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Nuclear Cleanup Site Has Cities Cleaning Up Financially

Cleanup of Hanford also has the virtue of being a public, environmentally friendly process, unlike the sloppy, secret and paranoid decades of the Cold War. Then, 440 billion gallons of contaminated liquid were intentionally dumped into the soil here, health scientists collected urine samples from front porches of Richland technicians and FBI agents asked neighbor to snitch on neighbor.

In the Cold War era, the culture of the Tri-Cities played down health risks at Hanford -- and records show that federal officials sometimes lied about the risks to people who lived downwind.


Houses are being built all over the Tri-Cities area of eastern Washington state near the Hanford nuclear reservation, where a costly cleanup has been going on since 1989. The effort has proved lucrative for area residents.
Houses are being built all over the Tri-Cities area of eastern Washington state near the Hanford nuclear reservation, where a costly cleanup has been going on since 1989. The effort has proved lucrative for area residents. (By Blaine Harden -- The Washington Post)

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In the cleanup era, though, the culture embraces candor.

During a recent public bus tour of the Hanford site, Gerber stood at the front of the bus and spoke in chilling detail about "the long waiting game" that lies ahead before deadly contamination can be cleaned up. She said that if there were a teacup of Hanford's high-level waste on the bus, it would kill or grievously sicken everyone on board within an hour.

Candor, in the cleanup context, is good politics. The more dangerous the site's waste is perceived to be, the more likely the federal government is to continue pumping in money to take care of it.

That spending, Gerber said, has hovered around $2 billion a year for the past 11 years and is likely to continue, with some slow decline, for well more than a decade. Even then, lots of federal money will continue to flow. The cleanup of high-level tank waste, assuming that the new processing plant starts operating by 2019, will then take at least 20 to 25 more years, said Roy Schepens, manager of the Energy Department's Office of River Protection in Richland.

That guarantee has helped secure increased outside investment in local agribusiness, particularly the wine industry and wine tourism. That, in turn, has attracted high-end restaurants such as Anthony's, a seafood restaurant group based in the Seattle area.

"Hanford supplies us with customers in the middle of the week who are doing isotope training and on weekends we have wine tourists," said Lane Hoss, a vice president at Anthony's.

To comprehend the growth and good times that have come with the federal cleanup spending, it is useful to look at Pasco, traditionally the poorest and smallest of the Tri-Cities.

Since 1990, Pasco's population has increased 134 percent, jumping from about 20,000 to nearly 48,000. Pasco High School, now the largest in the state, is bursting at the seams and a second high school is under construction.

"Hanford provides a strong, steady base for the future," said Carl F. Adrian, president of the Tri-City Development Council, which markets the area. "We are looking at growth well into 2040."

Richard J. Smith, Pasco's director of community and economic development, moved to town in 1992 and discovered that he was riding herd on the fastest-growing community in Washington state and one of the fastest-growing in the West.

"It just exploded," he said, noting that 20 years' worth of expected growth occurred in less than 10 years. "There were big potato fields west of town where there was nothing but a water tower. Right now, those fields are totally covered with houses and stores."

In Washington, D.C., news about construction delays and cost increases at Hanford's high-level waste-processing plant has often caused rage and consternation.

"You want to take somebody out and hang them," Rep. David L. Hobson (R-Ohio), chairman of the House subcommittee that pays for the project, told the Los Angeles Times.

But in Pasco, the news has generated a quiet measure of joy.

"We didn't view it as a negative," Smith said, referring to the delays and cost overruns at the waste-processing plant. "If you are an urban planner, this is where the action is."

He said he wishes the Hanford cleanup "would go on forever."


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