Washington
Related: About this forumAs feds talk of changing course on Hanford nuclear cleanup, WA officials get heated
The federal government is unenthusiastic about cranking up its biggest cleanup project next month at the Hanford nuclear site in south-central Washington. But it will meet an Oct. 15 deadline to bring the so-called glassification facility online, the U.S. Department of Energy said Thursday.
Whether the department may move later to shut down the facility, which will be used to turn radioactive waste into glass, is still hazy.
Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., talked with U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright on Wednesday about earlier reports the Department of Energy wanted to back out of firing up the long-delayed Hanford plant by Oct. 15 and go to an undefined alternate method to neutralize 56 million gallons of radioactive waste.
That waste is stored in 177 leak-prone underground tanks in the center of the Hanford nuclear reservation and is at risk of seeping into the Columbia River.
https://washingtonstatestandard.com/2025/09/12/as-feds-talk-of-changing-course-on-hanford-nuclear-cleanup-wa-officials-grow-heated/

MrWowWow
(1,180 posts)He said that the underground leaking tanks and the cleanup were not a high government priority at that time. That was during the Obama Administration. He told me this in-person back in 2016 at the "Children's Trust " federal lawsuit. The contaminated groundwater has likely already made it to the Columbia River by now.
FYI:
During Governor Jay Inslees time in office, no underground tanks at Hanford were replaced.
What did occur: leaks were identified, waste was moved into safer tanks, and plans for new double-shell tanks were advanced but full replacement of the old underground tanks never happened.
cbabe
(5,568 posts)Hanfords Dirty Secret and its not 56 million gallons of nuclear waste
July 26, 2019
Time and time again, activists have sounded the alarm on Hanfords damaging practices and each time researchers and whistleblowers were proven right at a devastating cost. The river was polluted by the cooling system that diverted its water and by accidental spills, which were never fully recorded at Hanford so their scale is hard to know. Radiation reached the Pacific Ocean 200 miles away and contaminated fish and soil on its way. Today, Hanford holds 56 million gallons of radioactive waste which leaks into the soil and groundwater because many tanks have never been replaced. In 2013, Governor Inslee admitted that one tank was leaking up to 300 gallons a year; the contracted cleanup company knewand did nothing. Still, authorities claim that none of the radiation is dangerous to public health. Local residents and workers disagree.
Around Hanford, people report unusually high rates of thyroid disorders, cancer, and handicaps, because of river pollution. In particular, Native American communities who rely on the river and salmon fishing to support their cultural way of life have been affected. The government claims the radiation is not dangerous, but thats no comfort to the estimated 2 million people on the shores of the Columbia who have been exposed to radiation.
On Hanfords grounds, the Dept. of Energy reported toxins in the air far exceeding occupational limits and a causal link between vapor exposure and lung and brain damage. Vapor exposure has harmed more than a hundred workers, resulted in respiratory and cognitive problems (even dementia), and lead to at least one death. A former worker, Seth Ellingsworth, 38, used to be an athlete, but after inhaling an unknown toxic substance at work, he struggles to breath. There are obvious health concerns at Hanford, but workers have been fired for speaking publicly. In Ellingsworths words, The program (regarding worker safety and chemical vapors) is designed to make workers feel safe, not actually be safe. To protect workers would cost too much money and the company denies responsibility for his condition. Workers have dedicated years to this environmental remediation project, but when they truly advocate for themselves and the environment they are silenced.
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cbabe
(5,568 posts)Radioactive jam sent to governor, Energy secretary
AUG. 8, 1990
RICHLAND, Wash. -- A scientist activist sent jam made from radioactive mulberries to Gov. Booth Gardner and Energy Secretary James Watkins as an object lesson on mismanagement of nuclear waste at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation.
Norm Buske, owner of a private research company that for years has studied ground-water contamination at Hanford, said Tuesday he made the jam from berries he picked at N-Springs along the Hanford shoreline of the Columbia River.
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