring a decision.
Lunn responded that the calls were to obtain information from Keen, as is "completely appropriate" for any minister.
Liberal
MP David McGuinty accused the Conservatives of U.S. Republican-style
tactics by dismissing Keen in the "dark of night," just hours before
she was due to testify before the Commons committee.
"These are
the kind of Republican tactics this town has never seen before, that
are new to Canadians," McGuinty told the committee. "What kind of
conduct is this, minister? What kind of government are you a part of?"
Keen still a commission member
Keen,
who became head of the commission in 2001 and had been serving her
second five-year term as president, will remain a member of the
commission.
Assistant deputy industry minister Michael Binder has been named as interim president.
The
Conservative government has blamed the commission's intransigence for
creating the crisis. And Prime Minister Stephen Harper pointed a finger
directly at Keen, a career bureaucrat whom he referred to as a Liberal
appointee.
"The course of action contemplated was extremely ill
advised, an appalling use of authority and judgment," Harper told CBC
News in December.
A ministerial directive on Dec. 10 ordered the
CNSC to reopen the site. The agency refused, insisting a backup safety
system be installed to prevent the risk of a meltdown during an
earthquake or other disaster.
On Dec. 11, an emergency measure
passed through the House of Commons overturned the watchdog's decision,
and the reactor was restarted for a 120-day run on Dec. 16.