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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Funds for Hanford plant in doubt

Associated Press

RICHLAND – State officials support the idea of a proposed new facility that would allow Hanford’s vitrification plant to start treating some radioactive waste at the country’s most contaminated nuclear site sooner but worry about how the federal government will pay for the facility.

The proposed Low-Activity Waste Pretreatment System – LAWPS – would prepare some low-activity waste now held in underground tanks to be treated at the vitrification plant, the Tri-City Herald reported. The waste could then bypass the plant’s Pretreatment Facility, where construction has been halted until technical issues are solved.

“We are all about getting waste into glass as soon as possible,” Suzanne Dahl, the manager of the state Department of Ecology’s tank waste treatment section, said at a recent committee meeting of the Hanford Advisory Board.

The vitrification plant is being built to turn up to 56 million gallons of radioactive waste held in underground tanks into a stable glass form for disposal.

The full vitrification plant might not be operating until 2031. But by building LAWPS, the Department of Energy could start treating low-activity waste in 2022.