Hermiston Herald
April 2, 2002
Neutralization draws skepticism
By Frank Lockwood
Staff writer
HERMISTON - The Army can speed up the destruction of chemical
agent and
perhaps save money by using neutralization on the mustard agent
at the
Umatilla Chemical Depot, an assistant secretary of the Army says.
However, he said, "If the community doesn't want to do it,
that's fine."
Mario Fiori, assistant secretary of the Army for Installations
and
Environment, spoke at the PMCD Outreach Office last Tuesday about
accelerating chemical weapons destruction. "I'd like decrease
the time that
it would take to get rid of (the nerve agent) by about four to
five years,"
he said.
To speed incineration, the Army could go to three shifts, and
employ
"reconfiguration," and change procedures at the incinerator
in order to
process weapons faster.
"I find this a little confusing," said Morrow County
Judge Terry Tallman,
"when we have been told that incineration is state of the
art and the best
way to take care of this."
"I'm a believer in incineration," Fiori responded.
"Neutralization is fairly
straight forward."
Hermiston community leaders, encouraged by the Army, have repeatedly
spoken
for incineration but against neutralization for this site. Fiori
anticipated
reluctance to accept the changes. "I have read ... 'We are
on this path,
let's stay on it, don't deviate.' Well, we can do that if that's
really what
the community wants. It won't get rid of that (agent) five years
earlier
though."
Umatilla County Commissioner Dennis Doherty questioned the
turn around.
"Speedy neutralization wasn't recommended six years ago,
particularly by the
Army," Doherty said, and "What has changed that makes
it of interest now?"
The Sept. 11 terrorist attacks added motivation for speeding weapons
destruction, Fiori said, but, otherwise, "Nothing has changed.
I am just
interested in speeding up the process." On the other hand,
the Army could
save several years by modifying incineration procedures, employing
alternate
technologies, including neutralization of mustard, and by addressing
unspecified "regulation issues."
Incineration opponents have been alert for any indication Fiori
would seek a
"Consent Decree," which amounts to a waiver of past
permit decisions. DEQ's
Wayne Thomas said Friday that the state is not considering a Consent
Decree.
And neutralization would not delay or slow incineration, Fiori
said. "I want
to accelerate the throughput of that very safe incinerator. I
want to make
sure that we are operating the most efficiently that's possible.
I want to
investigate all presumptions in the way we work. I challenge the
contractor
to come up with a whole bunch of ways to accelerate, if he could,
and I
think it could easily save five years." Fiori said.
Neutralization is touted as a safer, faster way to destroy
2,635 tons of
mustard stored in Umatilla, which makes up about 64 percent of
all the
chemical agent stockpile at the depot.
Comfortable With Incineration
"It has taken 11 or 12 years to get our people who are here
somewhat
comfortable with the incineration process," said Umatilla
Mayor George Hash.
"Now you want us to tell them differently." Hash and
others questioned
adding alternative technologies to the budget when cash is short
for present
safety programs.
"Present radio system can't keep contact with uptown and
downtown Umatilla,"
Hash said.
"If we throw in anything new that (citizens) even perceive
as delaying the
startup, we are going to have some unhappy people here,"
Hash said. "Don't
do anything that's going to delay the startup of this incineration
process."
Fiori, however, said his goal was to speed up incineration, not
to slow it
down.
Impacts Questioned
Morrow County Judge Terry Tallman suggested that running two plants
at once
would aggravate a boom-bust cost to his community. He inquired
as to whether
adding another facility - and the impacts on the communities it
would bring
- would make federal impact aid any more likely.
"That's a valid issue, but I don't think you will get
impact aid," Fiori
said.
Tallman had concerns about the environmental impact, and about
waste
management.
"The depot is in a critical groundwater area," he
said, "and what we have
been told about this technology is that it demands tremendous
amounts of
water. One of the things we do not want to see is people's private
wells and
the city's' wells be impacted because of this greater demand
for water."
A release from Chemical Weapons Working group, however, challenged
that
notion, saying that neutralization might use less water than incineration.
Tallman asked about the disposal of contaminated water which would
be
generated by neutralization. "We don't have the facilities
in Oregon to
handle it - the infrastructure," he said.
"The waste that comes from neutralization is fairly benign," Fiori noted.
"You will drown in it before you are poisoned by it."
But Tallman responded
that he was concerned about the "sheer volume," not
the toxicity of the
neutralization waste.
Other Interests
Increasing incinerator operations to three shifts, seven days
per week,
would increase the need for on-duty CSEPP personnel, but money
is not
budgeted for that, county commissioners said. Army spokesmen replied
that
they needed round-the-clock response capabilities anyway, and
that moving
munitions would only occur during daylight hours, under specific
weather
conditions.
Morrow County Commissioner John Wenholz suggested that funding
for safety
should be tied to any changes that would impact emergency preparedness.
"You say ... for the safety of the Unites States it is important
that we
move this program ahead," Wenholz said. "I am saying,
that for the safety of
the citizens that live in this area, we need whatever funding
it takes to
provide for their safety."
"If you need more resources, I can't imagine not doing
it," Fiori told those
present.
Goals the Same
Citizens Advisory Commission Chairman Bob Flournoy voiced a recurring
theme
when he said, "If we do bring in new technology, we are not
going to (want
to) slow anything down. Because that's what everyone's interested
in.
Getting rid of this stuff.
"Yes sir," Fiori said. "We certainly agree with
the goals that you just
said. And (incineration and neutralization) would be simultaneous
operations, if it ever happens. I am not slowing down incineration."
Frank Lockwood may be reached at 567-6457 or by e-mail at
flockwood@hermistonherald.com.