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Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations
July 19, 2002
09:30 AM
2123 Rayburn House Office Building
Mr.
Chairman:
We
are here today to discuss compliance agreements that affect the Department of
Energy's (DOE) cleanup program. Compliance
agreements are legally enforceable documents between DOE and its regulators,
specifying cleanup activities and milestones that DOE has agreed to achieve.
DOE's Office of Environmental Management (EM) is responsible for much of the
actual cleanup activity, which is carried out primarily under two federal
laws-the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act
of 1980, as amended (CERCLA), and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of
1976, as amended (RCRA). Besides DOE, other parties to the agreements include
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and state agencies that have
jurisdiction over environmental and health issues. Over the years, these
compliance agreements have been used to implement much of the cleanup activity
at DOE sites. In February 2002, the
Secretary of Energy proposed a new initiative to refocus DOE's cleanup program
by accelerating risk reduction at the sites.
Questions have been raised about the relationship of this initiative to
the schedules outlined in compliance agreements.
My
testimony is based on our report to you on the status and implications of
DOE's compliance agreements, which you are releasing today.
My testimony addresses five topics: (1) the types of compliance agreements, (2)
DOE's progress in achieving the milestones contained in the agreements, (3)
whether the cost to comply with the agreements is reflected in DOE's annual
budget request, (4) whether the agreements allow DOE to prioritize work across
sites according to relative risk, and (5) possible implications the agreements
have on DOE's efforts to improve the cleanup program.
In
summary,
-
The
70 compliance agreements at DOE sites vary greatly but can be divided into
three main types. These are: (1) agreements specifically required by CERCLA
to address cleanup of federal sites on EPA's national priorities list of
the nation's worst hazardous waste sites or by RCRA to address the
management of mixed radioactive and hazardous waste at DOE facilities, (2)
court-ordered agreements resulting from lawsuits initiated primarily by
states, and (3) other agreements, including state administrative orders
enforcing state hazardous waste management laws. Collectively, as of
December 2001, the 70 agreements had 7,186 schedule milestones.
-
ˇDOE
reported completing about 80 percent of these milestones by the time
originally scheduled in the agreements. Many of the milestones completed
either have been administrative, such as issuing a report, or have involved
completing some step in the cleanup process, such as conducting certain
tests. Although such process steps may be important in arriving at eventual
cleanup, for several reasons the number of milestones completed is not a
good measure of cleanup progress. For example, many of the milestones
require completing an administrative requirement that may not indicate what,
if any, actual cleanup work was performed. When DOE misses a milestone,
regulators have several options, including negotiating a new date or
assessing a penalty. Thus far, regulators have generally been willing to
negotiate extensions when DOE found itself unable to complete a milestone on
time, approving about 93 percent of DOE's requests for milestone changes.
However, DOE has paid about $1.8 million in monetary penalties and about $4
million in other penalties (such as added work requirements) because
regulators took enforcement actions for missed milestones.
-
The
cost of complying with these agreements is not specifically identified in
the DOE budget submitted to the Congress. Individual DOE sites develop
annual compliance cost estimates as part of their budget requests. However,
DOE headquarters officials adjust those individual site estimates to reflect
national priorities and to reconcile various competing demands.
Consequently, the final budget request does not identify what portion of the
request is intended to address compliance requirements.
DOE is not required to provide this information to the Congress.
Even if it were possible to trace this relationship in the final
budget, the figure would have limited significance because sites'
compliance estimates are based primarily on the expected size of the site
budget. If the funding sites receive is insufficient to accomplish
all of the compliance activities planned for that year, sites must decide
which activities to defer to future years. In contrast, if sites receive
more funding than anticipated in a particular year, they have an opportunity
to increase the amount of money spent on compliance requirements.
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Compliance
agreements are site-specific and are not intended to provide a mechanism for
DOE to use in prioritizing risks among the various sites. The agreements
reflect local DOE and community priorities for addressing environmental
contamination at individual sites and were not designed or developed to
consider environmental risk from a DOE-wide perspective. DOE has made
several attempts to develop a risk-based methodology across its sites, but
has not succeeded because of problems, such as its failure to integrate any
of the approaches into the decision-making process. Rather than prioritize
risk across sites, DOE has attempted to provide a relatively stable amount
of funding at each site from year to year and generally allow local DOE
managers and the community to determine the priorities for sequencing work
at each site. However, DOE's February 2002 initiative to improve the
Environmental Management program has as a central component developing
risk-reduction priorities and concentrating its efforts on activities that
contribute to risk reduction. DOE is considering how to best develop a
risk-based cleanup strategy, but it is unclear when the strategy will be in
place. Meanwhile, DOE is
proceeding to select and approve sites where cleanup activities would be
accelerated. To date, at least five major DOE sites with compliance
agreements have signed letters of intent with their regulators outlining an
agreement in principle to accelerate cleanup with increased funding.
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Compliance
agreements have not been a barrier to previous DOE management initiatives,
but it is not clear if the compliance agreements will be used to oppose
DOE's latest initiative to focus on accelerating risk reduction at the
sites. This initiative could have a potentially greater impact on cleanup
approaches and funding levels than prior initiatives. DOE's past
management initiatives, such as the contract reform initiative, generally
have not involved significant changes in cleanup approach or significant
reductions in funding at individual sites. Regulators generally supported
these initiatives, saying that they favor efforts to implement faster, less
costly ways to reduce the environmental risks at the sites, as long as
DOE's approach did not reduce funding for individual sites. DOE's recent
initiative, however, has the potential to alter the funding balance among
DOE sites. In some cases, it involves potential changes in technology or
approach that would result in leaving more of the waste on site than
currently planned and thus could significantly reduce cleanup costs. In
other cases, it could allocate funding using a greater emphasis on risk
reduction, which could shift funding among sites. Regulators told us that
they would be opposed to receiving reduced funding at their individual sites
and might not be willing to modify the compliance agreements to further
extend schedule milestones. DOE generally did not involve the regulators in
developing its reform initiative, but it is now coordinating with regulators
as it develops implementation strategies for each site. Beyond the five or
more letters of intent signed to date, it is too early to tell if regulators
will support these changes to site cleanup programs. Furthermore, even at
locations where letters of intent have been signed, many technical,
regulatory, and operational decisions need to be made to implement the
proposals.
DOE
is responsible for a nationwide complex of facilities created during World War
II and the Cold War to research, produce, and test nuclear weapons. Much of the
complex is no longer in productive use, but it contains vast quantities of
radioactive waste related to the production of nuclear material, such as
plutonium-contaminated sludge, and hazardous waste, such as solvents and
hazardous chemicals. Since the 1980s, DOE has been planning and carrying out
activities around the complex to clean up, contain, safely store, and dispose of
these materials. It is a daunting challenge, involving the development of
complicated technologies and costing about $220 billion over 70 years or more.
DOE has reported completing its cleanup work at 74 of the 114 sites in the
complex, but those were small and the least difficult to deal with. The sites
remaining to be cleaned up present enormous challenges to DOE.
DOE's
cleanup program is carried out primarily under two environmental laws. Under
section 120 of CERCLA, EPA must, where appropriate, evaluate hazardous waste
sites at DOE's facilities to determine whether the waste sites qualify for
inclusion on the National Priorities List, EPA's list of the nation's most
serious hazardous waste sites. For each facility listed on the National
Priorities List, section 120(e) (2) of CERCLA requires DOE to enter into an
interagency agreement with EPA for the completion of all necessary remedial
actions at the facility. These agreements often include the affected states as
parties to the agreements. These agreements may be known as Federal Facility
Agreements or Tri-Party Agreements. Under amendments to RCRA contained in
section 105 of the Federal Facility Compliance Act of 1992, DOE generally must
develop site treatment plans for its mixed-waste sites.
These plans are submitted for approval to states authorized by EPA to perform
regulatory responsibilities for RCRA within their borders or to EPA if the state
does not have the required authority. Upon approval of the treatment plans, the
state or EPA must issue an order requiring compliance with the approved plan.
The agreements are generally known as Federal Facility Compliance orders.
DOE
carries out its cleanup program through the Assistant Secretary for
Environmental Management and in consultation with a variety of stakeholders.
These include the federal EPA and state environmental agencies, county and local
governmental agencies, citizen groups, advisory groups, Native American tribes,
and other organizations. In most cases, DOE's regulators are parties to the
compliance agreements.
Other stakeholders advocate their views through various public involvement
processes including site-specific advisory boards.
Compliance
Agreements Are of Three Main Types
Compliance
agreements in effect at DOE sites can be grouped into three main types (see
table 1). Agreements of the first type-those specifically required by CERCLA
or by RCRA-are in effect at all of DOE's major sites. They tend to cover a
relatively large number of cleanup activities and have the majority of schedule
milestones that DOE must meet. By contrast, agreements that implement
court-ordered settlements exist at only a few DOE sites, tend to be focused on a
specific issue or concern, and have fewer associated schedule milestones. These
agreements are typically between DOE and states. The remaining agreements are
based on either federal or state environmental laws and address a variety of
purposes, such as cleaning up spills of hazardous waste or remediating
groundwater contamination, and have a wide-ranging number of milestones.
|
Type of
agreement
|
Number of
agreements
|
Number of sites
|
Number of
enforceable milestones
|
|
Agreements
specifically required to implement CERCLA and RCRA requirements
|
29
|
20
|
5,251
|
|
Court-ordered
agreements resulting from lawsuits
|
6
|
6
|
146
|
|
All other agreements
|
35
|
12
|
1,789
|
|
Total
|
70
|
23a
|
7,186
|
aThe
numbers in this column do not add because many DOE sites have more than one
agreement.
Source: GAO analysis of
DOE data.
Most
of the milestones DOE must meet are contained in the compliance agreements at
its six largest sites-Hanford, Savannah River, Idaho Falls, Rocky Flats, Oak
Ridge, and Fernald. These six DOE sites are important because they receive about
two-thirds of DOE's cleanup funding. In all, these sites account for 40 of the
agreements and more than 4,200 milestones.
Most
Milestone Dates Have Been Met, but Meeting Milestones Is Not a Good Measure of
Cleanup Progress
DOE
reported completing about two-thirds of the 7,186 milestones contained in its
compliance agreements as of December 2001. Of the 4,558 milestones completed,
about 80 percent were finished by the original due date for the milestone. The
remainder of the completed milestones were finished either after the original
due date had passed or on a renegotiated due date, but DOE reported that the
regulators considered the milestones to be met. DOE's six largest sites
reported completing a total of 2,901 of their 4,262 milestones and met the
original completion date for the milestones an average of 79 percent of the
time. As table 2 shows, this percentage varied from a high of 95 percent at
Rocky Flats to a low of 47 percent at Savannah River. Besides the 1,334
milestones currently yet to be completed, additional milestones will be added in
the future.
|
Dollars in
millions
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Site and state
|
Current EM
lifecycle cleanup estimate
|
Number of
enforceable milestonesa
|
Number of
milestones completed
|
Number of
milestones completed on original dateb
|
Percent of
completed milestones meeting original due date
|
|
Hanford (including
Office of River Protection), Washington
|
$62,097
|
1,080
|
825
|
743
|
90
|
|
Savannah River,
South Carolina
|
37,809
|
714
|
556
|
264
|
47
|
|
Idaho Falls, Idaho
|
27,881
|
428
|
334
|
312
|
93
|
|
Oak Ridge, Tennessee
|
8,456
|
846
|
513
|
360
|
70
|
|
Rocky Flats,
Colorado
|
7,705
|
119
|
62
|
59
|
95
|
|
Fernald, Ohio
|
3,341
|
1,075
|
611
|
558
|
91
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
aThe
total number of milestones is not yet known because at some sites, many
milestones will be added in the future as cleanup strategies change, new
schedules are set, and new work is defined.
bThe
number of milestones completed on the original due date is the total of all
milestones satisfactorily completed by the original date DOE agreed to with
regulators. Those milestones completed on other than the original due date were
generally not considered missed milestones because the milestone dates were
either extended or renegotiated with regulators.
Source: GAO analysis of
DOE data.
Although
DOE has completed many of the milestones on time, for several reasons DOE's
success in completing milestones on time is not a good measure of progress in
cleaning up the weapons complex. Specifically:
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Many
of the milestones do not indicate what cleanup work has been accomplished.
For example, many milestones require completing an administrative
requirement that may not indicate what, if any, actual cleanup work was
performed. At DOE's six largest sites, DOE officials reported that about
73 percent of the 2,901 schedule milestones completed were tied to
administrative requirements, such as obtaining a permit or submitting a
report.
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ˇSome
agreements do not have a fixed number of milestones, and additional
milestones are added over time as the scope of work is more fully defined.
For example, one of Idaho Falls' compliance agreements establishes
milestones for remedial activities after a record of decision
has been signed for a given work area. Four records of decision associated
with the agreement have not yet been approved. Their approval will increase
the number of enforceable milestones required under that agreement.
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Many
of the remaining milestones are tied to DOE's most expensive and
challenging cleanup work, much of which still lies ahead. Approximately
two-thirds of the estimated $220 billion cost of cleaning up DOE sites will
be incurred after 2006. DOE has reported that the remaining cleanup
activities present enormous technical and management challenges, and
considerable uncertainties exist over the final cost and time frame for
completing the cleanup.
Even
though schedule milestones are of questionable value as a measure of cleanup
progress, the milestones do help regulators track DOE's activities. Regulators
at the four sites we visited said that the compliance agreements they oversee
and the milestones associated with those agreements provide a way to bring DOE
into compliance with existing environmental laws and regulations. They said the
agreements also help to integrate the requirements under various federal laws
and allow regulators to track annual progress against DOE's milestone
commitments.
Regulators' Flexible Approach Results in
Renegotiated Milestones and Few Penalties
Regulators
have generally been flexible in agreeing with DOE to change milestone dates when
the original milestone could not be met. DOE received approval to change
milestone deadlines in over 93 percent of the 1,413 requests made to regulators.
Only 3 percent of DOE's requests were denied. Regulators at the four sites we
visited told us they prefer to be flexible with DOE on accomplishing an
agreement's cleanup goals. For example, they generally expressed willingness
to work with DOE to extend milestone deadlines when a problem arises due to
technology limitations or engineering problems. Because regulators have been so
willing to adjust milestones, DOE officials reported missing a total of only 48
milestones, or about 1 percent of milestones that have been completed.
Even
in those few instances where DOE missed milestone deadlines and regulators were
unwilling to negotiate revised dates, regulators have infrequently applied
penalties available under the compliance agreements. DOE reported that
regulators have taken enforcement actions only 13 times
since 1988 when DOE failed to meet milestone deadlines. These enforcement
actions resulted in DOE paying about $1.8 million in monetary penalties, as
shown in table 3.
|
Site and state
|
Milestones
missed
|
Enforcement
actions taken
|
Monetary
penalty paid
|
|
Hanford, Washington
|
13
|
2
|
$100,000 a
|
|
Idaho Falls, Idaho
|
4
|
2
|
970,000 b
|
|
Portsmouth, Ohio
|
2
|
2
|
292,000
|
|
Fernald, Ohio
|
7
|
3
|
250,000
|
|
Oak Ridge, Tennessee
|
2
|
2
|
100,000
|
|
Rocky Flats,
Colorado
|
2
|
2
|
100,000
|
|
Total
|
30
|
13
|
$1,812,000
|
aHanford
regulators recently levied a monetary penalty of $5,000 for the first week and
$10,000 for each additional week that DOE missed a July 31, 2001, milestone to
start construction of a waste treatment facility. However, regulators said they
will cancel the penalty if DOE meets a new milestone date set for the end of
this year. Therefore, this monetary penalty is not included in table 3.
bIn
April 2002, DOE agreed to pay $800,000 for missing a milestone requiring
submission of scope of work documents for one of the site's waste burial
sites. As of the time of this report, DOE had not yet paid the penalty.
Therefore, this monetary penalty is not included in table 3.
Source: GAO analysis of
DOE data.
In
addition to or instead of regulators assessing monetary penalties, several DOE
sites agreed to other arrangements valued at about $4 million. For example, for
missing a milestone to open a transuranic
waste storage facility at the Rocky Flats site, the site agreed to provide a
$40,000 grant to a local emergency planning committee to support a
chemical-safety-in-schools program. At the Oak Ridge site, because of delays in
operating a mixed waste incinerator, site officials agreed to move up the
completion date for $1.4 million worth of cleanup work already scheduled. Also,
at three sites-Paducah, Kentucky; Lawrence Livermore Main Site, California;
and Nevada Test Site, Nevada-the regulators either did not impose penalties
for missed milestones or the issue was still under discussion with DOE at the
time of our review.
DOE's Budget Request Does Not Identify the
Funding Needed to Meet Compliance Requirements
The
President's budget submitted to the Congress does not provide information on
the amount of funding requested for DOE's compliance requirements. DOE sites
prepare budget estimates that include compliance cost estimates and submit them
for consideration by DOE headquarters. However, DOE headquarters officials
evaluate individual site estimates and combine them into an overall DOE-wide
budget, taking into account broader considerations and other priorities that it
must address as part of the give-and-take of the budget process. As a result,
the final budget sent to the Congress has summary information on DOE's
programs and activities, but it provides no information on the portion of the
budget needed to fund compliance requirements. DOE is not required to develop or
present this information to the Congress. The President's budget typically
states that the DOE funding requested is sufficient to substantially comply with
compliance agreements, but it does not develop or disclose the total amount of
funding needed for compliance. Officials at DOE headquarters told us that budget
guidance from the Office of Management and Budget does not require DOE to
develop or present information on the cost of meeting compliance requirements,
and they said doing so for the thousands of milestones DOE must meet would be
unnecessarily burdensome. They said their approach has been to allocate funds
appropriated by the Congress and make it the sites' responsibility to use the
funds in a way that meets the compliance agreement milestones established at the
site level.
Individual
DOE sites develop information on the estimated cost of meeting compliance
agreements, but the annual estimates are a flexible number. Sites develop these
estimates because many of the compliance agreements require DOE to request
sufficient funding each year to meet all of the requirements in the agreements.
Also, DOE must respond to Executive Order 12088, which directs executive
agencies to ensure that they request sufficient funds to comply with pollution
control standards. Accordingly, each year DOE's sites develop budget estimates
that also identify the amount needed to meet compliance requirements. The
sites' process in developing these compliance estimates shows that a
compliance estimate is a flexible number. For example, two budget estimates
typically completed by the sites each year are the "full requirements"
estimate and the "target" estimate. The full requirements estimate
identifies how much money a site would need to accomplish its work in what site
officials consider to be the most desirable fashion. The target estimate
reflects a budget strategy based primarily on the amount of funding the site
received the previous year and is considered a more realistic estimate of the
funding a site can expect to receive. For each of these budget estimates, DOE
sites also include an estimate of their compliance costs. As a result of this
process, DOE sites usually have at least two different estimates of their
compliance costs for the same budget year. Table 4 shows how the compliance cost
estimates related to compliance agreements changed under different budget
scenarios at four DOE sites.
Table
4: Cost of Meeting Compliance Requirements under Two Different Budget
Scenarios at Four DOE Sites, Fiscal Year 2002
|
Dollars in
millions
|
|
|
Full
requirements estimate
|
Target
estimate
|
|
DOE Site
|
Compliance
a
|
Total
|
Compliance
a
|
Total
|
|
Hanford
|
|
|
|
|
|
Richland
|
$429.6
|
$958.4
|
$265.5
|
$721.8
|
|
River Protection
|
987.1
|
1,149.7
|
685.2
|
838.0
|
|
Idaho Falls
|
366.6
|
643.1
|
313.6
|
540.6
|
|
Savannah River
|
294.5
|
1,411.1
|
288.4
|
1,268.5
|
|
Oak Ridge
|
424.6
|
741.7
|
405.5
|
668.3
|
aThe
compliance amounts in this column show only the funding associated with meeting
requirements contained in compliance agreements. It does not include (1)
estimates of the funding needed to comply with requirements in federal, state,
or local environmental laws and regulations that are not part of a compliance
agreement or (2) the funding DOE estimates is necessary to maintain minimal site
infrastructure, security, and safety requirements.
Source: GAO analysis of
DOE data.
The
multiple estimates of compliance costs developed by individual DOE sites
indicate that DOE sites have alternative ways of achieving compliance in any
given year. DOE site officials said that how much DOE plans to spend on
compliance activities each year varies depending on the total amount of money
available. Because many of the compliance milestones are due in the future,
sites estimate how much compliance activity is needed each year to meet the
future milestones. If sites anticipate that less money will be available, they
must decide what compliance activities are critical for that year and defer work
on some longer-term milestones to future years. On the other hand, if more money
is available, sites have an opportunity to increase spending on compliance
activities earlier than absolutely necessary.
DOE's
compliance agreements focus on environmental issues at specific sites and do not
include information on the risks being addressed. As a result, they do not
provide a means of setting priorities for risks among sites or a basis for
decision-making across all DOE sites. Risk is only one of several factors
considered in setting the milestones in compliance agreements. Other factors
include the preferences and concerns of local stakeholders, business and
technical risk, the cost associated with maintaining old facilities, and the
desire to achieve demonstrable progress on cleanup. The schedules for when and
in what sequence to perform the cleanup work reflect local DOE and stakeholder
views on these and other factors and may not reflect the level of risk. For
example, regulators at DOE's Savannah River site told us that they were
primarily concerned that DOE maintain a certain level of effort and they
expected DOE to schedule cleanup activities to most efficiently clean up the
site. DOE developed a decision model to determine how to allocate its cleanup
dollars at Savannah River to achieve this efficiency. A group of outside
reviewers assessing the system at the request of site management concluded that
the model was so strongly weighted to efficiency that it was unlikely that
serious risks to human health or the environment could alter the sequencing of
work.
DOE officials said they revised
the model so that serious risks receive greater emphasis.
DOE's Attempts to Develop a Risk-Based
Approach Have Not Been Successful
In
response to concerns expressed by the Congress and others about the
effectiveness of the cleanup program, DOE has made several attempts to develop a
national, risk-based approach to cleanup, but has not succeeded. For example, in
1999, DOE pilot-tested the use of site risk profiles at 10 DOE offices. The
profiles were intended to provide risk information about the sites, make
effective use of existing data at the sites, and incorporate stakeholder input.
However, reviewers found that the site profiles failed to adequately address
environmental or worker risks because the risks were not consistently or
adequately documented. In 2001, DOE eliminated a support group responsible for
assisting the sites with this effort, and the risk profiles are generally no
longer being developed or used.
A
1999 DOE-funded study to evaluate its efforts to establish greater use of
risk-based decision-making concluded that none of the attempts had been
successful.
Common problems identified by the study included poor documentation of risks and
inconsistent scoring of risks between sites. The study reported that factors
contributing to the failure of these efforts included a lack of consistent
vision about how to use risk to establish work priorities, the lack of
confidence in the results by DOE personnel, the unacceptability of the
approaches to stakeholders at the sites, and DOE's overall failure to
integrate any of the approaches into the decision-making process. However, the
study concluded that the use of risk as a criterion for cleanup decision-making
across DOE's sites not only was essential, it was also feasible and practical,
given an appropriate level of commitment and effort by DOE.
Accelerated Schedules in DOE Initiative Signal
the Need to Develop a Risk-Based Approach
DOE
plans to shift its cleanup program to place greater focus on rapid reduction of
environmental risk, signaling yet again the need for a national risk-based
approach to cleanup. Without a national, risk-based approach to cleanup in
place, DOE's budget strategy had been to provide stable funding for individual
sites and to allow the sites to determine what they needed most to accomplish.
However, in a February 2002 report, DOE described numerous problems with the
environmental management program and recommended a number of corrective actions.
The report concluded that, among other things, the cleanup program was not based
on a comprehensive, coherent, technically supported risk prioritization; it was
not focused on accelerating risk reduction; and it was not addressing the
challenges of uncontrolled cost and schedule growth. The report recommended that
DOE, in consultation with its regulators, move to a national strategy for
cleanup. In addition, the report noted that the compliance agreements have
failed to achieve the expected risk reduction and have sometimes not focused on
the highest risk. The report recommended that DOE develop specific proposals and
present them to the states and EPA with accelerated risk reduction as the goal.
DOE's
new initiative provides additional funds for cleanup reform and is designed to
serve as an incentive to sites and regulators to identify accelerated risk
reduction and cleanup approaches. DOE's fiscal year 2003 budget request
includes a request for $800 million for this purpose. Moreover, the
Administration has agreed to support up to an additional $300 million if needed
for cleanup reforms. The set-aside would come from a reduction in individual
site funding levels and an increase in the overall funding level for the cleanup
program. The money would be made available to sites that reach agreements with
federal and state regulators on accelerated cleanup approaches. Sites that do
not develop accelerated programs would not be eligible for the additional funds.
As a result, sites that do not participate could receive less funding than in
past years.
To
date, at least five major DOE sites with compliance agreements have signed
letters of intent with their regulators outlining an agreement in principle to
accelerate cleanup-Hanford, Idaho, Los Alamos, Oak Ridge, and Nevada Test
Site. However, the letters of
intent generally also include a provision that the letters do not modify the
obligations DOE agreed to in the underlying compliance agreements. At Hanford,
DOE and the regulators signed a letter of intent in March 2002 to accelerate
cleanup at the site by 35 years or more. DOE and the regulators agreed to
consider the greatest risks first as a principle in setting cleanup priorities. They also
agreed to consider, as targets of opportunity for accelerated risk reduction, 42
potential areas identified in a recent study at the site. While accelerating the
cleanup may hold promise, Hanford officials acknowledged that many technical,
regulatory, and operational decisions need to be made to actually implement the
proposals in the new approach.
DOE
is proceeding with the selection and approval of accelerated programs at the
sites, as well as identifying the funding for those accelerated programs. At the
same time, DOE is considering how best to develop a risk-based cleanup strategy.
DOE's Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management said that in developing
the risk-based approach, DOE should use available technical information,
existing reports, DOE's own knowledge, and common sense to make risk-based
decisions. Because DOE's approach to risk assessment is under development, it
is unclear whether DOE will be able to overcome the barriers encountered during
past efforts to formalize a risk-assessment process. In the interim, DOE
headquarters review teams were evaluating the activities at each site and were
qualitatively incorporating risk into those evaluations.
Compliance
Agreements Were Not a Barrier to Past Management Improvements, but Impact on
February 2002 Initiative Is Unclear
Compliance
agreements have not been a barrier to previous DOE management improvements, but
it is not clear if the agreements will be used to oppose proposed changes
stemming from the February 2002 initiative. DOE has implemented or tried to
implement a number of management initiatives in recent years to improve its
performance and address uncontrolled cost and schedule growth. For example, in
1994, it launched its contract reform initiative; in 1995, it established its
privatization initiative;
and in 1998, it implemented its accelerated path-to-closure initiative. These
initiatives affected how DOE approached the cleanup work, the relationship DOE
had with its contractors, and, in some cases, the schedule for completing the
work. Based on our review of past evaluations of these initiatives and
discussions with DOE officials and regulators at DOE sites, it appears that DOE
proceeded with these initiatives without significant resistance or constraints
as a result of the compliance agreements.
Because
DOE's cleanup reform initiative is in its early stages, and site-specific
strategies are only beginning to emerge, it is unclear how the site compliance
agreements will affect implementation of DOE's latest cleanup reforms. For
example, it is not yet known how many sites will participate in DOE's
initiative and how many other sites will encounter cleanup delays because of
reduced funding. However, early indications suggest caution. Parties to the
agreements at the sites we visited were supportive of DOE's overall efforts to
improve management of the cleanup program, but expressed some concerns about
proposals stemming from the February 2002 review of the program. They said that
they welcome DOE's efforts to accelerate cleanup and focus attention on the
more serious environmental risks because such initiatives are consistent with
the regulators' overall goals of reducing risks to human health and the
environment. Most regulators added, however, that DOE generally had not
consulted with them in developing its reform initiative and they were concerned
about being excluded from the process. Furthermore, they said DOE's initiative
lacked specific details and they had numerous questions about the criteria DOE
will use to select sites and the process it will follow at those sites to
develop an implementation plan to accelerate cleanup and modify cleanup
approaches.
Most
regulators said they would not view as favorable any attempt by DOE to avoid
appropriate waste treatment activities or significantly delay treatment by
reducing funding available to sites. In such a case, these regulators are likely
to oppose DOE's initiative. They told us that they most likely would not be
willing to renegotiate milestones in the compliance agreements if doing so would
lead to delays in the cleanup program at their sites. In addition, these
regulators said that if DOE misses the milestones after reducing the funding at
individual sites, they would enforce the penalty provisions in the compliance
agreements.
The
effect of compliance agreements on other aspects of DOE's initiative,
especially its proposal to reclassify waste into different risk categories to
increase disposal options, is also unclear. Some of the proposed changes in
waste treatment would signal major changes in DOE assumptions about acceptable
waste treatment and disposal options. For example, one change would eliminate
the need to vitrify at least 75 percent of the high-level waste, which could
result in disposing of more of the waste at DOE sites. In addition, DOE is
considering the possibility of reclassifying much of its high-level waste as
low-level mixed waste or transuranic waste based on the risk attributable to its
actual composition.
However, at all four sites we visited, regulators said that it is unclear how
DOE's proposed initiatives will be implemented, what technologies will be
considered, and whether the changes will result in reduced cost and accelerated
cleanup while adequately protecting human health and the environment.
DOE
generally did not seek input from site regulators or other stakeholders when
developing its latest initiative. DOE's review team leader said that when the
review team visited individual sites, the team had not formulated its
conclusions or recommendations and so did not seek regulators' views.
Furthermore, the team leader said that, during the review, DOE was holding
internal discussions about improving ineffective cleanup processes, such as
contracting procedures. To include regulators on the review team during these
discussions, according to the team leader, could have created the impression
that the criticism of DOE processes came from the regulators rather than from
DOE and contractor staff. According to the Associate Deputy Assistant Secretary
for Planning and Budget, since the review team's proposals were made public in
February, DOE has held discussions with regulators at all sites and headquarters
about implementing the proposals.
In
summary, Mr. Chairman, DOE faces two main challenges in going forward with its
initiative. The first is following through on its plan to develop and implement
a risk-based method to prioritize its various cleanup activities. Given past
failed attempts to implement a risk-based approach to cleanup, management
leadership and resolve will be needed to overcome the barriers encountered in
past attempts. The second challenge for DOE is following through on its plan to
involve regulators in site implementation plans. DOE generally did not involve
states and regulatory agencies in the development of its management initiative.
Regulators have expressed concerns about the lack of specifics in the
initiative, how implementation plans will be developed at individual sites, and
about proposals that may delay or significantly alter cleanup strategies.
Addressing both of these challenges will be important to better ensure that
DOE's latest management initiative will achieve the desired results of
accelerating risk reduction and reducing cleanup costs.
_
_ _ _ _
Thank
you, Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee. This concludes my testimony.
I will be happy to respond to any questions that you may have.
GAO
Contact and Staff Acknowledgment
For
future contacts regarding this testimony, please contact (Ms.) Gary Jones at
(202) 512-3841. Chris Abraham,
Doreen Feldman, Rich Johnson, Nancy Kintner-Meyer, Tom Perry, Ilene Pollack,
Stan Stenersen, and Bill Swick made key contributions to this report.
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