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Senate confirms 39 to federal posts

WASHINGTON -- The Senate broke a long impasse early Friday, confirming 39 nominees to federal posts including two to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

The clearances came after Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and the White House reached a deal apportioning appointments sought by Reid and those favored by President Bush.

Under the deal, the Senate approved five Reid choices including the reappointment of Gregory Jaczko to have his term at the NRC extended through June 2013.

Reid promoted Jaczko for the panel that is expected to play a deciding role in whether a nuclear waste repository might be built at Yucca Mountain, about 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas.

Jaczko, a physicist, is a former Reid science policy adviser who helped the Nevadan fight the Yucca project before joining the NRC in 2005.

At the same time, 34 Bush nominees were approved. Among them was Kristine Svinicki to the NRC. Svinicki, a nuclear engineer and a professional staffer to several senators including Larry Craig, R-Idaho, was the choice of Republicans to fill a term that will expire in June 2012.

Svinicki and Jaczko were confirmed in tandem in a deal to maintain political balance on the NRC, which regulates nuclear power plants and the management of nuclear waste and nuclear materials.

The confirmations bring the NRC's membership to four, with one remaining vacancy.

According to reports in trade publications, Reid has urged Bush to fill the final vacancy with Allison Macfarlane, an associate professor of environmental science at George Mason University who also has expressed skepticism about the suitability of the Yucca Mountain site for nuclear waste disposal.

While Reid has declined to confirm reports that Macfarlane is his preference, nuclear industry lobbyists have said the White House is resisting the nominee.

"Macfarlane is being left at the altar," one lobbyist said Friday.

Contact Stephens Washington Bureau Chief Steve Tetreault at stetreault@stephensmedia.com or (202) 783-1760.

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