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Radioactive Air EmissionsThis Program protects the public from airborne radioactivity by enforcing federal and state standards for radioactive air emissions. This includes enforcing offsite dose standards and radionuclide control technology standards. Compliance with regulations is assured through inspections, plan reviews, and licensing. This Program is delegated federal authority for limiting radioactive air emissions from various types of sources. As part of that authority the Program issues Air Emission Licenses to Operate which are included in Air Operating Permits issued by the Department of Ecology (Ecology) (Code of Federal Regulations Title 40, subpart 70). Maintaining this delegation is essential in ensuring continued federal funds for many other programs. The Program is delegated federal authority from EPA for Code of Federal Regulations Title 40 Part 61subparts for airborne radionuclides. These Programs are fee supported. The state standards for radioactive air emissions are set by Ecology, by statute, and enforced state wide at any facility that emits, or has the potential to emit, radionuclides into the air. However, the enforcement of WAC 246-247 at most non-federal facilities is done by the Radioactive Materials Section as part of their Nuclear Regulatory Commissions Agreement State Program. This helps streamline the regulatory process, avoids duplicative efforts, and cuts costs. Exceptions to this are as follows:
In addition to UW and WSU, the Radioactive Air Emissions Program issues licenses for inclusion into AOPs to the Department of Energy at Hanford, the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Bremerton, and Fort Lewis. The program consists of reviewing and approving applications (Notices of Construction), issuing licenses to operate with conditions and limitations, inspecting and auditing emission units and projects to determine compliance, providing technical assistance and enforcing the standards. The program has civil and criminal enforcement authority.
Department of Energy, Hanford Site Operations
The Hanford Site began operation in the 1940's as part of the World War II Manhattan Project. The Hanford Site was a plutonium production complex with nine nuclear reactors and associated processing facilities. Today, the U.S. Department of Energy is cleaning up the waste left over from past Hanford operations. This consists of cleaning up more than 53 million gallons of radioactive and chemically hazardous waste in 177 underground storage tanks, 2,300 tons of spent nuclear fuel, 9 tons of plutonium, and about 25 million cubic feet of buried or stored radioactive and chemically contaminated solid waste. The Washington Administrative Code WAC 246-247-060(7) requires that each Federal Facility, which has the potential to emit radioactive material into the air, hold one air emission license for each site. Federal Facility License FF-01, issued to the U.S. Department of Energy by the Office of Radiation Protection, identifies the required emission control requirements, monitoring requirements and record keeping requirements for each emission unit on the Hanford Site. Manager 509-946-3798 Radiation Health Physicist 509-946-3874 Radiation Health Physicist 509-574-0198 Administrative Assistant 509-946-0192
Mailing Address/Physical Location
Washington State Department of Health Office of Radiation Protection Radioactive Air Emissions Section 309 Bradley Boulevard, Suite 201 Richland, Washington 99352 Fax: 509-946-0876 |
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