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Lawmakers make plea for more Hanford money
Friday May 9th 2008

Decision on nuclear waste disposal delayed
Monday April 28th 2008

Cleanup chief Rispoli lists top Hanford priorities
Thursday April 24th 2008

Lawmakers ask GAO for review of waste treatment plant's work 'stand-downs'
Friday April 18th 2008

Sen. Murray rebukes DOE over Hanford budget
Thursday April 10th 2008

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Sen. Murray rebukes DOE over Hanford budget

This story was published Thursday April 10th 2008

By Annette Cary, Herald staff writer

The federal government is playing with fire by underfunding the Hanford budget for next year, an annoyed Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., said at a congressional hearing Wednesday.

"Are you proud of this budget?" she asked twice as James Rispoli, the Department of Energy's assistant secretary for environmental management, fielded questions at a hearing of the Senate Energy and Water Appropriations Subcommittee.

The Bush administration has acknowledged its fiscal year 2009 budget proposal would cause up to 23 legal deadlines to be missed at DOE cleanup sites, and up to 600 people could be laid off, Rispoli said.

If all of the deadlines are missed, DOE and its contractors could be liable for up to $10 million in penalties, he said.

"I'm not just saddened by this budget request, I'm angered," Murray said.

The White House has proposed an unacceptably low budget, believing that Congress will do the difficult work of increasing it, she said. But if Congress does increase the overall budget, President Bush will veto it, she said.

Layoffs likely will be required this summer at Hanford because of the Bush administration's low budget proposal. Then, if Congress succeeds in increasing the budget, those workers will have to be found and hired back, she said.

"These jobs are dangerous ... and we have to have people who are highly skilled doing them," she said.

Subcommittee Chairman Byron Dorgan said that despite a rising DOE budget, the allocation for cleaning up contaminated sites such as Hanford has been reduced in the administration's budget request for the fourth straight year.

Rispoli pointed out that at the beginning of the Bush administration, Hanford was receiving $1.2 billion a year and that budget has grown to $2 billion a year.

However, $690 million is being used for a new project, construction of Hanford's vitrification plant.

Among changes to the proposed 2009 budget is a $77 million cut for cleanup of Hanford along the Columbia River, a project that is making admirable progress, Murray said.

"I don't understand why we are going to pull the rug out from under a high performing project," Murray said.

DOE is prepared to negotiate with the state if it believes cleaning up the river corridor should be a higher priority than other work, Rispoli said.

"That's not fair to dump it on the state," Murray said.

She told Rispoli that DOE has a moral and legal obligation to clean up waste and contamination at Hanford.


Dept. Of Energy: DOE names assistant manager for tank farms

05/09/2008

Fluor: Fluor wins $8 billion Savannah River contract

04/26/2008

Battelle/PNNL: Hanford molasses results sweet, so far

05/05/2008

CH2M Hill: Tank spill funds to stay in Mid-Columbia

04/25/2008

Washington Closure: Disposal procedure to change at Hanford

04/23/2008

Homeland Security: Jet encounter is test exercise

10/12/2007

Cleanup: Lawmakers make plea for more Hanford money

05/09/2008

Energy Northwest: Wind batters Energy Northwest's Columbia Generating Station

02/14/2008

B Reactor: Board will consider landmark status

05/08/2008

Vit Plant: Wyden raises concerns over quality control at Hanford's vit plant

04/09/2008


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