We get BBC world news and Deutsche Welle news here in the San Francisco Bay Area, and they spend less time on the hysteria and more on the details with professors from local (to them) universities.
http://www.mercurynews.com/science/ci_17...;nclick_check=1 has an article on tsunamis within the Golden Gate for those that are in the Bay Area, but it mentions the most likely source of a tsunami on America's West Coast is from Alaska, so West Coasters may find the article interesting.
"Scientists say worries about radiation are overblown":
http://www.kansascity.com/2011/03/15/2728833/scientists-say-worries-about-radiation.html(I think someone may have been having fun with that quote)
The most common radiation from power plants comes from cesium-137 (
http://www.epa.gov/radiation/radionuclides/cesium.html), strontium-90 (
http://www.epa.gov/radiation/radionuclides/strontium.html), and iodine-131 (
http://www.epa.gov/radiation/radionuclides/iodine.html), and the EPA has information about those elements.
I can't remember whether it was the Beeb or D-W, but their expert said if things continue as they are in Japan (total disaster from the plant's perspective but containment of the core and waste), the chance of "extra" cancer from the radiation is statistically zero in the areas around the plants. If there is a "Chernobyl" and the plants' containment buildings are breached, the chances of cancer are increased but no one can hazard any estimate in advance because there's no way to predict what a breach would look like.
Voices of reason are hard to find, because ratings are driven by drama and my opinion is that news is driven by ratings; others have different opinions, and I'm find with that. I mentioned during the swine flu or bird flu or whatever flu hysteria that people say what benefits them, so we get people predicting things that generate funds in their industry or create bigger bureaucracies for them to manage and so on.
Some of the experts being quoted on the Japanese reactors are not in the field of nuclear power at all; look at the tag with their name or listen to their introduction and see if they work at a planning agency or firm that manages disasters. If so, I tend to think they're promoting themselves and their company and benefit from scaring people.
If the talking head has a degree in physics or nuclear engineering and is at a known university, I'll give her more credence, but still that person isn't at the site and can't give first-hand information on what's happening.
The major problem is that we don't have access to what's really going on. It's possible that not even the Japanese have knowledge of what's going on; however, I remember events around their nuclear reactors from years past when the power companies lied about the severity of the problems. I have some disbelief about their statements to the press about what's going on.
I think one of my lessons is to know that I don't know and not to make worst-case assumptions based. My take on this is based on all the hysteria on past predictions of plagues, disasters, and doom that have never come to pass. Not knowing what's going on is a natural state of affairs. Sometimes we know we don't know, and sometimes we don't even know we don't know. I have no idea about nuclear reactor operations and safety systems, and if I did it doesn't seem to me to make any difference in what will happen in Japan.
Tsunamis, on the other hand, have the potential to affect me and my lesson is, if one is predicted to know the height of the predicted wave and move to higher ground if necessary. I'm not sure what else I need to know. (Oh, if I'm on an ilsand on vacation and the water suddenly moves way out on the beach, head for high ground NOW.)