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Steve Creamer resigns as EnergySolutions CEO
Feb 19, 2010
Salt Lake Tribune
SALT LAKE CITY — Since taking the helm of EnergySolutions six years ago, Steve Creamer became the face of a company that often found itself in the eye of the public storm. "Steve Creamer had the unique vision and energy to create a strong public company based in Utah that plays a critical role in America's nuclear industry," Christensen said. "Steve will continue to be an important sounding board and a strong supporter of the company." Christensen said he was instructed by the company's board to not disclose why Creamer, 58, resigned. "It may seem like an abrupt announcement to the rest of the world, but this succession plan has been in place for some time," he said, adding that Creamer indicated some time ago that he would give up his top spot this year. Christensen did say that, while he could not disclose what prompted the resignation, he could say what it was not about. Creamer was vacationing in Hawaii and unavailable for comment. In November 2007, Creamer took the company public, offering 11.85 million shares at $19 to $21 per share. The company's controlling stockholder, ENV Holdings LLC, offered 18.15 million shares. Since then, the company's shares have traded as high as $27.85 per share in December 2007, and as low as $3.55 in November 2008. Creamer, a Utah State University graduate, began his career as an engineer for the state environmental and transportation departments. He later was president of Creamer and Noble Engineers, a consulting firm. He also worked as an executive at East Carbon Development Corp., Laidlaw Environmental and USPCI, a Union Pacific hazardous-waste company. The EnergySolutions facility in Clive, 70 miles west of Salt Lake City, handles more than 95 percent of all commercial low-level radioactive waste produced in the United States, according to the Government Accountability Office. The company now has processing sites in Utah, Tennessee, South Carolina and the United Kingdom. The company has been at odds with environmental advocates for years. In February 2009, it offered to pay Utah 50 percent of an estimated $100 million a year for 10 years for permission to accept low-level waste from overseas to be stored in Utah. State lawmakers took no action during the 2009 legislative session, and the matter went to U.S. District Court. In May 2009, a federal court upheld the company's contention that its efforts to bring waste into the state fall outside the regulatory purview of the compact. Speaking during a conference call to reporters last August, Creamer said his company would likely pull its offer to share half of the net revenues produced by contracts to store foreign-generated waste at its Clive disposal location if its proposal wasn't accepted prior to the court's final ruling. After the ruling, the Utah Attorney General's Office appealed the decision. The appeal is still pending. e-mail: amyjoi@desnews.com, jasen@desnews.com |
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