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Uranium Mill Tailings Remedial Action

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INTRODUCTION TO URANIUM MILL TAILINGS
REMEDIAL ACTION PROGRAM OFFICE

24 Surface and Ground-Water Sites in 10 States

Twenty-four designated Uranium Mill Tailings Remedial Action (UMTRA) sites are located in 10 states, including Arizona (two sites), Colorado (nine sites), Idaho (one site), New Mexico (two sites), North Dakota (two sites), Oregon (one site), Pennsylvania (one site), Texas (one site), Utah (three sites), and Wyoming (two sites). The UMTRA Surface Project is managed out of the Albuquerque Operations Office located in New Mexico. The UMTRA Ground-Water Compliance Project is managed out of the Grand Junction Projects Office.

Uranium Mill Tailings Remedial Action (UMTRA) Program

Uranium Mill Tailings Remedial Action (UMTRA) Program

FACILITY MISSION

The United States Congress passed the Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act in 1978 in response to public concern regarding potential health hazards of long-term exposure to radiation from uranium mill tailings. The Act authorized the Department of Energy to stabilize, dispose of, and control uranium mill tailings and other contaminated material at 24 uranium mill processing sites and approximately 5,200 associated vicinity properties.

During the 1950s and 60s, private firms processed most uranium ore mined in the United States for the Atomic Energy Commission, a predecessor of the Department of Energy. The processing plants were shut down, and the tailings piles from mill operations were abandoned. These sites presented a potential long-term health hazard because they contained low-level radioactive and other hazardous substances that migrated to surrounding soil, ground water, and surface water. Furthermore, the piles often emitted radon gas. The tailings and other contaminated material were also used as fill dirt or incorporated into various construction materials at thousands of offsite locations.

The goals of the UMTRA Program are to: (1) address immediate risk concerns and prevent further increases in relative risk at all sites; (2) complete surface remedial action work at all 24 mill tailings sites and related vicinity properties by FY 1998; and (3) complete ground-water activities in compliance with Environment Protection Agency standards no later than FY 2014.

The Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act directed the Environmental Protection Agency to promulgate cleanup standards (40 Code of Federal Regulations 192) and assigned the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to oversee the cleanup and license the completed disposal cells. The responsibilities of the states and Tribes include (1) acting as an interface between the Department and the local community; (2) participating in public meetings; (3) acquiring real estate, where necessary; (4) interfacing with the Department on the environmental assessment; (5) reviewing remedial action plans; (6) concurring on supplemental standards; and (7) concurring that remedial action is complete. The Act also required the states to pay 10 percent of the remedial action and site acquisition costs.

The UMTRA program does not have any current or anticipated need for nuclear material and facility stabilization activities. The scope of environmental restoration includes all costs for waste management, program management, and landlord activities attributable to the Department of Energy.

FUTURE USE

Eleven of the 24 sites will employ a stabilize-in-place or stabilize-on-site disposal option. Portions of the sites not used by the disposal cell and its buffer area may be available for other uses but will likely maintain some form of land-use restriction. The Federal Government will maintain the portion of the site that contains the disposal cell under the Long-Term Surveillance and Maintenance program. Administration and costs associated with the Long-Term Surveillance and Maintenance program are provided for by the Grand Junction Projects Office. They are accounted for in the summary for that site in the Colorado section of this report.

Contamination at the 13 remaining sites will be excavated and disposed of offsite at remote disposal locations typically owned by the Department of Energy. These locations will also enter the Long-Term Surveillance and Maintenance program. Although these sites may be released without radiological restriction, the Department could enforce ground-water restrictions for many years. In most cases, the title to the portion of the site that does require institutional control by the Department will be transferred to the state or Tribe or remain with the original owners.

In all cases, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission will review and approve the ground-water remedial action plan strategy for the site, before any decisions regarding its future use are made. The affected states and Tribes will actively participate in this decision.

PRODUCTIVITY IMPROVEMENTS AND COST EFFECTIVENESS

The National Performance Review, instituted by Vice President Gore, presented the Hammer Award to the UMTRA program in October 1995 for the success of its Cost Productivity/Reduction Improvement Program. Since FY 1988, the UMTRA program has saved over $65 million through 1,300 contributions made by project participants.

ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION

The UMTRA program consists of two distinct projects, the Surface Project and the Ground-Water Compliance Project, which are directed by the Albuquerque Office and the Grand Junction Projects Office respectively. For clarity, this site summary has consolidated both projects. Costs for these activities have been apportioned to applicable sites. Under the provisions of the Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act, the Department pays 100 percent of the cost of the assessment activities and 90 percent of the remedial action activities for both surface and ground-water projects. The affected states pay the remaining 10 percent of the remedial action costs, with the exception of those sites located on Indian Tribal lands, where the Department pays 100 percent of the costs.

The Edgemont, South Dakota site is the only UMTRA site that has no remaining Surface and/or Ground-water Project scope or open legal issues. There is no additional Department of Energy liability at this site. The mill was constructed in 1956 to extract uranium from uranium ore and was operated by a subsidiary of Susquehanna-Western, Inc. Vanadium processing capability was added in 1960. All processing was complete by 1974, and the owners stabilized the tailings and other contamination onsite prior to the enactment of the Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act. Although the Edgemont site was not designated as one of the 24 UMTRA sites, a 1983 amendment to the Act required the Department to address the 135 vicinity properties associated with the Edgemont site. Material was removed from the vicinity properties and stabilized at the Edgemont site's Nuclear Regulatory Commission-licenced disposal cell. The current licensee is expected to turn the site over to the Grand Junction Projects Office's Long-Term Surveillance and Maintenance program in 1996.

The State of North Dakota has requested that the Department remove the Bellfield and Bowman sites from designation under the Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act. All activities have been suspended pending their removal from the designation list. However, estimated costs and site summaries are provided for these sites to frame the potential scope of Department of Energy activities in the event that these sites are not delisted.

STAKEHOLDER INTERACTIONS

No Baseline Report public participation activities were conducted for the Uranium Mill Tailings Remedial Action sites. However, most sites held meetings with their stakeholders for the Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement, which had many issues in common with the Baseline Report. If you would like more information about the report or have questions about the results for these sites, please contact:

Surface Project
Public Participation
Gaeton Falance
(505) 845-5636
gfalance@umtra.ccmail
compuserve.com
Technical Liaison
Steven Hamp
(505) 845-5640
shamp@umtra.ccmail
compuserve.com
Public Affairs
Gaeton Falance
(505) 845-5636
gfalance@umtra.ccmail
compuserve.com
Ground-Water Compliance Project
Public Participation
Audry Berry
(970) 248-7727
audrey.berry@gjpomail.doegjpo.com
Technical Liaison
Chris Pennal
(970) 248-6011
cpennal@gjpomail.doegjpo.com
 

UMTRA Surface Project

Surface remedial action consists of stabilizing the tailings onsite or, in some cases, relocating the tailings to more remote locations. The tailings are covered with soil and rock to prevent radon release, control erosion or biointrusion, and to minimize infiltration of rain and snow that could leach contaminants through the pile into the ground water. Surface remedial action at the 24 sites includes the costs for applicable vicinity properties and remote disposal locations.

For the surface project at each site a Remedial Action Plan will be generated that will (1) present the series of activities that are proposed by the Department to accomplish long-term stabilization and control of the radioactive materials at the inactive processing site; (2) provide a characterization of the present conditions of the sites; (3) document the concurrence by the state or Tribe and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in the remedial action plan; and (4) consolidate available engineering, radiological, geotechnical, hydrological, and other information pertinent to the remedial action.

UMTRA Surface Project Activities
Site Name
Surface Remediation Completion Date NRC Certification Date NRC Licensing Date Transfer to LTSM (GJPO) Date
Fiscal Year
Ambrosia Lake, New Mexico 1995 1996 1997 1997
Belfield, North Dakota1, 2 1997 1998 NA NA
Bowman, North Dakota1 1997 1998 1998 1998
Canonsburg, Pennsylvania 2, 3 1987 1995 1996 1994
Durango, Colorado 2 1991 1996 1996 1996
Falls City, Texas 1994 1996 1997 1997
Grand Junction, Colorado2 1994 1999 1999 2000
Green River, Utah 1990 1992 1996 1996
Gunnison, Colorado 2 1996 1997 1997 1998
Lakeview, Oregon 2 1990 1994 1995 1995
Lowman, Idaho 1992 1994 1994 1995
Maybell, Colorado 1997 1998 1998 1998
Mexican Hat, Utah 1995 1996 1996 1997
Monument Valley, Arizona 2 1994 1996 NA NA
Naturita, Colorado 2 1997 1998 1998 1998
Rifle, Colorado (2 sites) 2 1996 1998 1998 1998
Riverton, Wyoming 2 1990 1995 NA NA
Salt Lake City, Utah 1989 1997 1998 1998
Shiprock, New Mexico 1987 1991 1996 1997
Slick Rock, Colorado (2 sites) 2 1996 1998 1998 1998
Spook, Wyoming 1989 1992 1993 1994
Tuba City, Arizona 1990 1996 1997 1996
1 The State of North Dakota has requested that the Department remove these sites from designation under the Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act. All activities have been suspended pending their removal from the designation list.
2 Indicates remote disposal cell.
3 This date represents the licensing date for the processing site. Remote disposal cell was licensed in 1994.

The Long-Term Surveillance Plan, which describes how the disposal site will be managed, will be written concurrently with the each site's disposal cell Completion Report and final Audit Report. These two documents will be included as part of the Department's site Certification Report, which explains that the processing site has been cleaned up according to the provisions of the Remedial Action Plan. The site Certification Report and the Long-Term Surveillance Plan will be submitted to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission for concurrence as the first step towards licensing the disposal cell. Between the time that the remedial action is completed and the licensed site's surveillance activities are transferred to the Long-Term Surveillance and Maintenance Program, annual site inspections and custodial maintenance will be conducted under the UMTRA Surface Project's Pre-licensing Custodial Care activities. The prime objective will be to maintain cell integrity. Long-term surveillance of the disposal site will ensure that the cell continues to function as designed and that it continues to meet the licensing conditions. Also included will be general custodial maintenance, such as grass mowing and sign repair, and annual reports describing all site activities and findings, which will be provided to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, applicable state governments, and other affected parties.Future assessment efforts for the UMTRA Surface Project will center around investigating new vicinity properties (particularly the Grand Junction site) and the certification and licensing of all completed site remedial actions and disposal cells. Remediation will consist of completing the six sites started prior to FY 1995, starting the cleanup of the last five processing sites in FY 1995 and FY 1996, and completing cleanup of all sites by the end of FY 1998. Activities in FY 1999 will consist of finalization of site and vicinity property completion reports. Surface remedial action activities have been completed at 16 of the 24 sites, including: Ambrosia Lake, Canonsburg, Durango, Falls City, Grand Junction, Green River, Gunnison, Mexican Hat, Lakeview, Lowman, Monument Valley, Riverton, Shiprock, Salt Lake City, Spook, and Tuba City. The disposal cell at Grand Junction remains open to accept additional vicinity property material.Of the eight surface remedial action sites remaining, six are currently under way. As noted earlier, the State of North Dakota recently requested that the remaining two sites, Belfield and Bowman, be removed (delisted) from designation under the Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act.

UMTRA Ground-Water Compliance Project

Former uranium processing activities at most of the 24 inactive mill sites resulted in contamination of ground water beneath, and in some cases, downgradient of the sites. This contaminated ground water often has elevated levels of contaminants such as uranium or nitrates.The UMTRA Ground-Water Compliance Project is currently in the planning stages and includes completing a baseline risk assessment for six sites and preparing site observational work plans for nine sites. In addition, ground-water monitoring activities will be conducted to ensure public safety. The project was established to achieve compliance with Environmental Protection Agency standards. A Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement will be used as a decision making framework for determining the project-wide ground-water compliance strategy. The UMTRA Ground-Water Project Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement analyzes the potential impacts of four alternatives for conducting the Ground- Water Project, including the proposed action. These alternatives do not address site-specific ground-water compliance strategies because the Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement is a planning document only. It assesses the potential programmatic impacts of conducting the Ground-Water Project, provides a method for determining the site-specific ground water compliance strategies, and provides data and information that can be used to prepare site-specific environmental impacts analyses more efficiently. These proposed compliance strategies reflect the variety of ground-water conditions anticipated at the UMTRA sites and include No Further Action, No Action with Additional Characterization and/or Supplemental Standards or Alternate Concentration Limits, passive remediation (natural flushing), and engineered remedial actions. The draft Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement was published in the spring of 1995. In conjunction with that activity, the UMTRA Program is preparing site-specific baseline risk assessments. These assessments evaluate risks to human health and the environment by collecting field data and performing calculations and simulations. With one exception, the baseline risk assessments were complete in FY 1995. The last baseline risk assessment is scheduled for completion in FY 1996.

UMTRA Ground-Water Compliance Project Activities
Site Name
Remedial Action Plan Completion Date
(Fiscal Year)
Assumed Remedial Approach Assumed Certification Date
(Fiscal Year)
Ambrosia Lake, New Mexico 1999 No Further Action 2000
Belfield, North Dakota1 2004 No Further Action 2005
Bowman, North Dakota1 2004 No Further Action 2005
Canonsburg, Pennsylvania 2000 Characterization & Supplemental Standards 2001
Durango, Colorado 2005 Natural Flushing 2011
Falls City, Texas 2000 Characterization &Supplemental Standards 2001
Grand Junction, Colorado 2004 Natural Flushing 2011
Green River, Utah 2003 Characterization & Supplemental Standards 2004
Gunnison, Colorado 2004 Natural Flushing 2010
Lakeview, Oregon 2002 Characterization & Supplemental Standards 2002
Lowman, Idaho N/A No Further Action 2002
Maybell, Colorado 2002 Characterization & Supplemental Standards 2002
Mexican Hat 1999 Characterization & Supplemental Standards 2002
Monument Valley, Arizona 2003 Active 2015
Naturita, Colorado 2007 Natural Flushing 2013
Rifle, Colorado (2 sites) 2004 Natural Flushing 2010
Riverton, Wyoming 2002 Natural Flushing 2009
Salt Lake City, Utah 2005 Characterization &Supplemental Standards 2005
Shiprock, New Mexico 2001 Natural Flushing with passive flow-through barrier 2002
Slick Rock, Colorado (2 sites) 2007 Natural Flushing 2013
Spook, Wyoming 1998 Supplemental Standards 1999
Tuba City, Arizona 2002 Active 2013
1 The State of North Dakota has requested that the Department remove these sites from designation under the Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act. All activities have been suspended pending their removal from the designation list.

Site observational work plans for applicable sites began in FY 1994 and will continue through FY 2004 per the project schedule. These plans will define the technical scope, objectives, and strategies for the anticipated ground-water compliance activities at the site from characterization through engineering design and remediation. Site-specific environmental assessments, adhering to the framework defined in the Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement, will describe each site's compliance strategy. Because they follow the completion of the site observational work plans, preparation of environmental assessments will be initiated in FY 1996 and continue, according to the project schedule, through FY 2005.

The site-specific Remedial Action Plans will describe regulatory compliance strategies for the sites where active remediation strategies are proposed. The Remedial Action Plans will provide the information for States and Tribes to participate and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to concur upon the selection of the compliance strategy. Remedial Action Plans will be initiated just prior to finalization of environmental assessments and publishing of the Findings of No Significant Impacts in the Federal Register. They are scheduled to begin in FY 1997 and continue through FY 2007.

Although no decisions can be made prior to release of the Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement, budget preparation requires that site-specific scenarios be addressed as described above. This estimate assumes that two sites will require active compliance strategies. The active remedial action at these sites will require certification by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission that they are complete. This report assumes that active remediation will begin in FY 2002 and will be complete by FY 2014.

The remaining sites would have passive (natural flushing) strategies imposed, No Action with Additional Characterization, Supplemental Standards or Alternate Concentration Limits, or No Further Action. For No Further Action or No Action with Additional Characterization and/or sites where Supplemental Standards or Alternate Concentration Limits can be applied, no monitoring will be conducted. If natural flushing is selected as the compliance strategy, verification monitoring will be conducted for a three-to-five year period, followed by compliance monitoring under the Long­Term Surveillance and Maintenance Program for up to 90 more years.

If an Active Remediation compliance strategy is selected, ground-water monitoring will be conducted during the remedial action to ensure that active remediation is working as predicted and to determine when compliance has been achieved.

For all types of ground-water compliance strategies, once the Nuclear Regulatory Commission determines that the site is in compliance with Subpart B of the Environmental Protection Agency Standards, no additional long-term surveillance or monitoring will be conducted for ground water.

DESCRIPTION OF PERSONNEL

Current staffing requirements presented in the table below represent the total work force for the overall UMTRA program. The federal work force consists of a manager and scientists. The contractor work force is a mix of professional staff and labor, who plan and perform the remediation of the various sites.

Full-Time Equivalent Composition Table*

Full-Time Equivalent Composition Table*
*The projections for Full-Time Equivalent employees are based on FY 1996 planning baselines (see Reader's Guide).

Site Management Structure

The UMTRA Ground-Water Project transferred from the Albuquerque Operations Office to the Grand Junction Projects Office on October 1, 1995. The surface project will continue to be supported by the technical assistance contract in place with Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc., which is scheduled to expire in 1996. This report assumes that only the portion of the contract supporting the surface project will be extended through completion of the surface project. The ground water project will be supported by the new Grand Junction support contract currently held by Rust Geotech beginning in April 1996. This contract will expire June 30, 1996 and is in the process of being rebid as two support services contracts, each with a three-year term and two one-year extensions.

CONTRACTING OPPORTUNITIES

If you would like more information about performing work for the Department of Energy's Environmental Management program at this site, please contact:

Major Procurements
William Meyers
Director
Contracts and Procurement Division
United States Department of Energy
Albuquerque Operations Office
P.O. Box 5400
Albuquerque, NM 87185- 5400
p: (505) 845-5777
f: (505) 845-4210
Small Business Procurements
Greg Gonzales
Contracts and Procurement Division
United States Department of Energy
Albuquerque Operations Office
P.O. Box 5400
Albuquerque, NM 87185-5400
p: (505) 845-6182
f: (505) 845-4210

COMPARISON WITH PREVIOUS ESTIMATE

The 1996 life-cycle cost for the UMTRA Program is $500 million, which, after taking the 1995 expenditure into account, represents a three percent increase over the 1995 estimate of $579 million.

FY 1995-1996 Program Cost Comparison
State
Thousands of Dollars
1995 Estimate Less 1995 Expenditure 1996 Estimate Percent Change
Explanation
Arizona 194,906 203,843 4 - Improved analysis of ground-water project planning levels
- Redistribution of program management support costs across all sites
Colorado 181,820 216,643 16 - Increases in Grand Junction Vicinity Property remedial action
- Increases in surface remedial action at Slick Rock, Maybell, and Naturita sites
- Improved analysis of ground-water project planning levels
- Durango was not captured in 1995 estimate
- Redistribution of program management support costs across all sites
Idaho 122 559 78 - Ground water long-term surveillance and monitoring
- Redistribution of program management support costs across all sites
New Mexico 2,672 9,296 71 - Improved analysis of ground-water project planning levels
- Redistribution of program management support costs across all sites
North Dakota 27,525 23,857 (15) NA
Oregon 4,081 6,564 38 - Improved analysis of ground-water project planning levels
- Redistribution of program management support costs across all sites
Pennsylvania 5,374 2,821 (90) - Improved analysis of ground-water project planning levels
- Redistribution of program management support costs across all sites
Texas 26,131 5,804 (350) - Improved analysis of ground-water project planning levels
- Redistribution of program management support costs across all sites
Utah 7,064 19,400 64 - Improved analysis of ground-water project planning levels
- Redistribution of program management support costs across all sites
Wyoming 35,427 10,959 (223) - Improved analysis of ground-water project planning levels
- Redistribution of program management support costs across all sites
 
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