Washington State Seeks
to Bar More Waste from Hanford Nuclear Site
July 13, 2006 — By Associated Press
SPOKANE, Wash. — Washington state is
appealing a ruling that struck down a voter-approved initiative barring
the federal government from accepting more radioactive waste at the
Hanford nuclear site.
U.S. District Judge Alan McDonald ruled last month that the initiative was
unconstitutional. It would bar the government from accepting more nuclear
waste at Hanford until what's already there has been cleaned up.
State attorneys filed a notice of appeal Wednesday with the 9th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco.
"We are not content to let this decision rest with a single district court
judge," Attorney General Rob McKenna said in a statement.
The judge ruled that the initiative is unconstitutional because it
violates federal authority over nuclear waste, as well as the
Constitution's interstate commerce clause.
Voters overwhelmingly approved the initiative in 2004. The federal
government immediately sued to overturn it.
Hanford was built in the 1940s as part of the top-secret Manhattan Project
to build the atomic bomb. It produced plutonium for the nation's nuclear
arsenal for 40 years.
Today, it is the nation's most contaminated nuclear site. Cleanup costs
are expected to total as much as $60 billion, with the work to be finished
by 2035.
Source: Associated Press