NOTE: The nuclear emergency in Japan made me recall the Three Mile Island accident over 30 years ago. As a native of Central Pennsylvania, it was a scary time. Two years ago I blogged about my experience as a 6th-Grader during those tense days:
Yesterday marked the 30-year anniversary of the partial meltdown at the Three Mile Island nuclear plant - the worst nuclear power accident in U.S. history.
30 years ago I was in 6th grade at Stevens Elementary School in Carlisle, PA - 21 miles away from Three Mile Island. I don't remember much about the incident (the adults downplayed the danger), but I do remember that we weren't allowed out for recess, and the teachers kept the classroom windows closed. Because if the reactor melted down we would have been COMPLETELY safe indoors with the windows shut. Or something like that.
Throughout the crisis, officials never ordered an evacuation because they were afraid of causing a panic. My dad worked in Harrisburg (the state capital) which is just 10 miles away from T.M.I. - and I remember him talking about co-workers who left the area immediately (at least one never returned). I also remember my parents talking to my brother and I about the possibility leaving in case things got worse. I guess we would have gone to Texas to live with my grandparents, but ultimately we stayed put. And eventually we were allowed to go outside for recess at school again.
When I go visit my family back in Central Pennsylvania I always take the Amtrak train. And right before the train arrives in Harrisburg (my destination), I always look to my left to see the four cooling towers of Three Mile Island which loom over the Susquehanna River.
In 1985 the undamaged unit went back online - and is still operating today. That is why now you only see steam coming from 2 of the towers - the damaged unit has been decommissioned.
Yesterday marked the 30-year anniversary of the partial meltdown at the Three Mile Island nuclear plant - the worst nuclear power accident in U.S. history.
30 years ago I was in 6th grade at Stevens Elementary School in Carlisle, PA - 21 miles away from Three Mile Island. I don't remember much about the incident (the adults downplayed the danger), but I do remember that we weren't allowed out for recess, and the teachers kept the classroom windows closed. Because if the reactor melted down we would have been COMPLETELY safe indoors with the windows shut. Or something like that.
Throughout the crisis, officials never ordered an evacuation because they were afraid of causing a panic. My dad worked in Harrisburg (the state capital) which is just 10 miles away from T.M.I. - and I remember him talking about co-workers who left the area immediately (at least one never returned). I also remember my parents talking to my brother and I about the possibility leaving in case things got worse. I guess we would have gone to Texas to live with my grandparents, but ultimately we stayed put. And eventually we were allowed to go outside for recess at school again.
When I go visit my family back in Central Pennsylvania I always take the Amtrak train. And right before the train arrives in Harrisburg (my destination), I always look to my left to see the four cooling towers of Three Mile Island which loom over the Susquehanna River.
In 1985 the undamaged unit went back online - and is still operating today. That is why now you only see steam coming from 2 of the towers - the damaged unit has been decommissioned.
6 comments:
I live about 10 miles from a nuclear plant operated by Duke Energy. Up until yesterday, I kinda/sorta supported nuclear energy. I thought that safety protocols, etc. had gotten a lot better since the TMI and Chernobyl incidents.
Obviously, though, humans can't anticipate everything that mother nature can throw at us. I'm rethinking my support as a result of this. I just can't imagine what I'd do if McGuire (the plant near me) was having the problems that they are having in Japan.
good grief, we were living in south Idaho (nuclear research facility) and were very young newlyweds (very young).
This whole business has been very hard on The Engineer. The amount of errors in reporting makes his head explode. If our tv survives without the remote thrown thru it...
It was your exposure to all that radiation that made you gay! Pat Robertson told me so.
Sean -
LOL! Yep, that must've been it.
XOXOXO
Thanks for sharing, David... that must have been quite an ordeal for you to go thru.
Hoping Japan doesn't undergo the same fate... it's getting pretty scary.
Here in Texas, we make our electrcity the good ole fashioned way- from fossil fuels, drilled in the deepwater Gulf or imported from the middle east!
When I was a kid they built an "alternative fuel" plant near my hometown in Louisiana- coal fired! It had to be shipped in by train from "somewhere up north"!
I like the idea of electricity generated by tides- like big underwater "wind"mills. Out of sight and harm's way!
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