Skip to main content
Advertising

Originally published Thursday, January 10, 2013 at 10:56 AM

  • Share:
           
  • Comments (0)
  • Print

Hanford cleanup continues as Gregoire steps down

Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire she takes with her more than two decades of experience fighting to clean up the nation's most contaminated nuclear site when she leaves office next week.

The Associated Press

Most Popular Comments
Hide / Show comments
No comments have been posted to this article.
Start the conversation >

advertising

YAKIMA, Wash. —

Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire she takes with her more than two decades of experience fighting to clean up the nation's most contaminated nuclear site when she leaves office next week.

In the mid-1980s, Gregoire was a deputy state attorney general lobbying the U.S. government to disclose whether the top-secret Hanford nuclear reservation posed any environmental or health risks.

As director of Ecology, she helped negotiate a 1989 agreement requiring the federal government to clean up the site. She then served three terms as state attorney general and two terms as governor, often working to enforce that agreement.

Gregoire says she's still confident the site will be cleaned up, but acknowledges she was naive to think the agreement would resolve the problem because so much was unknown about Hanford then.

News where, when and how you want it

Email Icon


Advertising