State: ‘Indifference’ to worker safety at Hanford must end

Published 1:30 am Wednesday, October 12, 2016

State: ‘Indifference’ to worker safety at Hanford must end
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State: ‘Indifference’ to worker safety at Hanford must end
In this 2014 photo, workers wearing protective clothing and footwear inspect a valve at the “C” tank farm on the Hanford Nuclear Reservation near Richland. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)

Associated Press

SPOKANE — Washington state wants a federal judge to issue an injunction requiring the Department of Energy and its contractor to take steps to protect workers at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation.

The Tri-City Herald reported that from January through July, Hanford workers reported suspicious smells or symptoms that indicate exposure to chemical vapors.

The Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson said more than 50 workers have been exposed to toxic vapors and the “culture of indifference to worker safety must end.”

The state plans to make that argument during a federal hearing set for Wednesday morning in Spokane.

The agency has claimed that the plaintiffs in the case have not shown harm to Hanford workers from vapors. It has argued that symptoms like headaches are common and don’t necessarily indicate exposure to vapors.

The state called that claim “astounding.”

The judge also will hear arguments on DOE’s motion to dismiss the state’s case.