LiftPacs Key to Resuming Demolition Work at Hanford

Last Updated On Aug 8, 2018

HANFORD TO PERFORM FINAL ASSESSMENT BEFORE RESUMING PFP DEMOLITION

Plutonium Finishing Plant workers conduct full-scale dress rehearsals, or mockups, to train on enhanced safety controls and work procedures before demolition resumes.

RICHLAND, Wash. – EM Richland Operations Office (RL) contractor CH2M HILL Plateau Remediation (CHPRC) and parent company Jacobs Engineering are set to conduct a final assessment Aug. 13-23 of the contractor’s readiness to resume demolition of Hanford’s Plutonium Finishing Plant (PFP).

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The management assessment will include an onsite DOE team and will determine whether CHPRC and Jacobs are ready to implement enhanced safety measures to control contamination and protect workers, the public, and the environment. Following this evaluation, any issues identified will be corrected prior to the contractor asking DOE for approval to restart demolition.

The final assessment comes after months of evaluations and preparations following a December spread of low levels of contamination that halted demolition. CHPRC and Jacobs produced a causal analysis, which is an extensive review of causes, and a plan for demolition. DOE reviewed both documents at the local and headquarters levels, and a DOE expert panel concluded the remaining demolition can be successful.

“The strategy to resume demolition of the Plutonium Finishing Plant includes input from workers, labor, and an independent DOE expert panel, and contains numerous safety and work control enhancements resulting from the root cause evaluation and other assessments,” RL Federal Project Director Tom Teynor said.

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To reduce the amount of contaminated material at the Plutonium Finishing Plant by 90 percent (by plutonium content) before demolition resumes, workers removed more than 100 containers of debris that had already been packaged, including 20 large “super sacks.”

Hanford regulatory agencies also reviewed the demolition plan and recently lifted a formal stop-work order under Hanford’s Tri-Party Agreement to allow resumption of lower-risk demolition activities.

Demolition plans call for activities to occur in phases — lower-risk work, another management assessment, and higher-risk work.

The lower-risk work consists of removing demolition debris from around the Main Processing Facility (234-5Z), followed by demolition of the less-contaminated portions of that facility and an associated storage vault.

The higher-risk work consists of demolishing the remaining portions of the Main Processing Facility — two former plutonium metal and oxide production lines and the tunnels beneath — and removing debris remaining from demolition of the Plutonium Reclamation Facility in December.

The second management assessment, like the one to start next week, will incorporate worker feedback and lessons learned.

“PFP workers, union safety representatives, the technical staff, and project managers have done a great job developing this approach and identifying and implementing enhanced controls,” said Jason Casper, Jacobs PFP resumption manager. “I want to thank them for their partnership throughout this process.”

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This July 2018 aerial photo shows the partially demolished Main Processing Facility of the Plutonium Finishing Plant at center. Blue areas indicate where workers have been spraying adhesive paint, called fixatives, over the past several months to prevent contamination from spreading.

Enhanced controls to prevent the spread of contamination include expanding radiological boundaries to include a larger area, adding monitoring devices in more locations, increasing the frequency of checking monitors for contamination, removing debris as demolition proceeds rather than letting it pile up, and following manufacturers’ recommendations on dilution when spraying fixatives. Enhanced oversight is also in place for work activities and any proposed changes to work packages.

More information about the phased demolition approach, including enhanced controls, is available at this website. The site includes employee communications, briefings, and other information related to PFP recovery and demolition.

-Contributor: Destry Henderson

Taken from EM Update, Vol. 10, Issue 31 dated August 7, 2018


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