By Max Schulz on 3.9.06 @ 12:05AM
Miss Nevada has a lovely view of Yucca Mountain.
This article appears in The American
Spectator's March 2006 issue. To subscribe, please click
here.
In recent years Nevada politicos like Governor Kenny Guinn,
Congresswoman Shelley Berkley, and Senators Harry Reid and John
Ensign, along with the major newspapers, have proclaimed the Silver
State's united opposition to the proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear
waste repository about an hour and a half out of Las Vegas. Every
self-respecting Nevadan, it seems, naturally must be against
Yucca.
Well, maybe not everyone. It seems that Reid and Co. overlooked
a free thinker named Crystal Wosik.
Miss Wosik is better known as Miss Nevada. She was her state's
proud representative to January's Miss America pageant, which took
place, coincidentally, in Las Vegas. In a bid to breathe some life
into the dying Miss America spectacle, pageant organizers moved the
event out of Atlantic City for the first time in its 85-year
history. Searching for better ratings, they traded the rundown
squalor of a Jersey shore boardwalk for the glitz and glitter of
the Vegas strip.
According to the Reno Gazette Journal, Miss Wosik was
asked during the interview session (which did not air on
television) her opinion of the controversial plan to store the
nation's nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain. Bucking the trend
established by just about every major elected official in the
state, Miss Nevada replied that the waste must go somewhere, and
Yucca Mountain appeared to be the best place in the country for it.
It was an eminently reasonable, even courageous, position to
take.
Until the follow-up.
The pageant Savonarolas pounced. They asked what if something
terrible happened, some sort of catastrophe where people died.
Well, she reportedly replied, sometimes you "just have to take
one for the team."
Take one for the team indeed. Such selflessness and generosity
of spirit helped ensure Crystal would not be not crowned Miss
America.
So she went down in flames. But in so doing, Miss Wosik provided
a valuable service, suggesting the fissures that might exist in the
state's supposedly unified resistance to filling Yucca Mountain
with nearly 80,000 tons of spent nuclear fuel.
I had Crystal's Yucca Mountain apostasy in mind during a trip to
Las Vegas conducted just two weeks after the Miss America pageant.
Having long known what the state's political establishment had to
say about the matter, I was curious what the average Las Vegan --
if there is such a thing -- thought about Yucca. If my limited
sampling is any indication, the answer is not much at all.
"Yucca Mountain?" asked a blackjack dealer at the Bellagio in
response to my inquiry. "That's in Idaho, right?" I told him it was
not far from Las Vegas. He said he had only been in Sin City for a
year.
Others I asked could identify the Yucca Mountain controversy,
but nobody seemed too upset over the possibility the repository
might get built. "The politicians are making hay over it," a
cocktail waitress at the low-rent Barbary Coast noted. I had
queried her as she brought me an early morning drink. "But I don't
think it's much of a problem. The scientists will bury that stuff
pretty deep." Her candor earned a big tip.
My admittedly unscientific survey netted not one person who
could be described as being exercised over Yucca.
Perhaps that is not surprising. For years Nevada -- and Las
Vegas in particular -- played up its role as ground zero of the
nation's nuclear weapons efforts. Before the moratorium on nuclear
testing was instituted in 1992, more than 1,000 nuclear detonations
were conducted there. Most took place at the government's test site
near Las Vegas. About 100 of these were atmospheric tests; the rest
were detonated underground, leaving an eerie set of pockmarks along
the desert floor.
During the 1950s, the Nevada Test Site averaged an aboveground
explosion every five weeks. They were bona fide tourist
attractions. Casinos ferried high rollers out in early morning
limousine rides to watch the mushroom clouds tower over the
landscape. So important was the atom bomb to defining Las Vegas
that in 1958 Clark County incorporated a mushroom cloud into its
seal. According to a 2005 PBS feature on Las Vegas, the Sands Hotel
and Casino even held an annual Miss Atomic Beauty contest.
Miss Atomic Beauty! Now that's a pageant Crystal Wosik should
win hands down.
topics:
Trade, Harry Reid, Television, NATO, Nuclear Weapons