This image shows the wall outside of the 324 Building’s B Cell. This cell is about 20 by 20 feet wide and 30-feet tall. The plan is to eventually fill the cell, and other cells, full of grout, tear the building down around the blocks of grout and wire-saw them into pieces that can be lifted and shipped for disposal at Environmental Restoration Disposal Facility. (Photo courtesy of DOE Hanford Site)

This image shows the wall outside of the 324 Building’s B Cell. This cell is about 20 by 20 feet wide and 30-feet tall. The plan is to eventually fill the cell, and other cells, full of grout, tear the building down around the blocks of grout and wire-saw them into pieces that can be lifted and shipped for disposal at Environmental Restoration Disposal Facility. (Photo courtesy of DOE Hanford Site)

Cleaning up radioactive waste spill to take 7 years

  • By Wire Service
  • Wednesday, July 6, 2016 9:40am
  • Local News

Associated Press

RICHLAND — The U.S. Department of Energy is proposing a seven-year plan to clean up a radioactive waste spill under a building on the Hanford Nuclear Reservation.

The structure is known as the 324 Building and is located on the former nuclear weapons production site near Richland.

Contractor Washington Closure Hanford wanted to have the building down in the fall of 2013. But the company discovered a highly radioactive spill under the building from a hot cell leak.

The Tri-City Herald reports the building is 1,000 feet from the Columbia River. There is no evidence that the spill has migrated toward the river.

After the leak was discovered, a new plan was developed to install remotely operated equipment to clean up the spill.

Hanford for decades made plutonium for nuclear weapons.

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