Examiner.com // 55 mins ago
Examiner.com // 2 hrs 1 min ago
ABC7.com // 2 hrs 40 mins ago
Los Angeles Times // 2 hrs 56 mins ago
Los Angeles Times // 2 hrs 56 mins ago
Los Angeles Times // 2 hrs 56 mins ago
Los Angeles Times // 2 hrs 56 mins ago
Los Angeles Times // 2 hrs 56 mins ago
ABC7.com // 3 hrs ago
CBS2-KCAL // 3 hrs ago
 
   
Peach Bottom whistle-blower wants his firing investigated
Article History
There are updates to this article.

BALTIMORE (Map, News) - The whistle-blower who lost his job during the investigation of sleeping guards at Peach Bottom nuclear power plant has demanded federal officials take another look at his concerns and resulting dismissal.

Attorneys for former security guard Kerry Beal sent Dale Klein, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission chairman, a four-page letter complaining that the NRC had not thoroughly and independently investigated claims that guards had been sleeping at posts at the Peach Bottom Atomic Power Station, six miles north of the Maryland border in Pennsylvania.

By taking plant operator Exelon Nuclear at its word that the problems were limited to Beal’s shift of guards and allowing Beal to lose his job, the NRC sent the wrong message to plant employees, the letter said.

“Exelon’s other employees have observed what happened to Mr. Beal,” the letter said. “They know that, despite Exelon’s ‘new’ safety procedures and the additional NRC oversight, nothing has changed,” wrote Washington lawyers David Wachtel and Lynne Bernabai. “The same people are in charge and they will not hesitate to ignore complaints.”

Exelon suspended Beal during the NRC’s investigation after he leaked covert videos in September of guards sleeping in a “ready room” near the reactors in September.

“We still have more work to do,” NRC spokesman Neil Sheehan said, adding that the NRC was continuing its investigation through next year. “If a nuclear power plant employee is discriminated against because of raising safety concerns, that would be an NRC issue.”

Beal told The Examiner that he’d tried to report the sleeping guards to his superiors at Wackenhut security and to the NRC earlier in the year but had been rebuffed or ignored.

As a result of the NRC investigation, Exelon terminated its contract with Wackenhut but hired back many of the guards to staff its new, internally run security force.

Beal was not rehired, and though Exelon told him it was because of two infractions on his record, his attorneys suggested he had been written up for minor violations as a result of raising concerns about the sleeping guards.

The letter also alleged that the NRC had failed to adequately address what Exelon was doing to combat guard fatigue.

msantoni@baltimoreexaminer.com


Name
Comments

characters left


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"

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
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree

7:52 AM MST on Sun., Feb. 17, 2008 re: "Feds pledge new policies on guards, whistle-blowers at nuclear plants"

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
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
10:47 AM MST on Wed., Feb. 6, 2008 re: "Whistle-blower told don't worry"

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
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
5:17 PM MST on Wed., Nov. 7, 2007 re: "Feds return to Peach Bottom"

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
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
8:00 AM MST on Wed., Nov. 7, 2007 re: "Whistle-blower told don't worry"

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
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
2:30 PM MST on Tue., Nov. 6, 2007 re: "Whistle-blower told don't worry"

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
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
6:11 AM MST on Tue., Nov. 6, 2007 re: "Whistle-blower told don't worry"

G said:
What's the matter, you never took a nap while guarding a nuclear facility before?

97 agree | 97 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
 
 

(page generated in 0.11 seconds)