COLUMBIA--Former U.S. Attorney Strom Thurmond Jr.
has been hired by the company that runs the Savannah River Site to help it
retain a contract to run the former nuclear weapons plant.
Thurmond's job will be to let the Washington Group know what is going
on in his hometown of Aiken, just miles from the site, company spokesman
Jack Herrmann said.
"We like to get a fresh perspective on what's going on in the
community, and Strom is very well-established in the community," Herrmann
said. "We find him to be very candid and honest."
Washington Group's Westinghouse Savannah River Co. has run the nuclear
waste storage facility near Aiken for the past 15 years without a lot of
competition.
But with a contract that has been worth an estimated $1.5 billion a
year expiring in September 2006, some challengers are stepping up,
including Fluor Daniel, who has opened an Aiken office to pursue the
contract.
"He's new to this area in terms of his career. I don't know how much he
knows about it. I would suspect not a whole heck of a lot, but he might
surprise me," said Dan Evans, project director of Fluor Daniel's Aiken
office.
The only reason the Washington Group hired Thurmond is because of his
name, said Bob Guild, an environmental lawyer and chairman of the South
Carolina chapter of the Sierra Club.
"Why do they want him? It's not for his nuclear engineering acumen, his
environmental science skills or ability to advocate for clean and safe
energy for South Carolina," Guild said.
Thurmond, 32 and son of South Carolina's longtime U.S. senator, the
late Strom Thurmond, did not return a phone call from The Associated Press
on Thursday.