Sunday September 19, 2004
Incinerator back up, passes halfway mark
STOCKTON, Tooele County — Back in service after an environmental compliance
review, the Army's chemical weapons incinerator has passed the halfway point
in its work.
The incinerator began destroying the Tooele stockpile of aging nerve and
blister agent weapons in August 1996. Recently, operations at the incinerator,
the Tooele Chemical Agent Disposal Facility, were halted for an environmental
compliance review.
"An exhaustive review of TOCDF's hazardous waste management, clean air and
facility safety requirements was conducted," says a release by Deseret Chemical
Depot, where the plant is located.
It quoted Gary McCloskey, general manager for contractor EG&G Defense
Materials Inc., as saying administrators took "a good, hard look at how we
were doing things and made significant improvements."
The plant went back into operation on Sept. 10.
Two days later, incinerator officials reported it had passed the halfway mark
in getting rid of the toxic stockpile. Before the plant began operating, 13,616
tons of chemical agents were stored at the depot, contained within more than
1 million munitions. It was the country's largest stockpile of chemical arms.
With the processing of a spray tank filled with VX nerve agent last week,
adds the a press release, the plant had destroyed 6,817 tons of agent, "marking
the elimination of more than half of the depot's chemical agent stockpile."
The release quotes depot commander Col. Raymond T. Van Pelt as saying he
was proud of all workers at the depot, "the government civilians who have
transported more than 20,000 separate shipments of munitions to the plant
and those working for the TOCDF systems contractor, EG&G."
About 850 EG&G workers operate and maintain the plant, according to the
release.