Radioactive water spills into containment dome, yet there is no danger 
to the public, officials say.
http://sanclemente.patch.com/articles/operators-shut-down-san-onofre-one-reactor-unit-as-a-precaution#_=
Here we go again. The public relations experts step up to reassure  
the public that all is well. Meanwhile, I get this message from a 
whistle-blower, " So much for installing brand new steam generators for 
 
800 million. SCE  is  really down playing the seriousness of this."
Someday  we will hear the sirens go off, and it won't be another 
false alarm. In  fact, I sit here wondering if this may actually 
develop into the  dreaded nuclear nightmare. Is this our Fukushima? If 
not, it is only a  matter of time. We must understand that the protective measures  that were once in 
place no longer exist. It is up to you and me, the  people standing in 
harms way, to demand a shutdown of these unnecessary  reactors that 
threaten the livelihood and well being of more than 8  million people, 
all for 7% of our energy.
Let's make them prove  they are safe to operate and that they have 
addressed the lessons  learned from Fukushima before we allow them to 
continue on the reckless  path they are on. How many more warnings will 
we get? Do we really need a  total meltdown in America in order to 
accept the reality that nuclear  power is extremely dangerous? Are we 
the ones that are going to have to  be sacrificed as the example that 
Americans can no longer ignore?
Unfortunately,  I am beginning to believe that we won't take any 
serious  steps to  avoid a Fukushima-like event until it happens in our 
country.  With all  the warning signs, no one will be surprised when it 
does take  place  here. It is only a matter of time. San Onofre, with a 
safety record ten   times worse than the industry norm, sitting next to a
 fault line   exceeding the design basis for this nuclear power plant 
that is reaching   its intended 40 year lifespan in 2013, is a very 
likely candidate for   failure.
That is why we are planning an 
event to remember  Fukushima on the  upcoming anniversary. People need 
to remember the  lessons that the  Japanese are still enduring. The 
no-go zone in Japan  is a 12.5 mile  radius and it is estimated that it 
will take 40 years  before it might be  safe to return (if ever). The 
cost of cleanup is already in excess of $120 Billion.
Can 
you imagine that  happening here? No use  of the main freeway between LA
 and San Diego, a  major military base  rendered useless, thousands of 
homes and businesses  that can't be  insured against such a disaster, 
all the people left  homeless and with  very few possessions, for who 
knows how long. The financial disaster alone  would be staggering,  let 
alone the deaths and disease and environmental  degradation that are  
more difficult to substantiate or quantify.
Just yesterday, I participated in a webinar with the Nuclear 
Regulatory 
 Commission who wanted some public feedback on the proposition that we  
store highly radioactive waste on site for another two or three hundred 
 years. What are these people charged with the public's safety thinking 
 about other than what is best for the industry?
Let's move away  from this outdated dangerous technology and replace 
it with safe and  sustainable options that will lead us to a brighter 
future. We can live  without it as seen in this very moment when no 
power is coming from San  Onofre. It won't be nearly as bad as they make
 it out to be.
Please  join the people's movement to shut down our nuclear power 
plant  before  it is too late. Go to 
http://sanonofresafety.org/,
 or 
send an  email to  
gary@sanclementegreen.org to get involved, to do 
your
 part,  because  those that you think you can count on are not on your 
side. Stand with  us. Go with the  precautionary principle. There is too
 much at stake for  too little in return. No Fukushimas here. We know  
better and so do  you.