[V]ERNON โ€“ In response to objections from a Brattleboro anti-nuclear group, Vermont Yankee’s current and prospective owners maintain that they’ve followed the โ€œappropriate processโ€ in seeking state approval for the Vernon plant’s sale.

And for that reason, attorneys for Entergy and NorthStar Group Services are asking the Vermont Public Service Board to throw out a motion for summary judgment filed last month by the New England Coalition.

Vermont Yankee 2010
The Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant in Vernon.
The companies say the coalition’s motion is โ€œinconsistentโ€ with state statute and โ€œwould overturn established board practice.โ€

Entergy wants to sell the shut-down plant to NorthStar to facilitate an accelerated decommissioning process that could result in most of the site being ready for reuse by 2030. The transaction is subject to federal and state regulatory review.

The companies’ plan has attracted support, including backing from Vermont Yankee’s host town. But skeptics question whether NorthStar has the means to follow through on its plans.

In early May, the New England Coalition argued that several important elements of NorthStar’s decommissioning proposal shouldn’t be part of the sale deliberation that’s currently before the Public Service Board.

That’s because those plans improperly contradict agreements Entergy made as part of two previous PSB orders, the coalition contends. If NorthStar wants to make those kinds of changes, the coalition says, then it must reopen those previous dockets.

The activist group’s objections include NorthStar’s plan to combine Vermont Yankee’s decommissioning and site restoration funds into one account, as well as a controversial plan to bury large amounts of concrete rubble on site.

In a response filed Monday, NorthStar and Entergy don’t debate the merits of those plans, and they acknowledge NorthStar is proposing โ€œwhat may be considered departuresโ€ from past Entergy commitments.

But the companies say the Public Service Board has authority to amend its past orders โ€œin a new docket that addresses new parties and a new proposed transaction that were not before the boardโ€ previously.

The sale proposal, they argue, is โ€œclearly differentโ€ from the past cases the New England Coalition cites.

โ€œThe board will evaluate whether the transaction as a whole โ€ฆ promotes the general good of the state,โ€ the companies say.

Also Monday, the state Public Service Department โ€“ which represents the public interest in energy matters โ€“ weighed in on the dispute.

The department says the New England Coalition’s motion is premature and the group’s objections might better be addressed as part of the state’s overall review of the proposed Vermont Yankee sale.

This approach โ€œpromotes economy in the board’s proceedings and causes no prejudice to (the New England Coalition), given its full participation in this docket and the ability of the board to reopen the previous dockets at a later date, if needed,โ€ the department says.

Twitter: @MikeFaher. Mike Faher reports on health care and Vermont Yankee for VTDigger. Faher has worked as a daily newspaper journalist for 19 years, most recently as lead reporter at the Brattleboro...