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(For members) NRC finds no significant impact from producing tritium at Watts Bar 2

Posted at 12:12 pm February 13, 2019
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Watts Bar Nuclear Plant

Watts Bar Nuclear Power Plant

 

Watts Bar Nuclear Plant

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission announced on Monday that there would be no significant impact from producing tritium for nuclear weapons in a second unit at the Watts Bar Nuclear Power Plant in Rhea County.

The project involves the Y-12 National Security Complex in Oak Ridge.

The tritium could be produced in Unit 2 at Watts Bar, which is near Spring City about 45 miles southwest of Oak Ridge.

Tritium, which boosts the yields of nuclear weapons, is already being produced in Watts Bar Unit 1. The Tennessee Valley Authority has been producing tritium there since 2003.

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Filed Under: Federal, Front Page News, Government, Government, National Nuclear Security Administration, Premium Content, Slider, U.S. Department of Energy, Y-12 National Security Complex Tagged With: A Nuclear Family: Y-12 National Security Complex, considering operating license amendment, Federal Register, highly enriched uranium, low enriched uranium, National Nuclear Security Administration, NNSA, NRC, nuclear weapons, Rick Perry, Savannah River Site, Tennessee Valley Authority, TPBAR, tritium, tritium production, tritium-producing burnable absorber rods, TVA, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Unit 1, Unit 2, Watts Bar Nuclear Power Plant

(For members) DOE could lease space to store elemental mercury

Posted at 1:52 pm February 11, 2019
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Image from “Final Long-Term Management and Storage of Elemental Mercury Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement” published by U.S. Department of Energy in September 2013.

Image from “Final Long-Term Management and Storage of Elemental Mercury Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement” published by U.S. Department of Energy in September 2013.

 

Image from “Final Long-Term Management and Storage of Elemental Mercury Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement” published by U.S. Department of Energy in September 2013.

The U.S. Department of Energy is considering whether to lease space to store elemental mercury from sites across the country.

The facility could store about 1,200 metric tons (1,300 tons) of elemental mercury. The waste has been generated at sites in the United States, mostly at gold mining operations, according to the DOE Office of Environmental Management.

The mercury that could be stored at the leased facility is separate from the 1,200 metric tons of mercury stored at the Y-12 National Security Complex in Oak Ridge. The Y-12 mercury, about 2.6 million pounds stored in seamless steel flasks, was acquired for lithium-6 isotope separation operations for thermonuclear weapons.

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Filed Under: DOE, Front Page News, National Nuclear Security Administration, Oak Ridge Office of Environmental Management, Premium Content, Slider, U.S. Department of Energy, Y-12, Y-12 National Security Complex Tagged With: Ben Williams, Defense National Stockpile Center, DOE, DOE Environmental Management, DOE Environmental Management Consolidated Business Center, elemental mercury, environmental impact statement, Frank R. Lautenberg Chemical Safety for the 21st Century Act, lithium-6 isotope separation, mercury, Mercury Export Ban Act, mercury storage and management facility, mercury storage facility, Mercury Treatment Facility, National Nuclear Security Administration, NNSA, NNSA Production Office, nuclear weapons, Oak Ridge Office of Environmental Management, radiologically contaminated mercury, Steven Wyatt, U.S. Department of Energy, Waste Control Specialists, Waste Control Specialists LLC, Y-12 mercury, Y-12 National Security Complex

(For members) Testimony: Defendant in homicide case had planned to rob man

Posted at 2:41 pm January 24, 2019
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

The criminal homicide charge filed against Christy Viola Comer, 37, left, was sent to the Anderson County Grand Jury after a preliminary hearing in Anderson County General Sessions Court in Clinton on Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2019. At right is defense attorney Leslie Hunt. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

The criminal homicide charge filed against Christy Viola Comer, 37, left, was sent to the Anderson County Grand Jury after a preliminary hearing in Anderson County General Sessions Court in Clinton on Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2019. At right is defense attorney Leslie Hunt. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

The homicide charge filed against Christy Viola Comer, 37, middle, was sent to the Anderson County Grand Jury after a preliminary hearing in Anderson County General Sessions Court in Clinton on Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2019. At right is defense attorney Leslie Hunt. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

CLINTON—The defendant in a criminal homicide case in Rocky Top in August had planned to rob the 83-year-old man who died because “it would be easy,” according to court testimony Tuesday.

The body of the victim, J.C. Copeland, who has been described as a “sweet old man,” was found partially wrapped in a pink blanket underneath a porch at a mobile home on Jacksboro Avenue on August 31, according to Tennessee Bureau of Investigation Agent John Hannon. Copeland is believed to have been strangled until he died, according to court records. There was white rope around Copeland’s neck and other parts of his body, including his wrists and ankles, Hannon testified during a preliminary hearing in Anderson County General Sessions Court in Clinton on Tuesday.

Inside Copeland’s home, investigators found a fresh brown stain on the floor near his front door, white strings similar to the material found around his neck, and in one possible sign of a struggle, cigarettes on the floor, according to Hannon’s testimony. An acrylic painted press-on fingernail was found in the living room, Hannon said. It’s similar to the type of press-on fingernail that a woman might wear, Hannon said when questioned by prosecutor Emily Faye Abbott.

Outside the home, Copeland’s vehicle was missing.

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Filed Under: Anderson County, Courts, Front Page News, Police and Fire, Premium Content, Rocky Top, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County Detention Facility, Anderson County General Sessions Court, Anderson County grand jury, Christy Viola Comer, criminal homicide, Dave Clark, Don Layton, Drew Winstead, Emily Faye Abbott, homicide, J.C. Copeland, Jim Shetterly, John Hannon, Knoxville Police Department, Leslie Hunt, Mitch Wade, Rocky Top, Rocky Top Police Department, Seventh Judicial District Crime Task Force, TBI, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation

(For members) Five ORPD officers injured in fight with defendant

Posted at 3:46 pm January 10, 2019
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge Police Department Badge

Five Oak Ridge Police Department officers were injured in a fight with a defendant on Saturday, a man was held against his will by the defendant, and officers used a Taser on the defendant more than once, police said.

Oak Ridge Police Department Badge

Five Oak Ridge Police Department officers were injured in a fight with a defendant on Saturday, a man was held against his will by the defendant, and officers used a Taser on the defendant more than once, police said.

The 39-year-old defendant is now charged with five counts of aggravated assault on an officer and aggravated kidnapping, among other charges.

It’s not the first time the man has been accused of assaulting a police officer. In September, he pleaded guilty to assaulting a police officer in a previous case.

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Filed Under: Anderson County, Courts, Front Page News, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Premium Content, Top Stories Tagged With: aggravated assault on an officer, aggravated kidnapping, Anderson County Criminal Court, Anderson County Detention Facility, Anderson County General Sessions Court, assault on a police officer, disorderly conduct, evading arrest, manufacturing delivering selling or possessing a controlled substance, Oak Ridge Police Department, ORPD, possession of drug paraphernalia, possession of methamphetamine for resale, resisting arrest, Sherrill Selby, Thurman B. Bates

Records: Man shot last week has history of family disputes

Posted at 1:30 am January 2, 2019
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

A 61-year-old Clinton man was injured in a shooting on Lee Lane on Wednesday afternoon, Dec. 26, 2018, police said, after he reportedly came on to his son’s property with a loaded gun and fired several shots toward the house, reportedly over the positioning of a floodlight. The son exited his home and returned fire, striking his father once in the buttocks, police said. Police found the man on the ground in front of his home, pictured above. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

A 61-year-old Clinton man was injured in a shooting on Lee Lane on Wednesday afternoon, Dec. 26, 2018, police said, after he reportedly came on to his son’s property with a loaded gun and fired several shots toward the house, reportedly over the positioning of a floodlight. The son exited his home and returned fire, striking his father once in the buttocks, police said. Police found the man on the ground in front of his home, pictured above. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

A 61-year-old Clinton man was injured in a shooting on Lee Lane on Wednesday afternoon, Dec. 26, 2018, police said, after he reportedly came on to his son’s property with a loaded gun and fired several shots toward the house, reportedly over the positioning of a floodlight. The son exited his home and returned fire, striking his father once in the buttocks, police said. Police found the man on the ground in front of his home, pictured above. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

The Clinton man who was shot during a dispute with his son last week, reportedly over the positioning of a floodlight, has had other disputes with family members, including another one involving a firearm, according to Anderson County court records.

In one of the previous cases, the man who was shot, Terry Lee Crawford, 61, allegedly vandalized his sister’s house with a tractor in October, also because of a floodlight, the court records said. That case is pending in Anderson County General Sessions Court in Clinton.

Before the alleged vandalism this year, Crawford had pleaded guilty to an assault against his sister and another victim in 2015—that case involved a firearm—and to an attempted assault against his son in 2016.

The incidents have involved three homes plus Crawford’s, all on Lee Lane in west Clinton, court records said.

Besides those cases, there is an indictment pending against Crawford for driving under the influence, reckless endangerment, and reckless driving.

It’s not clear what charges might be filed after last week’s shooting. Crawford was taken to the hospital after the shooting. He was booked into the Anderson County Detention Facility in Clinton on Monday. But affidavits, which include specific charges and brief descriptions of alleged crimes, were not available on Tuesday.

On Thursday, the day after the shooting, the district attorney general’s office called Crawford a “danger to society” and asked that his bond be revoked or increased in two of the previous cases. The motion appears to have been successful, at least for now; Crawford’s bond has been set at $1.7 million, an unusually large bond, and he remained in custody on Tuesday night, according to Anderson County jail records.

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Filed Under: Anderson County, Clinton, Courts, Front Page News, Police, Police and Fire, Premium Content, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: aggravated assault, Anderson County Criminal Court, Anderson County Detention Facility, Anderson County General Sessions Court, assault, Brad Kidwell, Clinton, Clinton Police Department, driving under the influence, felon in possession of a weapon, Lee Lane, Mark Pack, reckless endangerment, Seventh Judicial District Attorney General’s Office, shooting, Terry Lee Crawford, Vaughn Becker, violation of probation

(For members) Y-12 class could be added to worker compensation program based on thorium, Pu-241 exposure

Posted at 6:33 pm December 28, 2018
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

The sign at the main entrance to the Y-12 National Security Complex is pictured above on Sunday, Aug. 6, 2017. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

The sign at the main entrance to the Y-12 National Security Complex is pictured above on Sunday, Aug. 6, 2017. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

The sign at the main entrance to the Y-12 National Security Complex is pictured above on Sunday, Aug. 6, 2017. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

A new class of Y-12 employees could be added to a federal worker compensation program based on exposure to radiation from thorium metal parts and plutonium-241 isotopes between 1958 and 1976, health officials said.

The worker compensation program involves certain illnesses and work at sites like Y-12 that are affiliated with the U.S. Department of Energy.

The program is a result of the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act, which was enacted in October 2000. The act includes what is known as the Special Exposure Cohort. The new class of Y-12 employees could be part of that Special Exposure Cohort.

That designation would allow eligible claimants to be compensated without the complete reconstruction of a radiation dose or a determination of the probable cause. A covered employee would have to have at least one of 22 specified cancers.

The class of employees being evaluated now would have worked at Y-12 between January 1, 1958, through December 31, 1976, when Y-12 was manufacturing nuclear weapons components during the Cold War. The employees would have had an aggregate total of at least 250 work days, according to a notice published in the Federal Register this month. The class could change, however, based upon the evaluation.

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Filed Under: Federal, Front Page News, Government, Health, Premium Content, Slider, Top Stories, Y-12, Y-12 National Security Complex Tagged With: Advisory Board on Radiation and Worker Health, alpha radiation, beta radiation, cancer, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Cold War, Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act, external radiation, Federal Register, internal exposures, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, NIOSH, nuclear weapons components, Oak Ridge Associated Universities, plutonium-241, radiation, radiation dose, radiological hazard, radium, radium-228, special exposure cohort, thorium, U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, worker compensation, worker compensation program

(For members) Oak Ridge Airport: Officials submit layout plan, wait for FAA response

Posted at 2:26 pm December 21, 2018
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Pictured above giving an update on the Oak Ridge Airport project during a Metropolitan Knoxville Airport Authority board meeting on Wednesday, Dec. 19, 2018, is Bill Barley, standing, vice president of CHA Consulting, and Mike Reiter of Michael Baker International, seated at center. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

Pictured above giving an update about the Oak Ridge Airport project during a Metropolitan Knoxville Airport Authority board meeting on Wednesday, Dec. 19, 2018, is Bill Barley, standing, vice president of CHA Consulting, and Mike Reiter of Michael Baker International, seated at center. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

 

Pictured above giving an update on the Oak Ridge Airport project during a Metropolitan Knoxville Airport Authority board meeting on Wednesday, Dec. 19, 2018, is Bill Barley, standing, vice president of CHA Consulting, and Mike Reiter of Michael Baker International, seated at center. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

MCGHEE TYSON AIRPORT—A layout plan has been submitted for the proposed Oak Ridge Airport, and now officials are waiting for a response from the Federal Aviation Administration.

The response could arrive any day, said Bill Barley, vice president of CHA Consulting, which has an office in Louisville. Barley and Mike Reiter of Michael Baker International, an architectural firm, gave an update about the Oak Ridge Airport project during a meeting of the Metropolitan Knoxville Airport Authority Board of Commissioners at McGhee Tyson Aiport in Alcoa on Wednesday.

The letter from the FAA could be a conditional approval, which is standard, Barley said.

If approved and funded, the airport would have a 5,000-foot runway, and it would be built on the south side of the East Tennessee Technology Park, the former K-25 site in west Oak Ridge. It would be near Highway 58, on 170 acres of land that have been declared excess by the U.S. Department of Energy. The runway could run roughly parallel to the highway.

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Filed Under: Business, Federal, Front Page News, Government, Oak Ridge, Premium Content, Top Stories Tagged With: airport layout plan, Appalachian Regional Commission, Bill Barley, Bill Marrison, Billy Stair, CHA Consulting, Community Reuse Organization of East Tennessee, CROET, DOE, Downtown Island Airport, East Tennessee Technology Park, FAA, Federal Aviation Administration, Highway 58, K-25 site, McGhee Tyson Airport, Metropolitan Knoxville Airport Authority, Michael Baker International, Mike Reiter, MKAA, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge airport, Roane County, runway protection zone, Tennessee Aeronautics Commission, Tennessee Department of Transportation, U.S. Department of Energy

(For members) Divided opinion, split vote for revised Main Street plan

Posted at 1:09 pm December 10, 2018
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

The Oak Ridge Municipal Planning Commission and City Council discuss the revised plan for the second phase of Main Street Oak Ridge during a non-voting joint work session in the Municipal Building on Thursday, Nov. 8, 2018. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

The Oak Ridge Municipal Planning Commission and City Council discuss the revised plan for Main Street Oak Ridge during a non-voting joint work session in the Municipal Building on Thursday, Nov. 8, 2018. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

The Oak Ridge Municipal Planning Commission and City Council discuss the revised plan for the second phase of Main Street Oak Ridge during a non-voting joint work session in the Municipal Building on Thursday, Nov. 8, 2018. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

The Oak Ridge Municipal Planning Commission and City Council discuss the revised plan for the second phase of Main Street Oak Ridge during a non-voting joint work session in the Municipal Building on Thursday, Nov. 8, 2018. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

Oak Ridge officials have discussed the revised plan for the next phase of Main Street Oak Ridge in a half-dozen meetings since October, and in that time, the Municipal Planning Commission has had a split vote and City Council members have expressed divided opinions about the plan.

The Planning Commission, which has generally had concerns about the revisions and had postponed a vote, approved a version of the revised plan, subject to 10 conditions, in a 5-4 vote during a special meeting on Wednesday.

It’s not clear what will happen when the City Council considers the Planning Commission’s recommendation on Monday, December 10. Several Council members have had concerns, while others seemed ready to allow RealtyLink, the developer, to proceed with the 58-acre redevelopment.

The revisions have been proposed as RealtyLink prepares to welcome a second wave of tenants to the former mall site. The changes, which planning commissioners have called significant, would eliminate multifamily units and add retail uses, according to the city staff. The proposed revisions have included removing the access road from the roundabout to Rutgers Avenue, building four stores in that area (between PetSmart and JCPenney), eliminating the planned multi-family residential units near JCPenney, adding sidewalks and open space, and including mixed-use development in a later phase along Wilson Street.

Those who have had concerns have been disappointed about the proposal to close the access road and a shift from what they thought was going to be a mixed-use center with residential units, retailers, restaurants, and a central gathering space, to what could be primarily a shopping center. They have argued that a mixed-use area could improve the long-term viability of the project.

“The overwhelming response I’ve heard is: We want a town center,” said Stephen Whitson, Planning Commission chair. “I’ve heard it over and over.”

Those who would like to proceed are worried that RealtyLink could move on to other developments in other communities if its revised project here is not approved, and they have cited the potential sales tax revenues from the new retailers as an important consideration. The new retailers could include apparel stores and a home store.

Complicating the project are various lease and deed restrictions that control what can be built where. Lease restrictions include, for example, limits on the size of buildings on Wilson Street and restrictions on parking lot use near Cinemark Tinseltown, with no residential within 300 feet of the closest boundary corner.

The question now is whether the city wants to “hold out for something better” or act on a plan that is ready to go, Oak Ridge City Manager Mark Watson said during a November 8 work session featuring Planning Commission and City Council.

RealtyLink has said the proposed changes to the plan are tenant-driven, and the company has limited control over the site plans. Five national tenants are “at the table,” Neil Wilson, RealtyLink principal, told planning commissioners in October. RealtyLink has taken a plan first proposed by Crosland Southeast, the original developer, and adopted and revised it.

New stores would not be expected to be open by Christmas 2019, but they could be open sometime around the spring of 2020, according to the discussion at a November 8 work session.

Here is a timeline of the discussion in five meetings since October. It includes the opinions of planning commissioners and City Council members, and the results of the Wednesday vote.

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Filed Under: Business, Business, Front Page News, Government, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge, Premium Content, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: American Museum of Science and Energy, AMSE, Belk, Ben Stephens, Charlie Hensley, Chuck Hope, Cinemark Tinseltown, Claudia Lever, Crosland Southeast, Ellen Smith, green space, Jane Shelton, JCPenney, Jim Dodson, Kelly Callison, Main Street—Oak Ridge, Mark Watson, mixed use, Nathalie Schmidt, Neil Wilson, Oak Ridge Community Development, Oak Ridge Municipal Planning Commission, Patrick McMillan, PetSmart, planned unit development, PUD, Ray Evans, RealtyLink, residential, restaurants, retail, revised plan, Rick Chinn, Rutgers Avenue, sales tax revenues, Sharon Kohler, shopping center, Stephen Whitson, Todd Wilson, Warren Gooch, Wayne Blasius, Wilson Street, Zabrina Minor Gregg

(For members) NNSA modernizing weapons as U.S. nuclear stockpile shrinks

Posted at 3:44 pm December 2, 2018
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Image from the Fiscal Year 2019 Stockpile Stewardship and Management Plan of the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration, which was released in October 2018.

Image from the Fiscal Year 2019 Stockpile Stewardship and Management Plan of the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration, which was released in October 2018.

 

Image from the Fiscal Year 2019 Stockpile Stewardship and Management Plan of the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration, which was released in October 2018.

The U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile continues to shrink and it’s gotten older, but the National Nuclear Security Administration, which has a site in Oak Ridge, has four modernization programs under way. That’s the busiest the NNSA has been since the Cold War era, Administrator Lisa Gordon-Hagerty said in a report to Congress in October.

The Y-12 National Security Complex in Oak Ridge, which enriched uranium for the first atomic bomb used in wartime, has been involved in the work to modernize some weapons and dismantle others as the stockpile changes.

The rest of this story, which you will find only on Oak Ridge Today, includes more information about Y-12’s work on nuclear weapons and a series of nine questions and answers with Hans M. Kristensen, the director of the Nuclear Information Project at Federation of American Scientists. 

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Filed Under: Front Page News, National Nuclear Security Administration, Premium Content, Slider, U.S. Department of Energy, Y-12, Y-12 National Security Complex Tagged With: B61-12 gravity bomb, B61-12 LEP, bombs, Cold War, cruise missile warhead, Federation of American Scientists, Fiscal Year 2019 Stockpile Stewardship and Management Plan—Biennial Plan Summary, Hans M. Kristensen, intercontinental ballistic missile warheads, life extension program, Lisa Gordon-Hagerty, National Nuclear Security Administration, NNSA, nuclear weapons, nuclear weapons stockpile, submarine-launched ballistic missile warheads, U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile, W76-1 LEP, W76-1 warhead, W80-4 warhead, W88 Alteration 370, weapon dismantlement, Y-12 National Security Complex

(For members) New DOE security contractor will take over in December

Posted at 2:27 pm November 19, 2018
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

The Joe L. Evins Federal Building is pictured above in Oak Ridge on Monday, Nov. 19, 2018. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

The Joe L. Evins Federal Building is pictured above in Oak Ridge on Monday, Nov. 19, 2018. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

The Joe L. Evins Federal Building is pictured above in Oak Ridge on Monday, Nov. 19, 2018. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

After a protest was denied this month, a new security contractor will take over protecting U.S. Department of Energy sites in Oak Ridge at the end of December.

The contract could be worth close to $66 million and be in place for five years.

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Filed Under: DOE, East Tennessee Technology Park, Front Page News, Oak Ridge Associated Universities, Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education, Oak Ridge Office, Oak Ridge Reservation, Office of Scientific and Technical Information, Police and Fire, Premium Content, Slider, U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: Central Training Facility, DiAnn Fields-Gilbert, DOE, DOE security contractor, East Tennessee Technology Park, Environmental Management Waste Management Facility, ETTP, Federal Building Complex, Golden SVCS LLC, National Strategic Protective Services LLC, NSPS, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge Office, Office of Scientific and Technical Information, Office of Secure Transportation-Agents Eastern Command Secure Transport Center, OSTI, Protection Strategies Inc., protective force, protective force contract, protective force security services, security contractor, Transuranic Waste Processing Center, U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. Government Accountability Office, WSI Oak Ridge, Y-12 National Security Complex

Revised plan, postponed vote inject uncertainty into second phase of Main Street

Posted at 2:20 pm October 24, 2018
By John Huotari 1 Comment

The access road from this roundabout to Rutgers Avenue, pictured above on Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2018, could be closed and a retail store built here as part of phase two under a revised master plan for Main Street Oak Ridge. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

The access road from this roundabout to Rutgers Avenue, pictured above on Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2018, could be closed and a retail store built in its place as part of phase two under a revised master plan for Main Street Oak Ridge. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

The access road from this roundabout to Rutgers Avenue, pictured above on Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2018, could be closed and a retail store built here as part of phase two under a revised master plan for Main Street Oak Ridge. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

A revised master plan and postponed vote have injected uncertainty into the second phase of Main Street Oak Ridge, the 58-acre redevelopment of the former Oak Ridge Mall.

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Filed Under: Business, Business, Front Page News, Government, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge, Premium Content, Slider Tagged With: American Museum of Science and Energy, AMSE, Ben Stephens, Burke's, Charlie Hensley, Chuck Hope, Claudia Lever, Crosland Southeast, Jane Shelton, JCPenney, Jim Dodson, Main Street—Oak Ridge, Mark Watson, master plan, Nathalie Schmidt, Neil Wilson, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Mall, Oak Ridge Municipal Planning Commision, Patrick McMillan, PetSmart, planned unit development, RealtyLink, roundabout, Rutgers Avenue, Sharon Kohler, Todd Wilson, Wilson Street, Zabrina Gregg

Y-12 approved for B61-12 weapons work

Posted at 11:14 am October 21, 2018
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Image from U.S. Government Accountability Office report in May 2018 on B61-12 Nuclear Bomb.

Image from U.S. Government Accountability Office report in May 2018 on the B61-12 nuclear bomb.

 

Image from U.S. Government Accountability Office report in May 2018 on B61-12 Nuclear Bomb.

Image from U.S. Government Accountability Office report in May 2018 on the B61-12 nuclear bomb.

 

The Y-12 National Security Complex in Oak Ridge has been approved to produce a major component of a nuclear bomb known as the B61-12.

The approval was the final step to authorize the manufacturing and delivery of the first production unit of a component called the canned subassembly. It’s scheduled for March 2019, according to Y-12. A canned subassembly is the second stage of a modern thermonuclear weapon, and it is part of the nuclear explosives package.

The Y-12 work is part of the B61-12 Life Extension Program, which will consolidate four versions of the bomb into one. The bombs could be carried on B-2A bomber aircraft and F-15Es, several types of F-16s, and PA-200 fighters, and in the future, F-35s and B-21s.

The rest of this story, which you will find only on Oak Ridge Today, is available if you are a member: a subscriber, advertiser, or recent contributor to Oak Ridge Today. 

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Filed Under: Federal, Front Page News, Government, National Nuclear Security Administration, Premium Content, Slider, U.S. Department of Energy, Y-12, Y-12 National Security Complex Tagged With: B61, B61-12, B61-12 LEP, B61-12 Life Extension Program, Bill Tindal, Boeing Tail Kit Assembly, canned subassembly, DOE, GAO, Kansas City National Security Campus, LEP, life extension program, Los Alamos National Laboratory, National Nuclear Security Administration, NATO, NNSA, NNSA Production Office, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, nuclear bomb, nuclear explosives package, nuclear weapons, Pantex Plant, qualification evaluation release, Ronald G. Allen Jr., Sandia National Laboratories, Savannah River Site, secondary, Steven Wyatt, thermonuclear weapons, U.S. Air Force, U.S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. Government Accountability Office, Y-12 National Security Complex

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