64°F
weather icon Clear

Heller votes against appointee with Yucca ties

U.S. Sen. Dean Heller hit a nerve last week when the Senate voted on an Energy Department nominee with ties to Yucca Mountain.

Make that a couple of nerves.

The Senate voted Thursday to confirm Joseph Hezir to be the department’s chief financial officer. The vote was 89-3, with Heller one of the three.

The Nevada republican pointed out that Hezir was a consultant and former lobbyist whose firm, the EOP Group, did lobbying throughout the 2000s for the Nuclear Energy Institute. Hezir’s lobbyist filings show he worked on Yucca Mountain and other nuclear waste issues.

Hezir halted lobbying in 2011, records show. The Washington Times reported he signed an ethics agreement saying he would resign as EOP Group vice president and director upon confirmation.

Heller said the connection between the nominee and the controversial Nevada nuclear waste site was too close for his comfort. On the Energy Department website, the chief financial officer’s job description includes “strategic planning,” with budget administration, program analysis and evaluation, finance and accounting, internal controls and corporate financial systems.

“Today I am standing up for Nevada,” Heller said after the vote. “Our delegation has fought for years to defund studies and processes leading to the approval of Yucca Mountain. Now we have someone who specifically lobbied the administration and Congress in favor of Yucca Mountain, as recently as two years ago, to oversee finances and implement departmentwide programs.”

Heller was further irked that Hezir was confirmed without a hearing that would have allowed him to be questioned on his lobbying.

A standing order the Senate approved in June 2011 listed the chief financial officer post among 200 presidentially appointed positions not required to go through a committee confirmation. Heller voted against that order.

There may have been a day in which a nominee carrying even a whiff of Yucca Mountain wouldn’t have made it through confirmation with Nevadans on guard.

That day might have passed — at least for now. Far from pursuing Yucca Mountain, the Energy Department under President Barack Obama has declared the site “unworkable” and says it has no plans to revisit the project.

A spokeswoman said Thursday that the Energy Department’s opposition to Yucca was “unwavering.”

Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., voted to confirm Hezir, and a spokeswoman said afterward that concern over the nominee was unfounded.

“The biggest threat to a Yucca revival is the soon-to-be Republican majority in the Senate, not an individual who will have zero policy responsibilities,” the spokeswoman, Kristen Orthman, said. “We have assurances from the Secretary of Energy and the White House that the agency will not pursue Yucca Mountain … Senator Reid will continue to work with the delegation and state, as he has for decades, to keep Yucca locked up and closed, like it is now.”

Bob Halstead, director of the Nevada Agency for Nuclear Projects, said there is value in reminders that Nevada’s official stance opposes Yucca Mountain even as relations with the federal government appear smoother than in the past.

“I think it is important to remind everyone that Nevada will do what is necessary to protect the state’s interests,” Halstead said.

THE LATEST
Landscape Tour will highlight local yards

The Pahrump Valley Garden Club is all set to hold its 16th Annual Landscape Tour and anyone with an interest in gardening, plants or yard art will not want to miss out. This year’s event features six local yards, all hand-picked by the Garden Club members to give attendees a wide variety of landscape types to peruse.

GALLERY: Celebrating the lives of lost loved ones

Butterflies are a symbol of transformation and one of the most transformative things a person can experience is the death of someone they love.

Local families invited to Community Baby Shower

Raising a child can be hard. That’s something the members of Pahrump Mothers Corner understand all too well. In an effort to ease the challenges of parenthood, particularly for new and expecting families, this group of local moms banded together to host a Community Baby Shower and the event proved to be very popular, leading to its return for the third year running.

Tonopah to be home to experimental hypersonic testing facility

Ambitious. It’s an apt word to describe Michael Grace’s vision for the future of his company, Longshot Space Technology Corporation, which, if all goes to plan, will build what he calls the world’s largest potato gun.

Pahrump man arrested for elder abuse

A Pahrump man wanted by the Nye County Sheriff’s Office on suspicion of elder abuse was arrested while attempting to purchase multiple vehicles at a Las Vegas car dealership, according to authorities.

Nye sheriff explains why you shouldn’t flee from the law

A man suspected of driving a stolen vehicle out of Las Vegas led Nye County Sheriff’s Office deputies on a high-speed pursuit into Pahrump on Monday morning, April 15.

Amargosa veterans honored with their own Quilts of Valor ceremony

The Nye County Valor Quilters are on a mission — to cover local veterans in the comfort of healing Quilts of Valor to honor the service and sacrifices they’ve made in the name of freedom – and now, these talented artists have started to expand their reach outside of the Pahrump Valley.

Vehicle in garage destroyed by fire

No serious injuries were reported after fire gutted a vehicle inside the garage of a home along the 2400 block of Zuni Avenue on Wednesday, April 10.

Need a good laugh? Join in a night of hilarious scholarship fundraising

Promising a “laugh-your-ass-off” night of hilarity and musical diversion, Sanders Family Winery is all set to host the Kiwanis Club of the Pahrump Valley Scholarship Fundraiser and its sure to be an amusing time for all involved.