Tag: Dinghan Meng

  • As Pilgrim decommissions, new nuclear debate rises in Plymouth MA

    From her bedroom window in Duxbury, 87-year-old Mary Lampert can still trace the silhouette of the concrete structure six miles away. It’s the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station in Plymouth, a facility she has battled for nearly four decades.

    Even though the plant shut down in 2019, Lampert still works six hours a day  updating reports, emailing state legislators and scrutinizing the latest regulatory filings.

    “That stuff is going to be bad for as long as the future extends, just as dinosaurs were in the past,” she said, referring to the 62 casks of spent nuclear fuel stored at the site. They sit exposed on a seaside hill, encased in half-inch-thick stainless steel, waiting for a federal repository that may never come.

    But David Butz, an 80-year-old retired engineer, views the same scene through a radically different lens.

    “If you took all of that material from 60 years of generating electricity in the United States, you could fit it in a Walmart,” Butz said. To him, the waste isn’t a curse, but a feature. “Waste is an argument for nuclear  it is small, contained, and doesn’t fly around like coal ash.”‘We would love to know’: What will 1,600 acres of land near power plant in Plymouth become?

    This winter, the two seniors find themselves on opposite sides of a new battle. The controversy is no longer about the closed Pilgrim plant, but about a sweeping energy bill proposed by Gov. Maura Healey.

    Healey proposal appears to clear way for new nuclear infrastructure

    On Nov. 11, the Legislature’s Joint Committee on Telecommunications, Utilities and Energy advanced Healey’s Energy Affordability, Independence & Innovation Act with a favorable 7-0 vote. While nominally aimed at reforming energy procurement and lowering costs, one provision has sparked a firestorm: It seeks to repeal a 1982 law that requires voter approval in a statewide vote for any new nuclear power plant construction.

    The media’s interpretation is direct: The move clears the path for small modular reactors (SMRs) in Massachusetts. These facilities represent a new breed of nuclear infrastructure. Unlike massive traditional plants, these units are designed to be prefabricated in factories and then transported to the site for assembly.

    Healey’s pivot is striking. As attorney general in 2019, she took a hard line against nuclear power, pressuring the Nuclear Regulatory Commission on Pilgrim’s safety and opposing clean energy subsidies for the plant. Now, as governor, she has become a proponent, prepared to bypass the state’s five million voters to push the plan forward.

    “She drank the Kool-Aid,” Lampert said. “Simple as that … lobbying and advertising by the industry.”More: What happens to greenhouse gas emissions when nuclear plants close?

    Healey’s shift seems rooted in reality. Massachusetts faces an energy crisis, with electricity rates among the highest in the nation. With federal delays hindering offshore wind projects and a 2050 decarbonization deadline looming, the pressure is mounting. Studies by ISO New England, the grid operator, suggest that small modular reactors could significantly reduce the infrastructure footprint and capital costs required to meet the region’s climate goals.

    And attitudes toward nuclear energy are shifting nationwide. Fueled by the artificial intelligence arms race, tech giants are increasingly pivoting to nuclear power to meet the insatiable electricity demands of data centers.

    In May, the Trump administration signed a series of executive orders directing the NRC to lower regulatory barriers. The administration’s goal is ambitious: to expand U.S. nuclear capacity from its current 100 gigawatts to 400 gigawatts by 2050. While Democrats and Republicans have historically clashed over energy policy, on nuclear power they have found a rare bipartisan consensus.

    “Massachusetts has the ingredients to be a world-class leader in advanced nuclear and fusion energy  technologies that provide affordable power, good jobs and significant economic development,” Healey said in a press release. “There is nationwide interest in the potential of advanced nuclear and fusion energy technologies.”

    She sees an opportunity: Nuclear power could meet climate targets while attracting the booming AI industry and data centers, driving economic growth.

    A can’t miss opportunity? Or a reckless gamble?

    For Lampert, this feels like a reckless gamble. Her opposition stems not from ideology, but from observed history.After moving to Duxbury in 1986, she noticed an unsettling concentration of cancer cases in her neighborhood  multiple myeloma, leukemia and thyroid cancer. Working with epidemiologists, she analyzed data suggesting a correlation between proximity to the plant and leukemia rates.

    She recalls the plant’s early years, when defective fuel rods and a lack of filtration led to radioactive releases. “I describe it as sex with a leaking condom,” she said.

    While her husband, Jim, a lawyer at a top Boston firm, supported the family, Lampert dedicated herself to Pilgrim Watch, a pro-safety watchdog group.More: Will Pilgrim nuclear power plant release decommissioned water? Tests results are in.

    Even with Pilgrim closed, Lampert argues the “sequel” is worse than the original movie. That “sequel” is decommissioning.

    “It’s hard to get people interested in part two  decommissioning  because largely the spent fuel is really the most dangerous part of the reactor and always has been,” she said.

    The waste now sits in dry casks that Lampert criticizes as the “cheap route”  half-inch-thick stainless steel rather than the robust casks used in Europe.

    “This was because of the myth that there would be a federal repository,” she said. “But no states are raising their hand saying they want it.”

    Retired engineer favors nuclear energy: ‘If done right, it’s clean’

    Butz, who lives in Groton, never shies away from the debate.

    “My 60 years of mechanical design experience taught me what is practical, cost-effective and what actually works to solve technical problems,” Butz said.

    In his view, renewables like wind and solar are “completely erratic and unpredictable” and have “no chance” of powering society alone. Nuclear’s advantage, he argues, is energy density.’Must step us for us’: Cape Cod’s May elections indicate unanimous against nuclear waste

    “If done right, it’s clean. And it’s not really dangerous,” Butz said, attributing public pushback to “over-exaggerated fear.” He dismisses concerns about terrorist attacks on the dry casks, citing tests where concrete casks survived rocket sled impacts intact.

    Regarding SMRs, Butz admits the criticism that the technology is “only on paper so far” is largely true, but insists the state should pursue them. When asked about siting an SMR at Pilgrim, he confirmed it is “technically feasible” due to the existing grid infrastructure.

    “We need to accept nuclear is a possibility and do a serious study,” he said.

    Plymouth’s crossroads

    For Plymouth, the debate is not just about safety.

    Since 1972, Pilgrim has been the town’s financial backbone, contributing $10 million to $15 million annually through payment-in-lieu-of-taxes agreements. But with the plant closed, those payments are phasing out, leaving Plymouth facing a fiscal cliff.

    “They’re hungry for revenue,” Lampert noted.

    The town recently released the “Pilgrim 1600 Acre Area Plan,” a study exploring the site’s future. The report identifies the property’s 34-kilovolt transmission lines as a “rare, high-value asset.” It suggests four potential uses: an undersea cable interconnection, a battery energy storage system, solar arrays or small modular reactors.

    According to the plan, the town holds a right of first refusal should Holtec International, the site’s owner, decide to sell the land.

    The report captures a community divided.

    In the web comments, one resident wrote: “I was one who submitted the idea to install SMR  I know nuclear is not broadly popular, but it is CO2-free and part of the future.”

    Another countered: “I do not want to see more reckless development in a pointless attempt to recoup the loss of shutting down the nuclear plant.”

    Holtec has signaled a clear interest in the technology. The company is already moving forward with deploying SMRs at its Palisades site in Michigan. And Patrick O’Brien, a Holtec spokesperson, confirmed that Pilgrim still has its power transmission lines in place, which would save the company time and money.

    Future uncertainty

    For Lampert, discussing new reactors while waste remains stranded is absurd.

    “If the bathtub’s overflowing, turn off the water. Don’t let the bathtub overflow,” she said.

    She remains deeply skeptical of SMR economics, noting the heavy subsidies required.

    “If the state gives subsidies, you’re just increasing electric bills and tax bills,” she said. She is lobbying lawmakers to add a clause to the governor’s bill: “There will be no subsidies for any new reactor.”

    As Plymouth stands at the intersection of a climate crisis and a fiscal cliff, two octogenarians continue their fight.Butz will keep attending hearings, arguing for a cleaner, nuclear-powered future. Lampert hopes to educate a younger generation on the risks.

    The problem, like the waste on the hill, isn’t going anywhere soon.

  • After a down tourism season, officials and businesses look to cash in next summer

    With the World Cup coming to Foxborough and the nation celebrating its 250th, they hope to draw more visitors to town.

    Plymouth Rock has long been a symbol of many things, including the town’s awkward tourism reality. People often stand before the “must-see” attraction, furrow their brows, and mutter the inevitable question: “That’s it?”

    The same question might be posed about the 2025 tourism season here and across the state. International visits statewide dropped nine percent, a decline some attributed to the Trump administration’s tariff policies and controversial rhetoric regarding neighboring nations. A tenuous economy also did not help.

    But hope springs eternal among tourism boosters and next summer shows promise. The state will host the FIFA World Cup and Sail Boston. It will also be a big part of the nation’s 250th anniversary celebration. For cities towns across Massachusetts, it promises to be a thrilling and lucrative season.

    The question is: Will Plymouth be able to attract its share of the many thousands of people from around the country and the world who are expected to visit Massachusetts?

    At the Hotel 1620 Plymouth Harbor, a mid-range, full-service hotel near the waterfront, general manager Thomas Anderson thinks so. He is using the off-season to renovate the hotel’s facilities in preparation for next year.

    With hotel rooms expected to be scarce – and expensive – in and around Boston, Plymouth could be a good option for soccer fans coming to see World Cup matches in Foxborough at Gillette Stadium (which will be renamed Boston Stadium during the tourney). 

    Local businesses are already counting on benefiting from the overflow, especially after this year.

    “Our peak season traditionally runs from late spring through early fall,” Anderson said. “Summer, in particular, sees the highest demand from leisure travelers, families, and tour groups. Our guest base is primarily drawn from the New England region, and international tour groups from Canada and Europe.”

    Jay Kimball, longtime owner of Wood’s Seafood, said his business relies heavily “on the influx of visitors from April through November.”

    “The fall definitely saw fewer visitors coming by car and bus, and international travel was down,” he said.

    State data reveal a fundamental structural issue facing Plymouth’s tourism economy. In 2024 – the latest year for which numbers are available – visitor spending in the Plymouth region topped $1 billion, ranking fourth among the state’s 15 convention and visitors bureaus.

    While ranking fourth sounds impressive, the gap between the region and the top three destinations is stark. Greater Boston, for obvious reasons, ranked first with $12.6 billion in tourism-related spending, accounting for more than 52 percent of the state’s total. Cape Cod and North of Boston followed with $2.8 billion and $1.2 billion, respectively.

    But the problem for Plymouth isn’t just how much money is spent, but where.

    According to the state’s Office of Travel and Tourism, more than 30 percent of visitor spending in Plymouth goes toward transportation and gasoline. Dining accounts for 19.5 percent, while lodging makes up just 15.8 percent — less than half the share of lodging spending on Cape Cod. Perhaps most telling is that day-trippers account for nearly 25 percent of all visitor spending despite having zero lodging costs — a figure that suggests the actual volume of day visitors is high.

    Plimoth Patuxet Museums, the town’s historical anchor, may draw the biggest crowds, but many of its visitors are gone within hours, often off to the Cape.

    One problem may be that higher-end lodging is lacking in Plymouth. There are some modern chain hotels, including the Hilton Garden, Hampton Inn, and Fairfield Inn, but aside from the Hotel 1620, the aging John Carver Inn is the only full-service hotel in the downtown/waterfront area.

    There is good news on that front, however – the John Carver was bought by the award-winning Mount Vernon Company earlier this year, and major renovations are underway.

    Also, Sisu, a “boutique motel” on Lincoln Street offers an alternative to the cookie-cutting chain hotels, and developer Rick Vayo plans to open a larger boutique hotel called The Drew on Chilton Street by next summer.

    The timing of The Drew’s debut could not be better, with World Cup matches starting on June 13, when Haiti faces Scotland at “Boston Stadium,” a little more than 40 miles away. That will be followed by matches featuring England, Morocco, Ghana, and a marquee showdown between Norway and France.

    The summer schedule throughout the Boston region will be packed. Boston Harborfest takes place July 1 to 4, ending with the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. A World Cup quarterfinal takes place in Foxborough on July 9, and two days later, 75 tall ships will arrive in Boston Harbor.

    Although the city is the official host for these events, the hotel-room crunch presents it with an opportunity. 

    On forums like Reddit and Facebook, soccer fans are already discussing alternatives. The UK’s Independent has advised travelers to look for cheaper lodging in towns 30 miles outside the city.

    That could be Plymouth’s opening. While hotels rates in Boston and closer to Foxborough have surged to $1,000 or more for match days, rooms in Plymouth can still be found for under $500 (considerably higher than normal summer rates).

    “This global event creates the potential for increased demand across multiple segments” of visitors, said Hotel 1620’s Anderson. His team is planning a marketing campaign targeting soccer fans, including themed signage and game-day events designed to encourage longer stays and repeat visits. As of now, Hotel 1620 is fully booked for key match dates in 2026.

    Plimoth Patuxet also is planning ahead. Executive Director Tom Begley said the museum is “currently working on strategies to figure out how we might be able to capitalize on these audiences.”

    Begley worries that transportation remains an issue. With no direct public transit between Foxborough and Plymouth, tourists without cars may struggle to bridge the gap.

    Kimball is optimistic but says it will take a unified effort to reap the benefits of the World Cup’s presence.

    “These soccer fans will come from all over the world and have money to spend,” he said. “The regional tourism councils should be putting together a marketing program highlighting Plymouth and Plymouth County as a great day trip or extended stay for the visitors to watch the World Cup soccer in Foxborough.”

    See Plymouth, the local tourism organization, did not immediately respond to requests for comment, citing a busy end of year schedule.

    If the town can solve the transit puzzle and market itself effectively, next summer could paint a very different picture than this past tourism season.

    Imagine this scenario in the summer of 2026: English soccer fans step out of Hotel 1620, fresh from a morning tour of the Mayflower II and Plimoth Patuxet. They head to Wood’s for a bowl of clam chowder, then board a shuttle bus to the match — passing Plymouth Rock’s granite portico on their way out.

    A fan might still point and ask, “That’s it?”

    They’ll also probably understand that there much more to Plymouth than a boulder in the sand.

    Dinghan Meng is a Boston University student enrolled in the school’s statehouse program.

  • No relief in sight to offset town’s $11 million school transportation costs

    Legislation to help defray the mounting expense fails to advance on Beacon Hill.

    A six-month push to ease Plymouth’s public school transportation costs has hit a roadblock after a key proposal failed to advance from a crowded legislative education committee agenda. The setback means Plymouth taxpayers will continue to shoulder the nearly $11 million it costs to bus students to schools across the town’s more than 100 square mileswhich makes it the largest municipality in the state geographically.

    Aside from $1.3 million in a special education circuit breaker reimbursement – which provides financial assistance to public school districts to offset the cost of travel services for special education students – Plymouth’s public schools do not receive any state transportation assistance, said Adam Blaisdell, the school system’s business administrator.

    The bill’s sponsor, Rep. Michelle Badger, D-Plymouth, lamented the outcome, but said that decades of experience in working on school transportation issues have taught her that this is not the time to back down.

    “We just keep building, and you never take no for an answer,” she said. “Hopefully, we’ll get to refile it next session and just keep working hard because it’s a problem that we have across the state – transportation for public schools.”

    With a self-described passion for school transportation issues – she calls herself a “school bus transportation nerd” – Badger began working on transportation reform while serving on the Plymouth School Committee.

    Over the years, she and her colleagues locally and on Beacon Hill have pursued various strategies, from budget amendments targeting Plymouth alone to proposals seeking subsidies for towns exceeding 100 square miles to bills covering more districts. They have not yielded significant results.

    Post-pandemic, school transportation operating costs rose further, intensifying the challenge. Against this backdrop, Badger and Rep. Kathleen LaNatra, D-Kingston – whose district includes part of Plymouth – introduced a measure to bridge subsidy gaps between regional and municipal school districts.

    During a June education committee hearing, Plymouth Public Schools Superintendent Chris Campbell, Blaisdell, and Select Board member Kevin Canty joined Badger in testifying in favor of the bill.

    The busing disparity between Plymouth and other nearby communities is striking. For instance, the Whitman-Hanson Regional School District serves 3,483 students over 22 square miles and received $1.2 million in subsidies last year based on state law Chapter 71’s commitment to regional school districts.

    Plymouth, as a municipal school district serves 7,000 students across 104 square miles. Of those, 4,849 are signed up to take buses to the town’s elementary and secondary schools, and another 236 students are bused to charter schools, according to Blaisdell.

    The Commonwealth’s reimbursement system is complex. According to state law and Department of Elementary and Secondary Education regulations, the transportation subsidy system includes seven separate programs with widely varying reimbursement rates.

    The state fully funds transportation for homeless students and partially subsidizes it for cross-district vocational and foster students. Plymouth students in grades K-6 who don’t qualify for the service, and all students in grades 7-12 who live within two miles of school but want to take a bus, must purchase a pass for $150, with a maximum annual cost of $450 per family.

    Badger said that even some regional districts struggle to secure full transportation subsidies, and many districts are concerned about the lack of competition among bus vendors.

    Though the bill did not result in funding for public school transportation in Plymouth, Badger put an upbeat spin on the disappointing outcome, saying it created a meaningful conversation. State lawmakers are beginning to recognize school transportation as a significant issue that could financially cripple districts, she said.

    The latest state budget includes a new $100,000 appropriation for districts to study school transportation, evaluate procurement processes, and explore more efficient solutions.

    “Plymouth is doing a really wonderful job of thinking ahead,” Badger said. “We started these conversations years ago, and going out there early for the [bus company] contract because they want to see what the cost could be [to make] the best plan.”

    Badger acknowledged that expecting a bill to pass on the first try would be “naive,” but would not concede defeat.

    “Everybody is working together to solve this problem because it becomes critical to the community,” she said.

    Dinghan Meng is a Boston University student enrolled in the school’s statehouse program.

  • Plymouth residents likely face even higher utility bills this winter

    As the heating season approaches, legislators on Beacon Hill grapple with the staggering costs of energy.


    Before autumn turns to winter, Beacon Hill lawmakers still have work to do if they hope to ease potentially higher utility bills, especially for customers served by Eversource.

    According to state data, Eversource provides natural gas to about 640,000 customers in 121 Massachusetts cities and towns, including Plymouth. The utility recently filed a winter gas rate adjustment request with the Department of Public Utilities, which includes both standard supply cost changes and increases tied to maintenance and infrastructure.

    Under the proposal, a Plymouth household using 126 therms per month would face a 13 percent increase, or $41.26 more, on its monthly gas bill. That includes a two percent increase for supply costs, 11 percent for maintenance and infrastructure investments, and less than $1 in public benefits fees.

    And that’s on top of crushingly high bills from last winter that placed a financial burden on many Plymouth households.

    Starting in November, residents will see those components broken out in a new bill format that is part of the state’s effort to improve billing transparency.

    Governor Maura Healey has slammed Eversource’s rate hike proposal as “outrageous” and urged the DPU to closely review the request. The Legislature’s Committee on Telecommunications, Utilities, and Energy held a hearing on Sept. 25 that brought to the forefront contractionary aspects of the state’s energy direction.

    Efficiency advocates, environmental groups, and clean energy backers pressed the committee to focus on long-term solutions to the high cost of energy. Many highlighted the state’s climate goals, the push to decarbonize the economy, and the role of the Mass Save program, which has come under increased scrutiny.

    In February, the DPU approved a $4.5 billion, three-year plan for Mass Save—$500 million less than the previous plan. The program offers free home energy assessments, upgrade recommendations, and rebates for high-efficiency appliances. It also encourages households to replace gas heating systems with electric heat pumps and solar panels, improve insulation, and install energy-saving windows and doors.

    Supporters said the program not only reduces reliance on fossil fuels and addresses climate change but also lowers peak demand, thereby preventing wholesale price spikes and decreasing the need to build more power plants. Together, the efforts result in overall savings across the grid, benefiting even those who did not enroll, according to advocates.

    But Senate Chair Michael Barrett, D-Lexington, questioned that logic.

    “Why does energy efficiency nevertheless have a reputation for being expensive rather than cost-saving?” he said. “Folks are under the mistaken impression that heat pumps are dominating the spending.”

    He cited Mass Save’s three-year plan, showing that nearly 44 percent of the funding goes toward traditional and “old-fashioned” home weatherization, while only about 20 percent supports the installation of heat pumps and on-site solar energy systems.

    All program costs are funded through the public benefits charge on utility bills.

    “Mass Save doesn’t seem impressive on its face,” said Kyle Murray, state program implementation director at Acadia Center. “If we don’t continue to do this, you’re asking constituents 5, 10, 15, 20 years from now to bear significantly higher costs.”

    Rep. Jeffrey Rosario Turco, D-Winthrop, expressed concern about the program’s public messaging.

    “We keep saying we’re saving $3.41 for every dollar we invest,” he said, “but that savings doesn’t show up until 30 years later.” He added that while “the program keeps saying we’re saving you money,” residents are paying more for energy each year.

    Indeed, Plymouth residents who heat their homes entirely with mini-split systems were among those hit with the highest electric bills last winter. Experts say that such systems work best in conjunction with another heating source, such as a gas furnace.

    Other advocates raised broader ideas during the hearing, including the creation of a zero-carbon renovation fund to help homeowners decarbonize and shift to cleaner energy sources.

    But Barrett called a thorough rehabilitation or expansion of Mass Save “complicated.” He urged the state to “prioritize some changes that are more manageable” if they genuinely help improve energy affordability.

    Dinghan Ming is a Boston University student enrolled in the school’s statehouse program.