- WASHINGTON - The federal
government spent $62 million on a building to store and treat low-level
radioactive waste at a California nuclear weapons laboratory, then decided
the structure wasn't secure enough.
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- So where is the waste kept now? Under tents.
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- Hundreds of bright yellow, 55-gallon drums are stacked
under the tents outside the building at the Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory, east of San Francisco.
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- Rep. Ellen Tauscher, the area's congresswoman, is incredulous.
"You're not trying to tell me that between the building and a tent,
the tent wins?" asked Tauscher, a Democrat. "In a post-Sept.
11 environment, you've got to say to yourself, 'Let's find a way to get
that stuff in the building.'"
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- The barrels hold liquid and solid hazardous wastes as
well as articles of clothing that became contaminated through exposure
to highly radioactive materials, said Energy Department spokesman Joe Davis.
The waste, said Davis, "is stored safely and securely."
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- Terrorists' use of airplanes against the World Trade
Center and Pentagon have raised concerns about the ability of nuclear plants
and storage facilities to survive similar attacks.
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- Highly radioactive materials " spent fuel from nuclear
reactors and other materials that emit dangerously high levels of radiation
for thousands of years " are stored in other buildings at Livermore,
Energy Department officials said. Low-level wastes, like those being kept
outside under tents, typically decay in a matter of years.
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- The Livermore building has been substantially complete
since last June, but Tauscher said the Energy Department has refused to
let Livermore workers begin using it. Tauscher said since January she has
been given different explanations for why the building remains unused.
Initially, she said, she was told the building could not withstand a direct
hit from an airplane.
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- Then Jessie Roberson, the assistant energy secretary
for environmental management, wrote Tauscher in May that the construction
plans did not sufficiently assess potential hazards and risks and what
to do about problems that may arise.
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- A third explanation came from Davis, the Energy Department's
chief spokesman in Washington, to whom calls to the laboratory were referred.
"The building is still under construction," Davis said. "If
you use the facility to store waste, you can't continue with the construction.
We're not going to compromise safety and security just to get it operating
quicker."
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- Tauscher said no one, including Energy Secretary Spencer
Abraham, told her construction was ongoing. "We can't even get a straight
answer out of them," said Tauscher, the top Democrat on a House Armed
Services Committee panel that oversees the Energy Department's reorganization,
focusing on nuclear weapons programs.
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- Under the department's latest plan for the low-level
waste, barrels of it would be stored inside beginning in September. Treatment
wouldn't begin until August of next year.
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- The Energy Department has been trying since the mid-1980s
to build a new decontamination and treatment facility at Livermore for
low-level waste, fighting off objections from area residents before finally
obtaining money from Congress in the late 1990s.
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- Tauscher attributed the delay to bureaucratic intransigence
and said the Energy Department's record on the issue undermines the public's
confidence. "How could they consider a building built to their own
specifications to be inadequate?" Tauscher asked. She has asked the
General Accounting Office, Congress' investigative arm, to report on the
situation.
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- c. 2002 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved
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