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   The Division of Environmental Health licenses, certifications, and permits


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    Dawn Mining Company

The Waste Management Section regulates the Dawn Mining Company uranium millsite through delegated authority from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.  From the mid-50s to the early 80s, Dawn Mining Company conducted uranium milling at the Ford site.  Most of the uranium ore processed at the site was obtained from the Midnite Mine located on the Spokane Tribe of Indians Reservation.  Since the mill was shut down, Dawn Mining Company has been in the process of cleaning up the millsite with Waste Management Section's oversight.  The millsite cleanup includes demolition and burial of site buildings, contaminated soil removal and disposal, and contaminated ground water remediation.

Historical Timeline

1956

DMC was licensed by the federal government to operate the uranium mill located near Ford, Washington.  The site encompasses 820 acres.  The millsite is adjacent to the Spokane Indian Reservation, with Chamokane Creek defining the boundary of the site and reservation.  DMC's Midnite Mine is located on the Spokane Indian Reservation, approximately 25 miles from the mill, and is under the jurisdiction of the federal government.

1969

Washington State assumed full licensing and regulatory authority from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC).

1981

DOH amended DMC's license, authorizing the disposal of uranium mill tailings into Tailings Disposal Area 4 (TDA-4).  TDA-4 is a HDPE lined below-grade impoundment.

TDA-4 was constructed to hold 44 million cubic feet of tailings, but only received 4 million cubic feet before shutdown.

1982

After processing approximately 58 million cubic feet of ore, uranium milling ceased and the facility was placed in a care and maintenance mode.

1987

DMC submitted to DOH a closure and reclamation plan for the millsite.

1989

After groundwater contamination from below TDA's 1, 2, and 3 had been detected in wells and in seeps discharging to Chamokane Creek, DOH issued a groundwater remediation order. 

1991

DMC submitted a revised closure and reclamation plan, which would provide for:

  • Demolition and disposal of the mill buildings.

  • Disposal of contaminated surface soils.

  • Comprehensive ground water cleanup.

  • Filling of 44 million cubic foot Tailings Disposal Area 4.

  • Bio-containment of all contaminated material using engineered cap over the tailings disposal areas.

  • Transfer of title to the site to the federal government for perpetual care and maintenance.

  • Closure activities to be completed by the year 2019.

DOH issued a Final Environmental Impact Statement, rejecting DMC's NORM (naturally occurring radioactive material) TDA-4 fill proposal.

1992

DMC resubmitted their closure plan, with an alternate TDA-4 fill proposal for offsite uranium mill tailings.

1994

DOH issued a supplement to the Final EIS, which found that DMC's alternative fill proposal was environmentally acceptable and posed no threat to human health and safety.

1995 DOH renewed DMC's radioactive materials license to allow DMC to implement its closure plan.  Receipt of out of state uranium mill tailings depended on the following license conditions being met:
  • Receive final DOH approval for all operations procedures.

  • Fully fund the trust fund for decommissioning, reclamation, and long-term surveillance and control of the millsite (approximately $14.4 million), or execute a surety bond in the amount of $14.4 million (the bonding company must be found financially secure by the State Finance Commission).

  • Finalize the site soil contamination survey and submit soil cleanup volume estimates to DOH.

  • Commence ground water remediation.

  • Commence construction of evaporation ponds.

  • Review of chemical characterization of potential tailings material by DOH, Washington State Department of Ecology, and the Local Citizens Monitoring Committee.

1995

Construction was completed of passive evaporation ponds that were designed to accept contaminated groundwater and process solution from TDA-4.  The 5 ponds are lined with 60-mil HDPE and cover approximately 110 acres of the site.

1996

The water was removed from TDA-4 and TDA-4 access was stabilized, and work begun to prepare TDA-4 for the receipt of fill material.  Pumping of groundwater into the evaporation ponds was resumed.

1998

DMC’s radioactive materials license was renewed which continued to allow DMC to import out of state uranium mill tailings for TDA-4 fill material.  An extensive public process preceded license renewal.

2001 DMC’s radioactive materials license was amended to disallow disposal of offsite uranium mill tailing, to change the reclamation date from 2019 to 2013, to allow the direct disposal of sludge/filtercake from the Midnite Mine water treatment plant into TDA-4, and to require milestones for individual reclamation tasks.  The license amendment process included many public meetings.

Significant Millsite Cleanup Activities

  • In 2001, DOH determined that the ground water pump-back system was no longer effective in reducing contamination and therefore directed DMC to prepare a Corrective Action Assessment of remediation alternatives.  Ground water tests have commenced to determine the effectiveness of creating a bio-remediation barrier to reduce uranium concentrations.  Uranium and sulfates are the contaminants of concern.  During the test, ethanol and sugars were injected into test wells.  The ethanol and sugars feed the local bacteria in ground water, which proliferate, consuming oxygen which creates a reducing environment in the aquifer and changes the uranium into an insoluable form.  The results from the test are now being evaluated to determine the next phase of testing.

  • In the summer and fall of 2003, the mill buildings and process tanks were demolished and buried in TDA-4.

  • Major contaminated soil cleanup occurred at the millsite in the summer and fall of 2005.  Contaminated soils along State Highway 231 and the county entrance road were also removed and disposed in Tailings Area 4.


Washington State Regulatory Authority Over Uranium Mills

  • The Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (AEA), as amended, created the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and provides for the regulation of radioactive materials.

  • The AEA authorized the NRC to enter into agreements with individual states to allow the state to regulate radioactive materials within the state's boundaries.

  • Washington State became an Agreement State in 1966.  Over the years, Washington has by statute or regulation developed a regulatory program that is compatible with NRC rules and regulations.

  • In 1978, Congress Passed UMTRCA (Uranium Mill Tailings Reclamation and Conservation Act) to specifically address reclamation and closure of uranium mill facilities.  10 CFR Part 40 is the federal regulation that govern mill closures.

  • Chapter 70.121 RCW provides the statutory authority for Washington State's oversight of uranium mills and Chapter 246-252 WAC is the main implementing regulation.

  • Every uranium mill licensee is required to post acceptable financial assurance in the event it abandons, defaults, or is otherwise unable to meet the requirements of the Department of Health (70.121.100 RCW).

  • If the licensee posts a bond as financial assurance, 70.121.110 RCW requires a review of the financial health of the bonding company by the State Finance Committee.


Midnite Mine

The Midnite Mine is a uranium mine located on the Spokane Tribe of Indians Reservation and 25 miles from Dawn’s uranium millsite at Ford, Washington.

Dawn Mining Company began mining uranium ore at the Midnite Mine in the 1950's.  The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) was the lead agency responsible for the reclamation (restoration of  the site) of the mine until 1998 when EPA took over the mine reclamation as a Superfund Site. 

Although the Department of Health has no authority over the final outcome of restoring the DMC mine site, it is responsible for issuing a radioactive materials license for the radioactive sludge generated by the water treatment plant at the mine and assuring compliance with the license.  The mine includes two open pits which must be dewatered before final reclamation can commence.  In 1992, the pits contained over 600 million gallons of contaminated water.  DOH issued the radioactive materials license to DMC at that time for a water treatment plant designed to decontaminate the pit water. 

  • BLM has ordered DMC to maintain a depth of three feet of water in Pit 3.  DMC has treated all of the water in Pits 3 and 4 and now seasonally operates the water treatment plant on a reduced scale just to eliminate water to the three-foot depth requirement.

 

External Links

 

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) - Drinking Water Standard

Environmental Protection Agency  (EPA) - Midnite Mine

 

Links to external resources are provided as a public service and do not imply endorsement by the Washington State Department of Health.


Contact Information

Dorothy Stoffel, Project Manager 509-456-3166

 

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Last Update : 08/11/2009 05:02 PM