Advertisement

Rocketdyne Gets Funds to Clean Site

Environment: Federal officials hail $148.5-million contract as a cost-effective way to decontaminate center. Critic calls the move a farce.

December 16, 1998|KATE FOLMAR, TIMES STAFF WRITER

The U. S. Department of Energy on Tuesday awarded Rocketdyne a multiyear $148.5-million contract to clean up contaminated water, soil and buildings at the Santa Susana Field Laboratory in the mountains northwest of Chatsworth.

Federal officials and Rocketdyne representatives hailed the contract, which runs through 2006, as a cost-efficient way to clean up the Energy Technology Engineering Center. That complex--government-leased land where scientists conducted nuclear research during the Cold War--sits on 90 acres in the rugged Santa Susana Mountains near Simi Valley.


Advertisement

"One of my top priorities for the department includes safe, effective and expeditious cleanup at DOE sites," Energy Secretary Bill Richardson said Tuesday. "The new contract will strictly focus on environment, and health and safety of the workers and the public."

A critic said that giving the contract to the aerospace giant without seeking competitive bids was a farce.

"If I recall, the entity that made the mess was Rocketdyne under contract for the Department of Energy," said Joseph K. Lyou, executive director of the anti-nuclear group Committee to Bridge the Gap. "Now the government is taking taxpayers' dollars to pay that polluter, Rocketdyne, an enormous amount of money to clean the mess they made. What a sham."

While saying she was delighted with the contract award, U. S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) said she hoped that government agencies could also scrape together dollars to study the health of people who live near the open-air field lab.

Many Rocketdyne neighbors blame the company's activities for their health problems. A recent UCLA study that found higher-than-expected cancer death rates among some Rocketdyne employees added to community concerns.

"I regret the fact that the [energy] department is not able to fund the 1998 community health study project but has requested that the Department of Health and Human Services consider doing so," Feinstein said. "I believe it is important that these health studies be finished. . . ."

After four decades of energy development research--from nuclear to solar power--the site is tainted with radioactive materials and toxics.

In particular, ground water is contaminated with the cancer-causing agent trichloroethylene. The site, closed for cleanup since 1995, is also peppered with the contaminants mercury, petroleum hydrocarbons, dioxin and cesium-137.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|