By JOHN NOLAN Associated Press writer
CINCINNATI — U.S. Energy Secretary
Spencer Abraham on Thursday said more
money is needed each year to speed
cleanup of radioactive contamination at
Energy Department sites nationwide.
Abraham proposed that $800 million
annually go toward expediting cleanup of
the 111 sites, of which only 30 are
open. His proposal is part of the Energy
Department’s $6.7 billion request for
basic site cleanup. More details were to
be released Monday with the department’s
entire 2003 budget request.
Abraham said that while quicker
cleanup at first will cost taxpayers
more money, they eventually will save
billions of dollars.
“Even if it means more money, let’s
get it done,” he said at the 1,050-acre
Fernald site, which for nearly 40 years
processed uranium for the nation’s
nuclear weapons.
The plant, 18 miles northwest of
Cincinnati, closed in 1989 and now
receives about $300 million annually for
cleanup. That amount could go up to $324
million annually under the program
Abraham proposed.
The extra money is needed to meet the
goal of cleaning up the site by 2006,
Abraham said.
“I know your goal is to finish this
project in 2006, that’s our goal as
well,” he told Fernald site employees.
Site managers would have to agree to
specific, realistic cleanup deadlines
that meet Washington’s approval, Abraham
said.
Abraham also talked about the need to
clean up the Rocky Flats site near
Denver, saying officials have predicted
the work could take 65 years and cost
$36 billion. He said the proposed plan
could allow Rocky Flats to be cleaned up
as soon as 2006 at a cost of $7 billion.
Fernald served as an important
component of America’s nuclear
weapons-making industry for 37 years,
starting in 1951. Thousands of workers
processed raw uranium ore into metal
sent to other sites to be used in the
production of plutonium for atomic
bombs.
Government officials later conceded
that the plant polluted the environment
and increased health risks for workers
and neighbors. |