








See Also
INL
Facilities
Contact INL Oversight
Boise
Office
1410
N. Hilton
Boise,
ID 83706
ph:
(208) 373-0498
fx: (208) 373-0429
Idaho
Falls Office
900
N. Skyline Dr.
Idaho
Falls, ID 83402
ph:
(208) 528-2600
fx:
(208) 528-2605
INL
Oversight Staff List
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About Us:
DEQ's INL Oversight Program
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| History of INL Oversight |
| When
the federal government developed what is now the Idaho National
Laboratory (INL) in 1949, the U.S. was engaged in the Cold War. National
security policy centered on developing a larger and more sophisticated
nuclear weapon arsenal than the Soviet Union.
To reach this goal, the nation often placed a higher priority on
immediate weapons technology development and secrecy than on long-term
effects on human health and the environment. When the veil of secrecy
finally lifted at the end of the Cold War in the 1980s, many Idahoans
learned for the first time that Department of Energy (DOE) activities
had contaminated the Snake River Plain Aquifer.
As the truth about contamination from a half century of nuclear
research and weapons production came to light, states increased
their demands that DOE and other federal agencies meet the same
environmental standards imposed on private industry. Congress eventually
passed legislation making federal agencies subject to Superfund
cleanup requirements, as well as clean air and hazardous waste laws.
However, DOE remained largely self-regulating when it came to nuclear
materials and wastes.
In response to continued calls to improve DOE’s public image,
the Secretary of Energy proposed a non-regulatory oversight role
for states that hosted DOE facilities. In 1989, the Idaho Legislature
established a comprehensive oversight program for the INL. In 1990,
Idaho became the first state in the nation to negotiate a five-year
agreement with DOE to provide funding for independent environmental
oversight and monitoring of a DOE facility within its borders.
Over the years, DEQ's INL Oversight Program
has developed an effective monitoring network to help evaluate the
effects of the INL on public health and the environment. |
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| INL Oversight Activities and
Goals |
| Activities
performed by INL Oversight include environmental surveillance, impact
assessment, emergency planning and response, public information,
and administration. |
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Environmental
Surveillance |
INL
Oversight maintains an independent environmental surveillance program
designed to verify and supplement INL monitoring programs. Over
the past 11 years, the program has developed a database of knowledge
that allows us to better understand background radiation, track
emissions from site facilities, and follow behavior of contamination
in the aquifer.
Monitoring and emergency response work closely together. In case
of an emergency, like last summer’s fires, we do enhanced
monitoring and scrutinize routine monitoring results even more closely
than usual. Monitoring data also help us develop an understanding
of the environment on and around the site so we know how contaminants
could travel through various pathways. This information helps emergency
planners prepare for emergencies and take steps to reduce potential
impacts. Real-time radiological and meteorological information will
also be shared with responders in the event of an emergency.
Oversight publishes technical reports to let other scientists know
what we’ve discovered and a newsletter to let the public know
how the INL affects the environment. Last year we produced posters
so people can get a quick read on the situation.
Environmental surveillance activities include an ongoing sampling
program for air, water, soil and milk. Oversight also conducts special
studies. Several studies now underway evaluate the effectiveness
of a method to verify if a particular area is indeed "clean."
Oversight’s environmental surveillance objectives include:
- Focusing on quality assurance and control so our data will be
reliable
- Continually reassessing our sampling programs' ability to provide
a meaningful picture of air and groundwater impacts from the INL
- Using specialized monitoring equipment to evaluate priority
sites, and
- Improving soil sampling information by developing an appropriate
soil sampling grid.
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Impact Assessment |
| As
the program responsible for coordinating all state activity relating
to the INL, Oversight is charged with developing a "big picture"
view of how the site affects Idaho’s environment and inhabitants.
That "big picture" view includes tracking inventories
of various types of waste and how they are handled, keeping up-to-date
on how facilities are managed, understanding potential impacts of
INL activities, and evaluating how INL is complying with various
state agreements and court orders, including the 1995 Settlement
Agreement.
Oversight staff regularly visit the site, ask questions, and review
engineering documents; review and comment on planning and decision-making
documents; and conduct independent research on how much risk activities
may involve.
Information gathered through impact assessment helps environmental
surveillance staff decide where to focus special monitoring efforts,
and may also guide the work of emergency planners.
Because many people are concerned about nuclear waste, there's a
lot of public information activity involving impact assessment.
We provide additional public information and education for high-profile
impact assessment issues, like decision-making involving management
of high-level waste and the Advanced Mixed Treatment Project.
Oversight’s impact assessment goals include the following:
- Participating in the decision-making process
for INL high-level waste management
- Negotiating an agreement for completing the
transfer of spent nuclear from pool storage to dry storage (completed)
- Participating in DOE's long-term stewardship
initiative
- Ensuring DOE's Hazards Assessments are revised
as appropriate, and
- Reviewing planning documents to determine potential impacts
of DOE activities in Idaho.
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Emergency Planning
and Response |
Oversight
staff work with other state agencies and assist local governments
in their planning and response to emergencies involving radiological
materials, whether they occur at the INL or the many other places
in Idaho radioactive materials are used (like hospitals and technology
and engineering companies). There are also plans for responding
to incidents occurring along transportation routes.
An Oversight Health Physicist is on call, 24 hours a day, 365 days
a year, to help local communities or State Police officers respond
to any event involving radioactive waste or material. In the event
of an incident involving a radioactive hazard, Oversight health
physicists assess potential effects to human health and the environment
and advise state and local agencies how to respond, and provide
data and interpretation of that data to the public.
Environmental monitoring data is vital to good emergency response,
as is the information about day-to-day site activities provided
by impact assessment activities. In the event of an emergency, or
even a field exercise, public information lets the press and the
public know what is happening.
Oversight’s emergency planning and response goals include
the following:
- Ensuring State plans are in place to respond
effectively to radiological events in Idaho
- Ensuring appropriate procedures for state participation
are available in the INL Emergency Operations Center
- Conducting exercises to evaluate procedures
- Improving Internet access to emergency data
and response information for state and local responders and working
with the Eastern Idaho Technical College to provide training to
state and local emergency response staff, and
- Improving interagency cooperation.
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Public Information |
Oversight
was established because legislators felt people in Idaho didn't
know enough about the INL and did not trust the information they
received. Every activity Oversight engages in has a public information
component: environmental surveillance to explain how the INL affects
Idaho's environment; impact assessment to let people know if activities
at the site pose risks to people or the environment, and emergency
planning and response to ensure the public receives accurate, timely
information that can be understood and used.
Oversight addresses issues of interest to the public and provides
information when and where needed. We try to provide objective information
and let people make their own informed decisions. And for those
who have confidence in our independent scientific judgment, we provide
our best interpretation of health risks based on our results.
Policy-makers are key audiences, as they need independent data to
make good decisions. We also target local governments and emergency
responders who rely on our expertise. Oversight also works to develop
credibility within the scientific community. Our most important
audience, however, remains the people for whom the program was created:
the citizens of the state of Idaho.
Oversight’s public information goals include the following:
- Maintaining and improving our Web pages
- Providing information related to high-profile
issues
- Developing new tools to share information,
and
- Exploring new communication venues and increasing
staff interaction with the public.
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Administration |
Administration
includes the nuts-and-bolts activities that keep INL Oversight running—like
making sure staff have the tools they need to get their jobs done,
evaluating our efforts, and making long-term plans for the program.
Administrative goals include the following:
- Negotiating a new 5-year agreement with DOE that outlines program
activities and goals and provides for program funding (completed)
- Updating our strategic plan, and
- Integrating administrative functions with those of DEQ. Oversight
became part of DEQ on July 1, 2000, when both DEQ and Oversight
were separated from the Department of Health and Welfare and Oversight
became a division of DEQ. The change doesn’t affect how
Oversight functions or relates to the public, but it does allow
Oversight to take advantage of DEQ’s administrative functions
like purchasing and fleet management.
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