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Long-Term Stewardship of DOE Legacy Waste Sites: A Status Report (2003)

Chapter: Appendix C: Presentations to the Committee

« Previous: Appendix B: Biographical Sketches of Committee Members
Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Presentations to the Committee." National Research Council. 2003. Long-Term Stewardship of DOE Legacy Waste Sites: A Status Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10703.
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Appendix C

Presentations to the Committee

August 6-7, 2001, Washington, DC

What is DOE Asking?, Gerald Boyd, Office of Science and Technology in the Office of Environmental Management (EM) at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)

Clean-up and Stewardship: The Big Picture, David Geiser, Office of Long-Term Stewardship DOE EM

LTS Portfolio of Sites and Challenges, Jeffrey Short, Office of Long-Term Stewardship DOE EM

Tribal Perspective on LTS, Russell Jim, Yakama Indian Nation, Environmental Restoration and Waste Management Program

U.S. EPA Perspective on Clean-up and LTS under RCRA and CERCLA, Murray Newton, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA)

State Concerns with Long-Term Stewardship, Howard Roitman, State of Colorado & Environmental Council of the States (ECOS)

U.S. NRC Perspectives on LTS, John Greeves, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (U.S. NRC)

Implementing Long-Term Stewardship under Local, State, and Federal Law, Mervyn Tano, International Institute for Indigenous Resources Management and John Pendergrass, Environmental Law Institute

Institutional Challenges for High-Reliability Systems Across Many Operational Generations, Charles Powers, Consortium for Risk Evaluation with Stakeholder Participation II; and Todd La Porte, Long-Term Institutional Management Committee Member

Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Presentations to the Committee." National Research Council. 2003. Long-Term Stewardship of DOE Legacy Waste Sites: A Status Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10703.
×

October 31, 2001, Miamisburg, Ohio

Speaking With One Voice, Mayor Dick Church, Jr.City of Miamisburg

Historical Overview of Mound Site, Rick Provencher, DOE Ohio

BWXT of Ohio Project Overview, P. Sandy Baker, BWX Technologies, Inc. of Ohio (BWXTO)

Sale of the Site Overview and Post Closure Stewardship Overview, Oba Vincent, DOE Miamisburg Mound Environmental Management Project (MEMP)

Mound 2000 Overview, Brian Nickel, Ohio Environmental Protection Agency

Environmental Restoration Project Overview, Monte Williams, BWXTO

PCS Information Management, Dave Rakel, BWXTO

Layered Approach to Implementation of Institutional Controls, Graham Mitchell, U.S. EPA

PCS Responsibilities—DOE Perspective, Sue Smiley, DOE Ohio

PCS Working Group Overview, Dann Bird, Miamisburg Mound Community Improvement Corporation (MMCIC)

Hazards and Risks, Dave Rakel, BWXTO and Oba Vincent, MEMP

Ownership and Responsibilities, Susan Brechbill, DOE Ohio and Mike Grauwelman, MMCIC

Panel Discussion on Goals and Progress, Susan Brechbill, DOE Ohio, Mike Grauwelman, MMCIC, Graham Mitchell, U.S. EPA, Dave Wood, City Councilman, Sharon Cowdrey, Miamisburg Environmental Safety and Health

Committee Tour of the Mound Site

November 1, 2001, Harrison, Ohio

Committee Tour of the Fernald Site

Physical Drivers/Goals and Progress, Johnny Reising, DOE Fernald

Long-Term Stewardship Plans, Gary Stegner, DOE Fernald

Future of Fernald Process, Doug Sarno, Fernald Citizens Advisory Board

Hazards and Risks, J.D. Chiou, Fluor and Kathleen Nickel, DOE Fernald

Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Presentations to the Committee." National Research Council. 2003. Long-Term Stewardship of DOE Legacy Waste Sites: A Status Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10703.
×

Long-Term Surveillance/Monitoring, Marty Prochaska, Fluor Fernald

January 14-15, 2002, Moab, Utah

Update on LTS Planning and Organization at DOE Headquarters, David Geiser, Office of Long-Term Stewardship, DOE EM

DOE’s Long-Term Surveillance and Maintenance Program and Long-Term Stewardship, Art Kleinrath, DOE Grand Junction Office (GJO)

Experience with Managing Moved Piles, Art Kleinrath, DOE GJO

Experience Remediating Mill Tailings Piles (Title I), Russell Edge, DOE Albuquerque Office (AL)

Committee Tour of the Atlas Mill Tailings Pile

DOE Draft Plan for Remediating the Moab Site, Ray Plieness and the Moab Project Team, DOE GJO

Groundwater Studies by Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), Frank Gardner, ORNL

Groundwater Studies by Shepherd Miller, Toby Wright, Shepherd-Miller, Loren Morton, Utah Division of Radiation Control, and Pete Penoyer, National Park Service

Studies of contaminant Effects on Larval Fish, Ann Allert, USGS and Bruce Waddell, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services (U.S. F&WS)

Human Health and Environmental Impacts of Management Options, Mike Fliegel and Mike Layton, U.S. NRC

Cost Estimates, Russell Edge, DOE AL and Don Metzler, DOE GJO

Comments from DOE, Grand Junction, Donna Bergman-Tabbert, DOE GJO

State of Utah Perspectives and Possible Future Regulation, Diane Nielson, Utah Department of Environmental Quality and Loren Morton, Utah Division of Radiation Control

Existing Regulations and Standards, Mike Fliegel, U.S. NRC

The Endangered Species Act, Yvette Converse, U.S. F&WS

UMTRA Title 1, Richard Graham, U.S. EPA Region 8

Perspectives on Tailings Management, Kimberly Schappert, County Commissioner, William Hedden, Grand Canyon Trust/Utah, Mark Buehler, Los Angeles Metropolitan Water District

Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Presentations to the Committee." National Research Council. 2003. Long-Term Stewardship of DOE Legacy Waste Sites: A Status Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10703.
×

October 14, 2002, Washington, DC

DOE LTS Strategic Plan, Questions and Answers, David Geiser, DOE/Office of Long-Term Stewardship

Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Presentations to the Committee." National Research Council. 2003. Long-Term Stewardship of DOE Legacy Waste Sites: A Status Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10703.
×
Page 50
Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Presentations to the Committee." National Research Council. 2003. Long-Term Stewardship of DOE Legacy Waste Sites: A Status Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10703.
×
Page 51
Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Presentations to the Committee." National Research Council. 2003. Long-Term Stewardship of DOE Legacy Waste Sites: A Status Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10703.
×
Page 52
Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Presentations to the Committee." National Research Council. 2003. Long-Term Stewardship of DOE Legacy Waste Sites: A Status Report. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10703.
×
Page 53
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The Department of Energy (DOE) has over 100 sites at which human access will be restricted even after scheduled cleanups because of the radioactive and chemical contamination and waste that will remain. This report reviews long-term plans for protecting human health and the environment at these sites--a mission DOE calls "long-term stewardship." The committee finds that there is a compartmentalization of cleanup planning and planning for long-term stewardship at the sites. The committee recommends that DOE explicitly plan for long-term stewardship responsibilities as part of its cleanup decisions, and that it taking into account capabilities and limitations of long-term stewardship when making cleanup decisions.

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