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Article History BALTIMORE (Map, News) - When the whistle-blower at Peach Bottom Atomic Power Station reported fellow guards sleeping on the job, his supervisors told him not to worry.
“Their response was, ‘You haven’t been here long enough; you’re still new, you’ll understand,’ ” Kerry Beal said in an interview Monday. “I was told I was new to the team, that I needed to learn to be a ‘team player’; that if I expect them to trust me, I need to trust them.”
Beal, a former guard for Wackenhut Security, said he first noticed guards sleeping at the plant — about six miles over the Harford County line in Pennsylvania — when he began working there in February.
He said he had no regrets and would report the guards again, putting his clear conscience before the loss of his job and threats he said he has received since a federal investigation began.
Beal said he co-workers dismissed his concerns. He couldn’t talk to his family, who would be burdened by fear that they were at risk.
“It wasn’t just my life at stake. If something were to happen on a nuclear scale, we’re all affected. I couldn’t do any-
thing but do the right thing,” he said.
John Jasinski, a church friend and former security supervisor at the plant, wrote a letter in March to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission after Beal expressed his concerns.
Dissatisfied when the investigation was handed back to Wackenhut and went nowhere, Beal secretly taped about 10 guards nodding off and sleeping in a “ready room” not far from the nuclear reactor.
The NRC began its investigation only after WCBS in New York aired the tape.
Wackenhut put Beal on leave during the NRC investigation, and he said he began feeling threatened after the word got out.
“I received a phone call from someone telling me to watch out for my family,” Beal said.
In his quiet neighborhood in Lancaster County, a black SUV started showing up late at night, he said, so he began leaving his dogs out and notified state police.
Beal lost his job when plant operator Exelon Nuclear fired Wackenhut. But Exelon rehired other Wackenhut guards as part of an in-house security team.
Wackenhut officials could not be reached Monday.
Beal’s attorney, David Wachtel, of Washington, says he’s reviewing whether Beal’s job is covered by state and federal laws protecting whistle-blowers.
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Comments from Examiner Readers
12:39 PM MST on Sun., Feb. 17, 2008 re: "Feds pledge new policies on guards, whistle-blowers at nuclear plants"
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7:52 AM MST on Sun., Feb. 17, 2008
re: "Feds pledge new policies on guards, whistle-blowers at nuclear plants"
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10:47 AM MST on Wed., Feb. 6, 2008
re: "Whistle-blower told don't worry"
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5:17 PM MST on Wed., Nov. 7, 2007
re: "Feds return to Peach Bottom"
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8:00 AM MST on Wed., Nov. 7, 2007
re: "Whistle-blower told don't worry"
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2:30 PM MST on Tue., Nov. 6, 2007
re: "Whistle-blower told don't worry"
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6:11 AM MST on Tue., Nov. 6, 2007
re: "Whistle-blower told don't worry"
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Darny said:
It's down right Un-American to fall asleep on the job. Keep up with policy and record these instances for future reference. Make the necesary changes. Homeland security needs to get involved. My own people are endangering us all with stupidity and not enough sleep. Know your co-workers. Kick there arse if they fall asleep. Put a coffee maker in the office for God sakes!!
38 agree | 38 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
I find your choice of "...former Clinton-era Energy Department advisor Robert Alvarez..." as a commenter on the security issues at Peach Bottom to be interesting considering that he lost his position (a political appointment)as a senior policy advisor at DOE after his security clearance was lifted when he and his wife were arrested in 1999 by Takoma Park, Md. police for growing marijuana at home. They were turned in by their teen-aged daughter. So far as I can ascertain, he has spent most of his career in politically appointed policy positions dealing primarily with international nuclear weapons control and has no direct experience with commercial nuclear power plants. There certainly are more creditable "critics" of the NRC that could have been used in your article. David Lockbaum of UCS or Billie with GAP have consistently raised valid critical commentary on NRC and industry performance, in particular with whistle-blowers.
40 agree | 50 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
This is par for the course for Wackenhut. While going to college I worked at a Government site in Alabama. The guards regularly slept on duty, watched television, and even misappropriated vehicles for personal business. When a female employee brought this to the ex prison-guard PM's attention, he conducted a sham investigation, handed out minimal punishments, and found a way to eventually fire the whistleblower. Amazingly enough the site renewed the contract, even awarding several additional security positions to Wackenhut. Somewhere, someplace Wackenhut has friends in the Federal Government, and they are being protected. Or worse, no one really cares what's going on out there. Incompetence is rampant. no one is really watching.
28 agree | 33 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
The feds have found that "management did not effectively convey that sleeping was unacceptable"! That's great. What a wonderful way to spend taxpayers' money. I guess that federal employees and vendors who work under federal contract are now going to have to sign a special forms that reads, " I agree to stay awake while on the job and I understand that my sleeping on the job may result in my employment termination."
103 agree | 107 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
I am sure his job with Wackenhut is protected under the whistle blowers law. Had Wackenhut not been fired, I am sure he would still have a job.
101 agree | 81 disagree
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Duh! said:
Duh! This will cost the company millions. What were they supposed to do, give this guy a raise and a promotion?
74 agree | 88 disagree
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G said:
What's the matter, you never took a nap while guarding a nuclear facility before?
97 agree | 97 disagree
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