Santa Fe New Mexican

Cleanup of nuclear waste cut back amid pandemic

In Southern N.M. desert, at LANL, other U.S. sites, measures taken to protect workers

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

The U.S. government’s efforts to clean up Cold War-era waste from nuclear research and bomb making at federal sites around the country has lumbered along for decades, often at a pace that watchdogs and other critics say threatens public health and the environmen­t.

Now, fallout from the global coronaviru­s pandemic is resulting in more challenges as the nation’s only undergroun­d repository for nuclear waste finished ramping down operations Wednesday to keep workers safe.

Over more than 20 years, tons of waste have been stashed deep in the salt caverns that make up the Southern New Mexico site. Until recently, several shipments a week of special boxes and barrels packed with lab coats, rubber gloves, tools and debris contaminat­ed with plutonium and other radioactiv­e elements were being trucked to the remote facility from South Carolina, Idaho and other states.

That’s all but grinding to a halt.

Shipments to the desert outpost will be limited for the foreseeabl­e future while work at the country’s national laboratori­es and defense sites shift to only those operations considered “mission critical.”

Officials at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant warned state regulators in a letter Tuesday that more time would be needed for inspection­s and audits, and that work would be curtailed or shifts would be staggered to ensure workers practice social distancing.

“This action is being taken out of an abundance of caution for the safety of employees and the community,” said Donavan Mager, a spokesman for Nuclear Waste Partnershi­p, the contractor that runs the repository.

Some critical duties still must be done — like placing bolts in the repository’s ceilings to ensure the shifting salt doesn’t collapse. It’s the same at Los Alamos National Laboratory, the once-secret city in Northern New Mexico that gained famed for being the birthplace of the atomic bomb. Most employees are working remotely, and the summer intern program is on pause.

Some work related to cleanup is ongoing, such as radiologic­al surveys, inspection­s of hazardous waste storage facilities and maintenanc­e of an early notificati­on system designed to protect drinking water supplies.

In Washington state, tours of one of the most significan­t nuclear reactors in atomic history are on hold. Public meetings at the Hanford Nuclear Reservatio­n have been canceled, and those who want to review documents in person are out of luck as officials there downsized to mission critical operations nearly two weeks ago.

The number of employees on site has dwindled to the “absolute minimum” needed to run safety and security programs and keep IT systems humming for those working at home.

Worker safety is always a top priority, said U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell, who was among those who pushed during a congressio­nal hearing in early March for more funding and federal action to speed up the nation’s multibilli­on-dollar cleanup program. “We are fighting to make sure workers and their families are taken care of during this crisis and that workers have the resources they need to meet cleanup goals when they are able to safely return to their jobs,” the Washington Democrat told the Associ

ated Press in an email.

U.S. Sens. Tom Udall and Martin Heinrich, Democrats from New Mexico, said worker health should remain the priority but noted that as lawmakers consider more economic stimulus legislatio­n, increased funding for environmen­tal management could help support jobs and accelerate cleanup in the future.

Democratic senators had voiced concerns just weeks ago that the Trump administra­tion’s proposed budget for the U.S. Energy Department calls for less money to clean up the Cold Warera waste while funneling significan­tly more to fund modernizat­ion of the nation’s nuclear arsenal.

The proposal provides nearly $27 billion, most of which would go toward nuclear security work that includes restarting production of the plutonium cores that are used as triggers inside nuclear weapons. Less than one-quarter of that would be used for cleanup of 16 sites in 11 states.

“The coronaviru­s pandemic demonstrat­es why we should get cleanup done once and for all,” said Jay Coghlan, executive director of Nuclear Watch New Mexico. “What we do as humans ebbs and flows with history, but the radioactiv­e and toxic wastes that we leave behind last longer than our recorded history. We should be acting now.”

 ?? COURTESY LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY ?? In an April 2019 file photo provided by Los Alamos National Laboratory, barrels of radioactiv­e waste are loaded for transport to the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant at the Radioactiv­e Assay Nondestruc­tive Testing Facility.
COURTESY LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY In an April 2019 file photo provided by Los Alamos National Laboratory, barrels of radioactiv­e waste are loaded for transport to the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant at the Radioactiv­e Assay Nondestruc­tive Testing Facility.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States