Las Vegas Sun

November 15, 2009

Currently: 50° | Complete forecast | Log in

Fernald to look for new site to dump nuke waste

Thursday, Oct. 7, 2004 | 9:25 a.m.

WASHINGTON -- Spurred by lawsuit threats from Nevada, the Energy Department has begun looking for a new place to store radioactive waste piled up in Ohio.

Nevada officials have long fought to keep the radioactive material out of the Nevada Test Site. The Energy Department had said Nevada was its "primary" disposal site for the waste at the former uranium processing plant in Fernald, Ohio.

But the department has now told cleanup contractor Fluor Fernald to look elsewhere for a dump site.

The department expects the contractor on Friday to submit a search plan for a new site, said Bill Taylor, director of the Fernald cleanup project. Department officials want to find a new site by March, he said.

In response to Nevada's objections, the department and Fluor Fernald are "opening the aperture" to seek out commercial dump sites, Taylor said.

Taylor and Energy Department spokesman Joe Davis today declined to say if the department had completely scrapped its plan to ship the waste to Nevada.

Sandoval had said he would sue the Energy Department if it tried to move thousands of truckloads of the waste from Ohio to Nevada. About 9,000 cubic yards of the material is a solid, viscous material, Taylor said. About 5,000 cubic yards is a white, metallic powder.

Nevada officials have argued that the waste should be stored at a site regulated by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. They have said the Fernald waste is more radioactive and not the same classification as waste at the low-level Test Site dump.

The Test Site, home to a federal government low-level radioactive waste dump, is managed by the National Nuclear Security Administration, an affiliate of the Energy Department.

The 1,375-square mile Nevada Test Site, once the nation's nuclear weapons proving ground, has its nearest border about 65 miles northwest of Las Vegas.

The 1,050-acre Fernald plant, 18 miles northwest of Cincinnati, had supported the U.S. weapons programs for 37 years when it was closed in 1989.

archive

  • Most Read
  • Discussed
  • Most E-mailed

Calendar »

  • 15 Sun
  • 16 Mon
  • 17 Tue
  • 18 Wed
  • 19 Thu