Filmed over 12 years, SOS - The San Onofre Syndrome: Nuclear Power's Legacy dramatically chronicles how Southern California residents came together to force the shutdown of an aging nuclear power plant only to be confronted by an alarming reality: tons of nuclear waste left near a popular beach, only 100 feet from the rising sea, that — with radioactivity lasting millions of years — menaces present and future generations.
The film portrays San Onofre as a microcosm of this national problem - the mismanagement of lethal radioactive waste lasting millennia.
It's a syndrome shared by all 55 nuclear reactor sites across the United States.
SOS spotlights the essential role citizens must play to ensure public safety is the top priority. Told largely through the eyes of five main characters, we witness how they mobilize their communities, become experts on the issues, and tactically wiser in the face of adversity.
SOS - The San Onofre Syndrome: Nuclear Power's Legacy is a critical warning that America's nuclear 55 power plants, each with their own tons of intensely radioactive waste in inadequate temporary containers are putting their local communities and national security at grave risk.