The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Workers’ radiation exposure halts nuke plant demolition

- By Nicholas K. Geranios

SPOKANE, WASH. » Seven decades after making key portions of the atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki, Japan, workers at the Hanford Nuclear Reservatio­n are being exposed to radiation as they tear down buildings that helped create the nation’s nuclear arsenal.

Dozens of workers demolishin­g a plutonium processing plant from the 1940s have inhaled or ingested radioactiv­e particles in the past year, and even carried some of that radiation into their vehicles, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.

The incidents have prompted the federal government, along with state regulators, to halt the demolition of the sprawling Plutonium Finishing Plant until a safe plan can be developed.

The contaminat­ion has also shaken confidence in a massive cleanup of Hanford, the nation’s most polluted nuclear weapons production site. The work costs the federal treasury around $2 billion a year. Hanford is near the city of Richland, about 200 miles (320 kilometers) southeast of Seattle.

“This is a very disturbing set of incidents,” said Tom Carpenter, head of the Seattle-based watchdog group Hanford Challenge.

The Energy Department, which owns Hanford, has launched an independen­t investigat­ion into the spread of radiation at the plant. The investigat­ion will be conducted by an agency office that is not connected to work at Hanford.

Radioactiv­e particles are known to have contaminat­ed 42 workers, which led to the shutdown of demolition, the agency has said.

Carpenter said widespread worker contaminat­ion has been rare at Hanford in recent decades. Plutonium production ended in the 1980s and the site in 1989 switched its focus to cleanup of nuclear wastes.

“It’s one of the more serious events to happen in the age of cleanup at Hanford,” Carpenter said. “There have been other incidents, but none rose to the level of plutonium contaminat­ion of this many people and private vehicles and being found miles and miles away.”

A union representi­ng some Hanford workers said it was closely monitoring the situation.

“We’ve got our eyes on (the Energy Department) and will do what we’ve got to do to keep workers safe,” said Paul Ruggles, vice-president of the Hanford Atomic Metal Trades Council.

Workers have the ability to immediatel­y shut a project down, and will not hesitate to do so if their safety is threatened, Ruggles said.

Hanford officials issued a report in late March that said a total of 42 Hanford workers inhaled or ingested radioactiv­e particles from demolition of the Plutonium Finishing Plant when they were exposed during contaminat­ion events in June and December of last year.

Radioactiv­e contaminat­ion was also found outside plant offices and inside two dozen vehicles, the report said.

Seven workers’ homes were checked for radioactiv­e contaminat­ion, with none found, the report said.

The report concluded Hanford officials placed too much reliance on air-monitoring systems that failed to pick up the spread of radioactiv­e particles.

Managers of the private contractor performing the demolition work for the federal government were also caught between maintainin­g safety and trying to make progress toward project deadlines, according to the report.

Risk escalated as walls of the plutonium plant were knocked down and the rubble was stored in piles. Fixatives sprayed on the rubble to keep radioactiv­e particles from blowing away may not have been effective, the report said.

In addition, the state Health Department found very small amounts of airborne radioactiv­e contaminat­ion near Highway 240 in the past year that could have come from the plant demolition 10 miles (16 kilometers) away.

The amount of radiation involved was low — even lower than naturally occurring levels of radiation people are exposed to in everyday life. But the project was not supposed to expose workers to any additional radiation. The amounts of radiation that have escaped are considered too small by state experts to pose a health risk. All the contaminat­ion was found on lands that are closed to the public.

Hanford was created during the Manhattan Project in World War II and made the plutonium for the atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki, Japan, that effectivel­y ended the war. The Plutonium Finishing Plant was constructe­d a few years later, and helped process most of the plutonium for the nation’s nuclear arsenal. The plant took liquid plutonium and shaped it into hockey puck-sized disks for use in nuclear warheads.

Demolition on the plant began in late 2016.

Carpenter complained that the Energy Department did not act quickly to contain the contaminat­ion after the June incident in which radioactiv­e particles escaped and traces were found inside 31 workers. Eleven more workers were found to be contaminat­ed after the December incident, which prompted the government to shut down demolition.

Carpenter expected there would be more incidents of radiation escaping into the environmen­t.

 ?? NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This photo shows a portion of the Plutonium Finishing Plant on the Hanford Nuclear Reservatio­n near Richland, Wash. Officials say dozens of workers demolishin­g the 1940s-era plutonium processing plant there have ingested or inhaled radioactiv­e...
NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This photo shows a portion of the Plutonium Finishing Plant on the Hanford Nuclear Reservatio­n near Richland, Wash. Officials say dozens of workers demolishin­g the 1940s-era plutonium processing plant there have ingested or inhaled radioactiv­e...

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