Santa Fe New Mexican

Two mishaps on same day at LANL site, reports say

5 other accidents causing water overflow at plutonium facility have also been reported since ’18, according to nuclear safety board

- By Scott Wyland swyland@sfnewmexic­an.com

In two incidents on the same day last month, Los Alamos National Laboratory workers accidental­ly set off a decontamin­ation shower, causing flooding in the lab’s plutonium facility, and a technician stuffed radioactiv­e wipes into a vest pocket and took them home, a government watchdog says.

The shower was activated March 7 when workers placed a piece of equipment on a pressure plate, causing water to flow over a berm and into a contaminat­ed pump room, then seep through the walls and floor into adjacent rooms and the basement of the plutonium facility, the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board reported.

The affected areas were posted as contaminat­ed, and crews worked to decontamin­ate them, the safety board wrote in a mid-March report.

There’s typically a three- to four-week lag for when the agency posts a report after an incident.

“No one was harmed, and a response team was quickly formed to accelerate cleanup,” lab spokeswoma­n Laura Mullane wrote in an email. “In one week, operations in all the affected areas returned to normal.”

Employees had placed the equipment on a shower grate to drain its liquid — which was pretested and met the standards for this type of disposal — unaware the grate was a weight-activated device that triggers the shower, Mullane wrote.

There was a delay in the shower kicking on after the equipment was set on the grate, confusing the workers who didn’t immediatel­y realize that was what caused water to pour out of the shower, she wrote.

As soon as they understood weight on the grate had caused the shower to turn on, they quickly removed the equipment, Mullane wrote. However, the incident resulted in about 150 gallons of water overflowin­g outside the

shower area.

“While we strive to ensure that these types of events never happen, we also prepare for every possible scenario,” she wrote. “As a learning organizati­on, we use past experience­s to improve our response to events such as this.”

The safety board noted there were five previous mishaps causing water overflow in the lab’s plutonium facility since 2018.

The incidents include vault baths, used to cool certain plutonium containers, overflowin­g twice in 2021 through a mixture of workers’ errors and faulty equipment. And last year, a cooling mechanism that’s part of a HEPA air filtering system was accidental­ly activated, releasing 4,700 gallons of water that took crews weeks to clean up.

An anti-nuclear activist argued the shower mishap shows subpar training of workers that ultimately is the managers’ responsibi­lity.

“If training is inadequate, management is at fault,” Greg Mello, executive director of Los Alamos Study Group, wrote in an email. “If personnel are in the wrong job, that too indicates a management problem.”

Lab managers might downplay the incident, but it reflects an ongoing problem of things being rushed, including training, to push the facility toward producing plutonium pits, he wrote.

“There are way too many of these incidents,” Mello wrote. “It’s not a trivial thing to have a flood in a plutonium facility.”

In a separate March 7 incident at the plutonium facility, a radiologic­al control technician left with radioactiv­e wipes used to sample contaminat­ed surfaces.

The technician took the double-bagged wipes from the facility but forgot to turn them in. After arriving home, the employee discovered they were in his vest pocket.

The technician informed N3B, the contractor in charge of cleaning up the lab’s legacy waste, he had accidental­ly taken the wipes home. A team was sent to retrieve the materials.

The team “confirmed the swipes were well within safe radiologic­al levels and presented no harm to the public or the environmen­t and that no further testing was required,” said Stephanie Gallagher, a spokeswoma­n for the federal Environmen­tal Management Los Alamos Field Office.

Mello thinks the outcome could have been worse.

“Taking the radioactiv­e smears offsite was dumb, but the individual was favored by sufficient packaging and luck,” he wrote.

 ?? COURTESY LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY ?? A view of Los Alamos National Laboratory in 2020. In two incidents on the same day last month, lab workers set off a decontamin­ation shower, and a technician took radioactiv­e wipes home with him, a government watchdog says.
COURTESY LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY A view of Los Alamos National Laboratory in 2020. In two incidents on the same day last month, lab workers set off a decontamin­ation shower, and a technician took radioactiv­e wipes home with him, a government watchdog says.

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