Morning Briefing - August 28, 2017
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August 28, 2017

Hanford Office of River Protection Manager Retiring

By ExchangeMonitor

Kevin Smith, the manager of the Department of Energy Office of River Protection at the Hanford Site in Washington state, plans to retire Sept. 30. He gave the word to Energy Secretary Rick Perry on Aug. 15 when the DOE chief visited Hanford.

“The Department of Energy is grateful for Kevin’s service and wishes him the best in retirement,” DOE said in a statement.

Ben Harp, the Office of River Protection’s deputy manager since last December, will serve as acting manager when Smith leaves. The office is responsible for management of 56 million gallons of radioactive and hazardous chemical waste held in underground tanks and the Waste Treatment Plant being built to vitrify the waste for disposal.

Smith has served for almost five years as manager, a position that had been marked by turnovers since Congress established the office in 1998. He was at least the seventh manager to lead the office. Smith told employees in an Aug. 17 message that when he took the job his goal was that employees would no longer measure their tenure by the number of managers they survived, but rather would see his eventual departure “as just a normal transition of a stable, mission-focused organization.”

The decision to leave the position was difficult, he said. But he retires from federal service at a time when the Office of River Protection is “a strong, well-performing organization.” The vitrification plant and tank farms are on “good vectors” and a plan to start treating low-activity radioactive waste as early as 2022 has “tremendous internal and external support,” he said. There is a good chance that the technical issues related to high-level radioactive waste, which stopped construction of the plant’s Pretreatment Facility in 2012, could be resolved by December, or at least by February, according to Smith.

It makes sense to allow a transition of leadership in time for the next manager to build a thorough understanding of the tank farms and vitrification plant before processing operations begin, he said.

Smith joined DOE in 2004 after retiring from the Air Force. In addition to working at Hanford, he has worked at the Savannah River Site in South Carolina, the Kansas City Site Office, and the Y-12 Site Office at Oak Ridge, Tenn. DOE has yet to announce any plans for a search for Smith’s replacement.

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DOE spent fuel lead Brinton accused of second luggage theft.



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