A bleak  funding picture across the country
Nationally, the news isn't much  better. Chemical & Engineering News reports this week that cleanup of  nuclear weapons sites across the country is underfunded, but DOE is cutting the  program. According to the magazine,
"An audit shows that the cost  to clean up extensive radioactive and hazardous waste contamination is likely to  be as high as $305 billion, more than $50 billion higher than the  Administration's earlier estimate. It also may take until 2062 to finish the  jobmore than 20 years longer than original estimates. Yet this year's cleanup  budget proposal is $5.5 billion, the lowest level in the last 15 years for the  huge cleanup program."
DOE officials acknowledge that the cuts for  2009 mean the department will not be able to meet cleanup milestones in Idaho  and elsewhere. Assistant Energy Secretary James Rispoli said recently in a  presentation that  funding levels requested for 2009 mean that DOE "would not meet some of the  milestones and obligations contained in all of the environmental agreements that  have been negotiated over many years with regulators . . . regardless of the  approach that is chosen and its associated level of funding."