Mission
In 1988, the Washington State Department of Ecology created a new program within
the agency to deal specifically with mixed radioactive and chemically
hazardous wastes. The primary focus of the Nuclear Waste Program is
Hanford. The program also has
regulatory responsibility for mixed wastes at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in
Bremerton and commercial facilities in the Tri-Cities area. In addition, the
program oversees disposal and policy issues for
commercial low-level radioactive wastes.
The mission of the Nuclear Waste Program is to ensure sound management of
nuclear waste statewide and to promote the sound management and protection of
the environment at, and adjacent to, the U.S. Department of Energy’s Hanford
Site. To accomplish this mission, the program will:
- Enforce regulatory compliance and cleanup at the Hanford Site and at other
facilities managing nuclear waste statewide.
- Promote public involvement, congressional and federal contact, and
interstate activities in order to enhance nuclear waste management, compliance,
and cleanup of the Hanford Site.
- Ensure appropriate oversight for the safe management and disposal of
radioactive wastes at the Richland commercial low-level radioactive waste
disposal site.
The Roots of Hanford
Cleanup
Enormous changes at Hanford resulted from events in 1986:
- The U.S. Department of Energy (USDOE) made available thousands of secret
documents. The documents showed that defense-related work at Hanford resulted in
off-site releases of radiation and considerable contamination of the site.
- The Chernobyl disaster heightened public concern about all things nuclear.
This led to the shutdown of the last reactor at Hanford that produced weapons
material, the N Reactor.
- USDOE selected Hanford as one of three potential sites for a high-level
nuclear waste repository. This increased public awareness and concern throughout
the Pacific Northwest about all aspects of Hanford’s nuclear operations.
- Through a statewide referendum 84 percent of Washington voters rejected
using Hanford as a high-level nuclear waste disposal site.
- USDOE published its draft Hanford Defense Waste Environmental Impact
Statement, revealing the volume and variety of wastes at Hanford.
- Congress granted the state of Washington legal authority to regulate
hazardous wastes at Hanford. Due to public awareness of contamination and the
end of the Cold War the Hanford Site changed its mission from nuclear weapon
production to environmental cleanup and environmental management.
The Tri-Party Agreement
Before 1986 environmental laws only regulated private industry and state and
local governments. Washington state (Ecology) and the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) had to decide how to apply environmental regulations to
a federal agency (USDOE) at Hanford. Instead of lengthy litigation, these three
agencies agreed to manage cleanup under the Hanford Federal Facility Agreement
and Consent Order, also known as the
Tri-Party
Agreement. Signed in 1989, the agreement has a schedule to clean up Hanford
over a 30-year period. It defines roles and responsibilities between Ecology and
EPA for regulating hazardous waste sites.
Ecology’s Nuclear Waste Program carries out this important work for the
people of the state of Washington.
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WANT TO LEARN MORE ABOUT HANFORD?
History and science of Hanford for Teachers &
Kids
Visit
the Department of Energy's official Hanford website
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