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GAO-05-1044R 1 (2005-09-22)

handle is hein.gao/gaocrptarcl0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 



  SGAO

       Accountability * Integrity  Reliability
United States Government Accountability Office
Washington, DC 20548







         September 22, 2005

         The Honorable Jeff Sessions
         Chairman, Subcommittee on Strategic Forces
         Committee on Armed Services
         United States Senate

         The Honorable Wayne Allard
         United States Senate

         Subject: Nuclear Cleanup: Preliminary Results of the Review of the Department of
         Energy's Rocky Flats Closure Project

         For about 40 years, the Department of Energy's Rocky Flats site, near Denver, served
         as a production facility that made plutonium triggers, or pits, for nuclear weapons.
         That role resulted in radiological and chemical contamination of many of the site's
         buildings and its soil and water. Cleanup of the site, which commenced in 1996, has
         been a monumental undertaking. The cleanup is being conducted under the Rocky
         Flats Cleanup Agreement, which is the legally binding agreement that provides the
         framework for the cleanup effort.' The cleanup agreement specifies the roles of the
         Department of Energy (DOE) and the two regulatory agencies for the site: the
         Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Colorado Department of Public
         Health and Environment (Colorado). In February 2001, when GAO last reported on
         DOE's project to clean up and close the Rocky Flats site,2 the project was slightly
         over cost and behind schedule. The vast amount of work remaining to be done at
         that time, along with various major challenges facing the cleanup contractor, made it
         doubtful that the contractor could achieve its December 2006 closure goal. But now
         the contractor hired by DOE (Kaiser-Hill Company, L.L.C.) plans to complete the
         physical cleanup portion of the work early and under budget. The regulatory
         agencies' final decision on the adequacy of the cleanup will take another year or so
         after completion of the physical cleanup, and the majority of the planned wildlife
         refuge will not open to the public for at least 5 years.

         'In addition, the cleanup must be conducted in accordance with all applicable statutes, including the
         Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980, as amended, also
         known as Superfund; and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, as amended.

         2GAO, Nuclear Cleanup: Progress Made at Rocky Flats, but Closure by 2006 Is Unlikely, and Costs
         May Increase, GAO-0 1-284 (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 28, 2001).


GAO-05-1044R Rocky Flats Closure Project

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