FPL sends out nuclear emergency booklets
The booklets provide information about the St. Lucie nuclear power plants, evacuation routes and emergency planning.
Although the two power plants have never had any accidents requiring evacuation, the power company is required by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to send out the booklets with their detailed instructions and evacuation route maps.
“This actually started after the incident at Three Mile Island in 1979 when they realized there was no coordinated response plan between different agencies,” said Tom Veenstra, FPL’s nuclear communications manager.
The partial meltdown at the Middletown, Pa. power plant caused over 100,000 people to flee from the area around the damaged plant for almost a week.
Today, federal, state and local government agencies work with power companies like FPL to form a coordinated response team. An emergency operations center west of Interstate 95 is where decision-makers from FPL plus the state, local, and federal governments would gather in the event of radiation being released from the plant, Veenstra said.
Florida Power & Light has two nuclear power plants on South Hutchinson Island, along with The Energy Encounter, which is a visitorÂ’s center. It has interactive exhibits about electrical power and how it is created as well as easily understandable explanations and displays related to nuclear power for children and adults.
The first nuclear plant on Hutchinson Island was opened in 1976. The second one began producing electricity in 1983.
FPL and the government agencies participate in one drill outside the power plants each year. FPL conducts drills inside the plants several times a year.
For more copies of the booklet, call the two agencies responsible for public emergency planning: The St. Lucie County Dept. of Public Safety at (772) 462-8100 or the Martin County Division of Emergency Management at (772) 287-1652.
Related News

Study: US Power Grid Has More Blackouts Than ENTIRE Developed World
WASHINGTON - The United States power grid has more blackouts than any other country in the developed world, according to new data that spotlights the country’s aging and unreliable electric system.
The data by the Department of Energy (DOE) and the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC) shows that Americans face more power grid failures lasting at least an hour than residents of other developed nations.
And it’s getting worse.
Going back three decades, the US grid loses power 285 percent more often than it did in 1984, when record keeping began, International Business Times reported. The power outages cost businesses in the…