Hanford High Level Waste: Reopened Comment Period. Webinar on October 14 to help you comment.

Today, in response to Heart of America NW comments, Ecology announced reopening of the comment period on the permit for High Level Waste “Tank Side Cesium Removal.”
Ecology agreed there are potential significant environmental impacts.
But it is going to take much more pressure to make this reconsideration meaningful.
We will hold a webinar on Tuesday October 13 at 5:15 PM – 6:15 PM to help you comment on this and on the proposed demolition of Hanford’s “B-Plant.” The comment period on B-Plant ends on Oct 14.
Copy or click HERE to put link into calendar or join the webinar on Oct 13..
The good news – in response to Heart of America Northwest’s comments, Washington Department of Ecology announced today that it is reopening the comment period on USDOE’s permit application for High Level Waste “Tank Side Cesium Removal.”
In August, our comments documented that this proposal has potential significant environmental and health impacts – particularly in event of an accident – that have never been considered. Yet, there was no Environmental Impact Statement or any review of impacts for the public to review and comment on, as required by NEPA and SEPA.
We were right.
This proposal would use an unshielded, mobile processing unit in what is the equivalent of a shipping container alongside the High Level Waste Tanks to remove extremely radioactive Cesium before the tank waste is piped to the vitrification plant.
The risks from unshielded Tank Side Cesium Removal, including from accidents, air emissions and storage of the Cesium, were never considered in the massive EIS USDOE prepared for its vitrification plans back in 2012.
If you are on the Hanford Tri-Party Agreement (TPA) email notice list, you received an email today announcing that Ecology was reopening the comment period because Tank Side Cesium Removal has potential significant environmental impacts but there was no NEPA and SEPA review of those impacts for you to consider in commenting in August.
Recognition of potential impacts is step one.
Ecology’s notice says: “Ecology has determined this proposal is likely to have a significant adverse impact on the environment.”
However, rather than require USDOE to prepare a supplemental EIS that specifically looks at the risks from processing High Level Waste to remove Cesium in an unshielded mobile unit prior to vitrification, Ecology is adopting a previously published USDOE supplement that never considered the potential accident risks from an unshielded mobile “Tank Side Cesium Removal” process.
We will send out a Guide to commenting and include this topic in a webinar on October 13 at 5:15 PM.
We’ll be asking for a full Supplemental EIS considering risks from accidents and considering an alternative to build a shielded building with proper emission monitoring and controls for this dangerous activity.
Comments will be due Nov 12. Go to Ecology’s Hanford public comment page and open “Low Activity Waste Pretreatment System” permit to reach documents and the electronic comment submission link: https://ecology.wa.gov/Waste-Toxics/Nuclear-waste/Public-comment-periods
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The Columbia River flows through Hanford, past nine closed nuclear reactors used to produce Plutonium for bombs. While you read this, radioactive Strontium 90 flows into the Columbia River at over 1,000 times the Drinking Water Standard from contamination left in sites along the River. Heart of America NW is also leading the campaign to require USDOE to cleanup along the River so the fifty miles of shorelines in the Hanford Reach National Monument will actually be safe for Tribes and the public to use.
Gerry Pollet, J.D., Executive Director

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