Tri-Cities Area Journal of Business
www.tricitiesbusinessnews.com/articles/2056
Brian Vance, U.S. Department of Energy Hanford site manager, in blue helmet, speaks to Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Washington, during her visit to the Hanford Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plant on April 24. (Courtesy U.S. Department of Energy)

Urgency, momentum progress at Hanford

May 16, 2019

By Brian Vance

A sense of urgency is building at the Hanford site as we get closer to delivering on our commitment to safely, efficiently and effectively treat tank waste and close Hanford tanks; continue to remediate waste sites and facilities; and reduce risk to our employees, the public and the environment.

Brian Vance
Brian Vance is the manager of the U.S. Department of Energy Hanford site.

As the manager of both the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of River Protection and Richland Operations Office, I am pleased with our momentum over the past year and expect our momentum to continue building.

This is a time of tremendous change and opportunity for the Hanford site, as we prepare to start tank waste treatment as early as 2022, about a year earlier than our consent decree milestone of December 2023. We are also shifting our operational culture to prepare for round-the-clock tank waste treatment operations, while also focusing on being a demanding and fair customer to our contractors; enforcing ethical standards and conduct; building and maintaining constructive relationships with Hanford stakeholders; and driving our performance to higher standards.

To foster this transition, in February I was named the acting manager for the Richland Operations Office in addition to my role as manager for the Office of River Protection. Under this single-manager leadership, we have an opportunity to drive positive change that safely delivers cost-effective cleanup, reduces risks and provides the best return on the taxpayer’s investment. This change, however, does not represent a recombination of the offices.

Our plan to treat the less radioactive tank waste, known as

direct-feed low-activity waste, requires strong teamwork between DOE and all of

the site’s contractors. Design is underway on a system called tank-side cesium

removal, or TSCR, which will remove cesium and solid materials – the

higher-level waste components – from the liquid tank waste, providing a

low-activity waste stream for vitrification in the Hanford Waste Treatment and

Immobilization Plant Low-Activity Waste Facility.

Understanding the status of older tanks and preventing

contamination that has already leaked from tanks in the past from moving deeper

toward groundwater are also priorities. The tank operations contractor has

completed integrity assessments on all 149 single-shell tanks and in 2018

constructed a surface barrier over SX tank farm,

to prevent precipitation from driving contamination in the soil deeper.

Near the Columbia River, we are at the halfway point of

transferring 35 cubic yards of radioactive sludge from the K West Reactor Basin

away from the river and expect to complete this significant achievement this

year. We are also making good progress on installing remote-controlled

equipment in a former nuclear laboratory north of Richland to excavate highly

contaminated soil beneath the 324 Building.

On the central plateau, lower risk demolition of the

Plutonium Finishing Plant has resumed, and we will work at a safe and

deliberate pace to ensure we are protecting workers, the public, and the

environment. Workers have finished filling a second waste storage tunnel near

the Plutonium Uranium Extraction Plant with grout to prevent a potential

release of contaminated material from a collapse.

Across Hanford, we expect once again to exceed our goal of

treating nearly

2 billion gallons of contaminated groundwater and removing tons of

contaminants, reducing risk to the Columbia River and shrinking the size of

contaminated groundwater areas.

However, even as we continue to make good progress, we also

are facing stark realizations regarding the schedule and cost to achieve this

cleanup.

Hanford receives about $2.4 billion annually, which enables

our more than 9,000 federal and contractor staff to safely advance our cleanup

mission. These staff are highly trained with unique skills and capabilities.

But with decades more to go our success lies in the next generation of cleanup

employees and leaders. Through engagement with our area colleges and

universities, the department and our contractors are helping to develop this

next generation.

I’d also be remiss if I did not mention the importance of our

community businesses and stakeholders, who continue to support our cleanup

efforts. Our prime contractors reported more than $785 million in

subcontracting last year, including over $500 million going to local businesses

and about $400 million going to small businesses.

I’m proud to say Hanford enjoys the

support of many stakeholders, and we don’t take that for granted. The recently

released Hanford lifecycle report showed a significant increase in the

estimated cost of future cleanup, which further demonstrates that new

approaches are needed for the mission at Hanford. We do not accept the status

quo and we look forward to continuing to collaborate with Congress, tribal

governments, regulators and Hanford stakeholders to change course and enable

our future success.

Across all of our projects, my role is to reinforce a sense

of deliberate urgency as we look to achieve a safe, affordable and protective

cleanup for the community and the American taxpayer, and I look forward to

discussing this more with you and hearing your input at our meetings throughout

the year.

For more information on progress at Hanford, go to www.hanford.gov.