Zion's nuclear fallout; still reeling from 1998 closing
Workers are methodically dismantling the once-mighty Zion nuclear power plant. Just up the road in the far north suburb, a different kind of dismantling is taking place.
The small Lake County city of Zion founded at the start of the last century as the new City of God and once a bustling little blue-collar bedroom community is staggering. Crushed by the loss of half its property-tax base when the power plant was closed in 1998, it faces the foreseeable future as a nuclear waste dump.
It wasnt supposed be this way.
The understanding was that Zion would have a nuclear power plant on the lakefront and that it would be an eyesore but that there could be some economic development down the line, Zion Mayor Al Hill says. The understanding also was that, when they closed it, it would be gone. Thats not what happened.
What happened is that no one can agree on where to put about 1,000 tons of spent nuclear fuel rods. So they will stay, sealed inside stainless steel canisters, encased in concrete and stacked in neat rows of 20-feet-tall cylinders on a concrete pad, all huddled together along some of Illinois most beautiful lakefront shoreline.
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