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PO BOX 27646 TEMPE ARIZONA 85285 USA 480-557-0263 A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION CONNECT WITH US ON SOCIAL MEDIA WMS2016 WMS SUPPORTERS American Nuclear Society IAEA - International Atomic Energy Agency IFNEC - International Framework for Nuclear Energy Cooperation Nuclear Energy Agency OECD - Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development Roy G. Post Foundation Socit Franaise dEnergie Nuclaire Waste Management Education and Research Consortium WNA - World Nuclear Association The conference is organized in cooperation with the US Department of Energy The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission the US Environmental Protection Agency and the US Department of Defense. CCOUNTRIES REPRESENTED AT WM SYMPOSIA REPRESENTATION OF COUNTRIES VARIES EACH YEAR AUSTRALIA AUSTRIA BELGIUM BRAZIL CANADA CHINA CZECH REPUBLIC FINLAND FRANCE GERMANY ITALY JAPAN KAZAKHSTAN RUSSIAN FEDERATION SAUDI ARABIA SLOVAKIA SLOVENIA SOUTH AFRICA SOUTH KOREA SPAIN SWEDEN SWITZERLAND TAIWAN TAJIKISTAN THAILAND TURKEY UKRAINE UNITED ARAB EMIRATES UNITED KINGDOM USA wmsym.org EDUCATION OPPORTUNITY IN WASTE MANAGEMENT WM2016 MARCH6-102016 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Schedule of Events 2 Presidents Welcome 4 Meeting Contacts WMS Officers and Directors 5 Program Advisory Committee PAC Members 8 Conference Registration - Fees and Categories 10 General Conference Information 11 Presenters Panelists and Volunteers 14 Special Meetings Training and Events by Day 15 Saturday March 5 15 Sunday March 6 15 Monday March 7 17 Tuesday March 8 19 Wednesday March 9 20 Thursday March 10 21 Contracting and Procurement Sessions 21 Sessions Open to all Attendees 22 PAC Thursday Meeting Schedule 23 Featured Sessions 24 Scheduled Tours and Recommendations 26 Scholarships Honors and Awards 28 Papers of Note 30 Map - Metro Light Rail 34 Map - Walking Parking Guide 35 Map - Level Three Presenters Breakfast Plenary and Lunches 36 Map - Level Two WoWM Receptions 37 Map - Level One - Technical Sessions 38 Map - Lower Level - RegistrationShow Floor 39 Comprehensive List of Acronyms 42 Track List with Related Sessions 45 Technical Program - Schedule at a Glance 47 Technical Program Descriptions - Sessions 1 134 51 Authors Index 114 Poster SessionsStudent Poster Competition 125 Exhibitor List in Alphabetical Order 127 Exhibitor List by Booth Number 151 WM2017 Important Dates 153 www.wmsym.org SATURDAY MARCH 5 2016 0700 2000 - GuestAttendee Tour Grand Canyon Tour Buses load at 0645 1100 1700 - Registration Open Lower Level Exhibit Hall 4 1100 1700 - Satellite Registration Desk Open Marriott Renaissance Lobby 1100 1900 - Satellite Registration Desk Open - Hyatt Regency Lobby 1630 1800 - Track Co-Chair Meeting Hyatt Regency AB 1800 2130 - PAC Meeting and Dinner Hyatt Regency CD SUNDAY MARCH 6 2016 0800 2000 - Registration Open Lower Level Exhibit Hall 4 0800 1500 - WMS Board of Directors Meeting Hyatt Regency 0800 1700 - Workshop - US EPA Superfund Radiation Risk Assessment Calculator Training - Level One 106B 0800 1630 - Roy G. Post Foundation Benefit Golf Tournament The Legacy Golf Club 0900 1700 - Satellite Registration Desk Open - Marriott Renaissance Lobby 0900 1700 - Satellite Registration Desk Open - Hyatt Regency Lobby 1000 1400 - GuestAttendee Tour Desert Hike Tour Buses load at 0945 1100 1700 - Workshop Critical Decisions and Tools for First-Time and Experienced Managers Level One 106C 1500 1600 - First Time AttendeePAC Orientation Level One 101B 1600 1645 - IPAC Meeting Level One 102A 1600 1645 - Technical Student Assistant Training Level One 101C 1700 2000 - Welcome Reception Show Floor Open Lower Level Exhibit Hall 4 MONDAY MARCH 7 2016 0700 0800 - Presenters Breakfast Level Three 301A 0700 1800 - Registration Open Lower Level Exhibit Hall 4 0730 1100 - ASME Radwaste System Committee Meeting Hyatt Regency Phoenix Cowboy Artists Room 0800 0945 - Opening Plenary Session Level Three 301CD 0930 1830 - Show Floor Open Lower Level Exhibit Hall 4 0945 1030 - Refreshment Break - Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 1000 1700 - Technical Sessions Level One Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 1045 1115 - Demonstration in Demo Zone - Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 1200 1315 - Keynote Luncheon Level Three 301CD 1330 1400 - Demonstration in Demo Zone - Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 1330 1700 - Student Poster Competition Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 1415 1445 - Demonstration in Demo Zone - Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 1445 1530 - Refreshment Break - Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 1700 1830 - WMS Networking Reception Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 1800 1930 - Students Young Professionals Networking Reception Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 Near Student Poster Session TUESDAY MARCH 8 2016 0700 0800 - Presenters Breakfast Level Three 301A 0700 1800 - Registration Open Lower Level Exhibit Hall 4 0830 1700 - Technical Sessions Level One Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 0930 1830 - Show Floor Open Lower Level Exhibit Hall 4 0945 1030 - Refreshment Break - Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 1045 1115 - Demonstration in Demo Zone - Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 1200 1315 - Honors Awards Luncheon Level Three 301CD 1415 1445 - Demonstration in Demo Zone - Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 1445 1530 - Refreshment Break - Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 1700 1830 - WMS Evening Reception Lower Level Exhibit Hall 4 1800 2000 - Women of Waste Management WoWM Panel Networking Reception Level Two 212ABC WM2016 SCHEDULE OF EVENTS All sessions will take place at the Phoenix Convention Center PCC West Building unless noted otherwise. All buses for off-site events tours will load from the Hyatt Regency Phoenix Monroe Street exit. 2 WEDNESDAY MARCH 9 2016 0700 0800 - Presenters Breakfast Level Three 301A 0700 1800 - Registration Open Lower Level Exhibit Hall 4 0830 1700 - Technical Sessions Level One Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 0930 1330 - Show Floor Open Lower Level Exhibit Hall 4 0945 1030 - Refreshment Break - Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 1445 1530 - Refreshment Break - Level One Foyer 1800 2100 - Phoenix Art Museum Networking Reception Dinner Buses load at 1745 THURSDAY MARCH 10 2016 0700 0800 - Presenters Breakfast Level Three 301A 0700 0815 - PAC Meeting - Part 1 - Level Three 301A 0700 1700 - Registration Open Level One 101A 0800 0845 - Refreshment Break - Level One Foyer 0830 1700 - Technical Sessions Level One 1200 1315 - Thursday Luncheon Level Three 301A 1200 1315 - PAC Meeting - Part 2 - Level Three 301A 1330 1700 - Topical Session - International Nuclear Plant Decommissioning Time for Awareness and Planning Level One 102BC 1445 1530 - Refreshment Break - Level One Foyer 1700 1800 - Closing Reception Level One Foyer 1800 1930 - Optional PAC Meeting - Part 3 Hyatt Regency Curtis AB Separate Registration Fees Apply Schedule Subject to Change STAY CONNECTED WITH US WM2016 SCHEDULE OF EVENTS All sessions will take place at the Phoenix Convention Center PCC West Building unless noted otherwise. All buses for off-site events tours will load from the Hyatt Regency Phoenix Monroe Street exit. DOWNLOAD THE WM SYMPOSIA APP The conference app provides up-to-date information about the schedule presenters and current information about the conference. We strongly encourage you to download the app to enhance your experience at WM. Youll be able to plan your day with a personalized schedule and browse exhibitors maps and general conference info. We will update the schedule and other conference information throughout the conference to keep you fully informed. 1. Download from the Apple App Store Google Play or BlackBerry World. 2. Search for WM Symposia WM Symposia has joined Twitter LinkedIn Facebook and YouTube to better communicate with you. We invite you to connect with us. If you already have Twitter or Facebook accounts we encourage you to FOLLOW us on Twitter LIKE us on Facebook andor VIEW OUR PROFILE on LinkedIn. Facebook www.facebook.com WMSymposiaInc Twitter WMSymposia LinkedIn WM Symposia YouTube WM Symposia WMS2016 3 42 YEARS OF DELIVERING GLOBAL PROGRESS IN WASTE MANAGEMENT THROUGH INNOVATION AND COLLABORATION Welcome to the 42nd Annual Waste Management Conference WM2016 the premier international conference for the management of radioactive materials and related topics. WM2016 will convene at the Phoenix Convention Center PCC from March 6 10 2016. We have made it our goal to build a conference that promotes innovation and collaboration around the world. We have accomplished that again this year with nearly 30 countries represented and over 2000 engineers scientists managers and students. Our comprehensive technical program will deliver over 500 papers and 134 technical sessions and panels. It is complemented by an extensive exhibition. This year we are especially proud to have the United Kingdom as our featured country to detail recent developments and ambitious plans for the future. Please be sure to visit the UK Pavilion located inside the Exhibit Hall to learn more about these developments. We have made some exciting changes inside the Exhibit Hall this year. Several panel sessions and demonstrations will take place on the show floor throughout the week as well as additional areas and work stations for you to conduct business on the show floor. On Thursday March 10 WMS is proud to present a topical session entitled International Nuclear Power Plant Decommissioning Time for Awareness and Planning followed by a closing reception that evening. This panel focuses on the approximately 200 nuclear power plants around the world that are slated to be decommissioned over the next twenty years. It is important that regulators utilities and companies involved in decommissioning commence planning for this significant development. This panel will provide international views addressing regulatory issues decommissioning cost estimation remediation experience and expectations decommissioning challenges waste management issues and identification of sites planning decommissioning globally. The panel will consist of US and international experts. In addition there will be featured panel and paper sessions focusing on special topics from our featured sites the US DOE site of Oak Ridge Tennessee and the US DOE site of Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico. There will also be special reserved sessions on the Fukushima Project and DD Procurement and Contracting Safety Clean-up of Legacy Sites Worldwide and IAEA Topics. Our goal is to continuously improve the conference. If you have ideas on how to improve the technical content or the logistics of the conference please let us know. I would like to thank the WM team for their tireless efforts before and during the conference. Thanks to our sponsors and exhibitors for their contributions that enhance what we can accomplish. We appreciate the WM attendees whose involvement collaboration and insights make the conference exciting and meaningful. We are a non-profit organization with the mission of supporting education. With your support and participation we are able to provide numerous scholarships each year to promising young people studying in the waste management field. I hope you enjoy your time at WM2016. James Fiore President - WM Symposia 4 MEETING CONTACTS James W. Voss Managing Director Gary Benda Deputy Managing Director PAC Chair Linda Lehman Deputy PAC Chair Sonny Goldston PAC Aide Melanie Ravalin CMP Conference Manager Danielle Adams Senior Conference Planner Jaclyn Russell Exhibits Sponsorship Advertising Manager Amanda Tassoul Technical Program Coordinator Selly Soetarso Registration Manager Roy G. Post Foundation Student Information Lisa Parenti Technical Program Administrator CONTACT INFORMATION James W. Voss E jamesvosswmarizona.org P 1 480-557-0263 Gary Benda E gbendawmarizona.org P 1 803-345-2170 Linda Lehman E llehmanwmarizona.org P 1 612-867-9725 Sonny Goldston E sgoldstonwmarizona.org P 1 480 557-0263 Melanie Ravalin CMP E melaniewmarizona.org P 1 480-557-0263 x11 Danielle Adams E daniellewmarizona.org P 1 480-557-0263 x15 Jaclyn Russell E jaclynwmarizona.org P 1 480-557-0263 x17 Selly Soetarso E sellywmarizona.org P 1 480-557-0263 x16 Amanda Tassoul E amandawmarizona.org P 1 480-557-0263 x10 Lisa Parenti E lisawmarizona.org P 1 480-557-0263 x12 5 James Gallagher Chairman of the Board James Fiore President Steven P. Kadner Treasurer John Mathieson Secretary Larry W. Camper Member-at-Large John Longenecker Member-at-Large George Dials Member-at-Large Fred Sheil Member-at-Large Bob Cochran William T. Gregory III Lawrence Harmon Angie Jones Jack L. McElroy Greg Meyer Lance Mezga Sue J. Mitchell WMS BOARD OF DIRECTORS 6 WMS BOARD OF DIRECTORS Mamoru Numata Olaf Oldiges Susan Stiger Robert Weiler Mark Gilbertson WMS Board Members Larry W. Camper US NRC Retired Talisman Intl Advoco Professional Svcs Bob Cochran CTG LLC George Dials Pajarito Scientific Corporation James Fiore Fiore Consulting James Gallagher Gallagher Consulting William T. Gregory III Vinculum Mktg Solutions Lawrence Harmon Project Enhancement Corporation Angie Jones AMEC Foster Wheeler Steven P. Kadner Aquila Technologies John Longenecker Longenecker Associates John Mathieson NDA UK Jack L. McElroy Consultant Greg Meyer Fluor Corporation Lance Mezga Consultant Sue J. Mitchell Consultant Mamoru Numata NDF Japan Olaf Oldiges DAHER Nuclear Technologies GmbH Germany Fred Sheil Sheil Consulting Ltd. UK Susan Stiger Bechtel NSE Robert Weiler AREVA Mark Gilbertson US DOE Liaison WMS Board Members Emeritus Ron K. Bhada New Mexico State University Paul Crawley Consultant Scott Dam ASD EC Howard M. Frederick Consultant James Glasgow Pillsbury Winthrop John Hurley Consultant Alec E. Kelley Professor Emeritus Hiroshi Kuribayashi Consultant Japan Takao Nakajima JAIF Kurihalant Co. Ltd. Japan Nancy Rothermich Lawrence Berkelely National Laboratory Robert F. Williams WTA Inc. WMS Legal Counsel James Glasgow Pillsbury Winthrop 7 WM2016 PROGRAM ADVISORY COMMITTEE PAC PAC ChairDeputy Managing Director Gary Benda AVANTech Inc. Deputy PAC Chair Linda Lehman CH2M Hill Inc. PAC Representative W.T. Sonny Goldston EnergySolutions Track Co-Chairs - Track Number Kim Auclair KD Auclair Assoc. 9 Gabriele Bandt TV NORD EnSys Hannover 3 Robert Berry Foxfire Scientific Inc. 8 Frazier Bronson Canberra Industries 3 Tom Brouns PNNL 2 Ray Clark US EPA 1 Judith Connell Fluor Govt Group - 8 Jas Devgun Consultant 6 Al Freitag Consultant 6 Kurt Gerdes US DOE 7 W.T. Sonny Goldston EnergySolutions-8 Angie Jones AMEC Foster Wheeler 1 Paul Jones Ameriphysics 5 Robert Jubin ORNL 2 John Kristofzski Consultant 7 Mark Lewis EnergySolutions 4 John Mathieson UK NDA 1 C. Clint Miller PGE 4 Keith Miller NNL 2 Roger Nelson US DOE 2 Olaf Oldiges DAHER Nuclear Technologies GmbH- 5 Grald Ouzounian Andra 2 Colleen Owens ATL 3 Andreas Roth EnergySolutions 4 Fred Sheil Sheil Consulting Ltd. 6 Tjalle Chuck Vandergraaf Consultant 7 Ming Zhu US DOE 9 Additional PAC Members Rateb Abu Eid US NRC Sue Aggarwal New Millennium Nuclear Technologies Nithin Akuthota CRC Technologies Ed Alperin Solutions-IES Inc. Mark Arenaz US DOE Harry Babad Consultant and Author Anthony Banford NNL Del Baird Pro2Serve Helen Belencan Consultant Remi Bera AREVA Federal Services Dale Bignell Portage Inc. Enrique Biurrun DBE Technology GmbH Dick Blauvelt Portage Inc. Peter Booth Hylton Environmental Joseph Boucau Westinghouse Elizabeth Bowers Consultant Paul Bredt PNNL Jonathan Bricker SRR Steven Brown SHB Inc. Lisa Burns Consultant Connie Callan Natl Educational Technology Solutions LLC Larry Camper USNRC Retired Advoco Professional Svcs LLC Chris Chadwick Porvair Filtration Group Grant Charters New Millennium Nuclear Technologies Michelle Claggett Project Enhancement Corporation John Coffman ReNuke Svcs Michael Connolly INL Rick Dearholt Information International Associates Rick Demmer INL George Dials Pajarito Scientific Paul Dickman Argonne National Lab David Eaton CH2M-WG Idaho LLC Russel Edge IAEA Robert Edmonds AREVA Federal Svcs Mike Eisenhower Materials Energy Corporation Leif Eriksson Nuclear Waste Dispositions Erich Evered Jacobs Christine Fahey Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Ltd Ella Feist CH2M Hill Inc. Terri Fellinger SRR Kapila Fernando ANSTO Jim Fiore Fiore Consulting Lauire Ford Critical Path Management Jenny Freeman Strata-G Mark Frei Longenecker Associates James Gallagher Gallagher Consulting April Gil US DOE Sal Golub US DOE Kapil Goyal LANL Anja Graf WAK GmbH John Greeves Talisman International John Gregory AREVA Federal Services LLC William Gregory Vinculum Marketing Karen Guevara Consultant Lawrence Harmon Project Enhancement Corporation Bob Hiergesell SRNL Cathy Hickey CH2M HILL Inc. Steven Houser Oneida Total Integrated Enterprises Betty Humphrey Weston Solutions Jeannette Hyatt SRNL James Hylko ENERCON Services Inc Vijay Jain Savannah River Remediation Moses Jaraysi CH2M HILL PRC Leslie Jardine L.J. Jardine Services Myron Kaczmarsky Westinghouse Ashok Kapoor US DOE Edward Ketusky SRNL Scott Kirk WCS Heather Klebba NFT Eric Knox AECOM Heinz Kroeger TV NORD EnSys Hannover Simon Kwong NNL Christian Ladirat CEA Marcoule Leonel Lagos FIU Christine Langton SRNL Hope Lee PNNL Martin Letourneau Consultant Maria Lindberg Studsvik Nuclear AB Larry Ling Savannah River Remediation John Longenecker Longenecker Assoc. Todd Lovinger LLW Forum Inc. Con Lyras ANSTO Margaret MacDonell ANL Sharon Marra SRNL Mark Matthews Matthews Inc. Jack McElroy McElroy Consulting Irena Mele IAEA Roger Merrick EngineeringRemediation Resources Group Inc. Lance Mezga Consultant Kent McDonald PNNL Sue Mitchell MS Technology Inc. Sitakanta Mohanty Center for Nuclear Waste Regulatory Analyses Mike Nolan Energy Northwest Columbia NNP Michael Nosbisch Hill International Inc. Mamoru Numata NDF Patrick OSullivan IAEA Michael Ojovan University of Sheffield Corhyn Parr Nuclear Enterprise Ltd Russell Patterson US DOE Bernard Poncet EDF-CIDEN Kenneth Redus Redus and Associates Larry Regens OU Health Sciences Center Karlan Richards Bechtel National Inc. Allen Roos USACE Terry Sams WRPS Elizabeth Saris Leidos Inc. Detlef Schmidt Nuclear Projects Consultancy Malgorzata K. Sneve Norwegian Radiation Protection Authority Joy Shoemake Mission Support Alliance Mike Snyder EPRI Sergey Stefanovsky SIA Radon Hans-Jrgen Steinmetz Forschungszentrum Jlich GmbH Roger Stigers PPL Susquehanna Karthik Subramanian WRPS Linda Suttora US DOE Andrew Szilagyi US DOE Kazuhiro Suzuki NDF Erich Tiepel Golder Associates Inc Steve Thomson NNL Holger Tietze-Jaensch Forschungszentrum- Jlich GmbH Christopher Timm PECOS Mgmt Svcs Mindy Toothman AECOM Julia Tripp INL Chi-Fung Tso ARUP Esko Tusa Fortum Power and Heat Oy Vanessa Vanover Hatfield E2 Consulting Engineers Inc. Leo van Velzen NRG-Arnhem Robert Vellinger TerranearPMC LLC Bernard Vigreux SFEN Thilo Von Berlepsch DBE Technology GmbH James Voss Predicus LLC Charles Waggoner Mississippi State University David Wallace Lockheed Martin Corp. Nelson Walter AMEC Susan Walter AECOM Anna Wikmark Swedish Nuclear Fuel and Waste Management Co Wendell Weart Weart Consulting Kirste Webb PQC Solutions Julia Whitworth LANL Terry Wickland Nuclear Filter Tech. William Wilmarth SRNL James Wright Rio Technical Services Chuan-Fu Wu ESH Solutions Loong Yong Spectra Tech Inc. Ming Zhang Geological Survey of Japan AIST International PAC Members International Program Advisory Committee IPAC Leaders China Chuan-Fu Wu Canada Tjalle Vandergraaf France Gerald Ouzounian Germany Andreas Roth Japan Ming Zhang Korea Kun Jai Lee Scandinavia Esko Tusa Russia Leslie Jardine United Kingdom Keith Miller 8 K-761 Demolition URS CH2M Hill Oak Ridge ETTP Oak Ridge TN N-Reactor Washington Closure Hanford RCCP Hanford WA K-31 Demolition URS CH2M Hill Oak Ridge ETTP Oak Ridge TN Defense Waste Processing Facility Savannah River Remediation SRS Aiken SC Delivering a Clean Environment AECOM is a premier fully-integrated profession and technical services firm with nearly 90000 employees in more than 150 countries. We are addressing complex high-hazard issues for the U.S. Department of Energy and throughout the world. www.aecom.com 013-16 Onsite Conference Registration Fees Full Technical Registration 1475 PAC Members Full Technical 1375 2 Day Technical MonTues or TuesWed or WedThurs 1130 1 Day Technical Mon or Tues or Wed or Thurs 975 Full-Time Student Full Technical 35 Exhibit Hall Only Registration Exhibit Hall Only Sun - Wed 600 1 Day Exhibit Hall SunMon or TuesWed Not Available for MonTues 400 Professional Development Workshopss Sunday Workshop Critical Decisions and Tools for First-Time and Experienced Managers 150 Sunday Workshop US EPA Superfund Radiation Risk Assessment 150 Guest Program and Other Options Guest Program Registration 150 Lunch Ticket Mon or Tues or Thurs 40 each Wednesday Evening Event at The Phoenix Art Museum 50 Full Technical Registration includes four days of the conference 4 receptions Monday Keynote lunch Tuesday Awards lunch Wednesday Exhibit Hall lunch Thursday lunch and workshops and online proceedings. Please note the Wednesday evening Phoenix Art Museum event is a separate fee. Two Day Technical Registration includes two days of the conference receptions lunches and online proceedings. You may register for Monday and Tuesday Tuesday and Wednesday or Wednesday and Thursday. If registering for MondayTuesday the Sunday Evening Welcome Reception is included. Please note the Wednesday evening Phoenix Art Museum event is a separate fee. One Day Technical Registration includes one day of the conference reception lunch and online proceedings. Please note the Wednesday evening Phoenix Art Museum event is a separate fee. Student Registration see Full Technical registration description. This category is open only to full-time students 35 years of age or younger. SpeakersPanelistsSession Co-Chairs Speakers Panelists or Session Co-Chairs must have a Technical registration badge. Full Week Exhibit Hall Only Registration includes access to Exhibit Hall only including refreshment breaks and receptions on Sunday Monday and Tuesday evenings. Access only to technical sessions as specially noted in program schedule. Two Day Exhibit Hall Only includes access to the Exhibit Hall for the two days selected and includes the refreshment breaks and evening receptions. If TuesdayWednesday pass is purchased Wednesdays boxed lunch in the Exhibit Hall is included. Guest Program Registration includes Exhibit Hall access to the social events on Sunday Monday and Tuesday evenings and breakfast voucher valid at the Terrace Caf located inside the Hyatt Regency Phoenix on 2nd floor from Monday - Thursday. Please see terms conditions on actual voucher. Please Note Guests are defined as spouses and significant others and are NOT BUSINESS ASSOCIATES Co-workers or associates in the industry do not apply. Please note no one under the age of 18 years old is permitted to attend the conference or Exhibit Hall. Exhibitors - conference registration fees are in addition to exhibitor booth fees. Most booth fees include complimentary registration badges. Registration Categories CONFERENCE REGISTRATION 10 NEW THIS YEAR Concierge Booth Concession Stand Panel Zone Demo Zone and more Concierge Booth Ask our knowledgeable Concierge Booth staff questions on local businesses venues special events and recommendations tailored to your needs WMS will now offer a new service to WMS attendees and their guests to assist with any conference questions restaurant reservations recreation requests car reservations etc. The Concierge Booth is located near Registration at the Phoenix Convention Center Lower Level inside Exhibit Hall 4. Hours Saturday March 5 1100 1700 Sunday March 6 0800 2000 Monday March 7 0700 1800 Tuesday March 8 0700 1800 Wednesday March 9 0700 1300 Thank you to our Concierge Booth Sponsor Concession Stand The concession stand located near aisle 100 on the show floor will be open on Monday and Tuesday from 1000 1600 and will feature a variety of meal options. This is a great opportunity to grab a quick bite to eat and visit the exhibitors or take advantage of the charging tables located throughout the hall to catch up on work. Located on the Lower Level Show Floor in Exhibit Hall 4. Panel Zone New this year we have added panel sessions to our Show Floor in the Exhibit Hall. These sessions will take place in the Panel Zone located near aisle 300. Sessions include topics such as UK NDAUS DOE Contracting US DOE Small Business Procurement and Interim Storage of Used Nuclear Fuel in the US. Located on the Lower Level Show Floor in Exhibit Hall 4. Demo Zone Make sure to leave time in your day to take advantage of the live demonstrations taking place on the show floor near aisle 1100. Learn about products from different aspects of the industry including the products detailed below. Demonstrations begin at 1045 on Monday and Tuesday and again at 1330 and 1415. On Monday morning watch as Ortec demonstrates their integrated Cooling System. This is a new electromechanical cooler for HPGe detectors which provides multi-directional LN2 free operation and versatility with different detector types and sizes and has a long life robust design that incorporates a hardened cryostat. Monday afternoon Mega-Tech Services LLC will showcase two high pressure hydraulic cutting tools the MT-2 which is a guillotine style cutting tool and the MT-SC-3 which is a scissor style cutting tool and can be used in both manual and remote applications. Following you will then be able to experience the ultimate LDR treatment of RCRA mixed low level waste debris radioactive lead solids by learning about UltraTechs Macro Encapsulation which comes in fixed and mobile systems. Kicking off the demonstrations on Tuesday Morning AttentionIT will show you how to strategically manage trace report all Waste Streams with their eMWaste G2 Primary COTS Software. To further your learning on Tuesday afternoon iRobot will then showcase how their remotely operated mobile robots have significantly reduced dose and personal exposure by allowing human operators to remain outside of the radiation environment while performing tasks. Located on the Lower Level Show Floor in Exhibit Hall 4. Electronic Signage Make sure to refer to our new electronic signage outside of the session rooms for the most up to date session information. Thank you to our sponsor GENERAL CONFERENCE INFORMATION 11 WMS Non-Discrimination Compliance with the laws and regulations that are applicable to the annual WM Symposia and other programs that it conducts shall be a foremost objective of WM Symposia Inc. WMS including requirements of law regarding equal opportunity and non-discrimination based on age color disability national origin race religion gender pregnancy genetic information retaliation or any other characteristic protected by law. In selecting officers and directors and pursuing its mission WMS will adhere fully to this policy. WMS will advise all directors officers employees and WMS contractors of their obligation to comply with this nondiscrimi- nation policy. In organizing and presenting the annual WM Symposium and other events WMS will advise registrants and other participants of its non-discrimination policy and seek to promote an environment free of any such discrimination. Photograph and Video Policy By registering you agree to the WM Symposia photograph and video policy. Under this policy no person may video any portion of the technical program without the written consent of WM Symposia as well as each presenter that you are filming. In addition you agree that you may be photographed or filmed while attending WM Symposia and that these images may be used by WM Symposia or someone that has received WM Symposia consent. Special Needs WMS Staff will be glad to help with any special needs onsite. Please visit the Registration Desk located in the Exhibit Hall for assistance. Lost and Found Please visit the Registration Desk for any lost and found items during the conference at the PCC. The registration desk will be relocated to Room 101A after the Exhibit Hall closes on Wednesday. Registration Policies The deadline for substitution requests or cancellation was February 12 2016. Refunds will not be granted after that date nor will they be given to no-shows unless approved by the Managing Director. The cancellation fee will be 40 of the total amount paid and refunds will be processed no later than 30 days after the conference. There is a 50 change fee charged for all substitutions and payment method cannot be changed. Ribbons and Conference Materials Please stop by the Registration Desk to collect your ribbons. Thank you to our registration materials sponsors Portable Chargers Lanyards Registration Bags Notepads Pens We would also like to thank AECOM for sponsoring the water coolers outside of the level one meeting rooms and inside of the Exhibit Hall also the bottled water available outside the Exhibit Hall and for our presenters in the session rooms. Emergencies at the Phoenix Convention Center PCC Each meeting room at the PCC has a Security Monitor System that is a direct link to the Security department for emergencies. If you smell smoke or see fire summon help. Call House Security at 85 on any white house phone located throughout the PCC or call 1 602-262-7271. Report the emergency giving the location if possible and any other details. Proceed to emergency exits and DO NOT use the elevators. 12 Medical EmergenciesFirst Aid at PCC In case of a medical emergency summon help. Call House Security at 85 on any white house phone located throughout the PCC or call 1 602-262-7271. Report the emergency giving the location if possible and any other details. Stay with the injured person until House Security arrives if possible. House Security will call 911. The Phoenix Convention Center is equipped with a sufficient number of first aid stations. The PCC Event and House Security Officers are trained and equipped as first responders to medical emergencies and can provide minor first aid. The Security Officers are certified in administering the Automatic External Defibrillator AED. Hotel Accommodations Hyatt Regency Phoenix P 1 602-252-1234 122 North Second St Phoenix AZ 85004 Marriott Renaissance Phoenix Downtown P 1 602-333-0000 50 East Adams St Phoenix AZ 85004 METRO Light Rail Service The METRO light rail system features state-of-the art vehicles that include oversized air conditioning units tinted windows and door entries level with station platforms for easy no-step boarding. METRO light rail and Valley Metro bus share the same fare system. An all-day pass for METRO light rail and Valley Metro bus is 4.00 when purchased in advance and 6.00 when purchased on board. Metro stations near the PCC Van Buren and Central Avenues Washington and Central Avenues and 3rd Street and Jefferson. www.valleymetro.org Lunches Monday and Tuesday lunches are ticketed sit-down events with programs on level three and the Wednesday lunch will be a casual boxed lunch in the Exhibit Hall. The Thursday buffet lunch will also be a ticketed lunch on level three. Thank you to our lunch sponsors Monday Keynote Luncheon Tuesday Honors Awards Luncheon Wednesday Exhibit Hall Luncheon Please bring your ticket for entry into the lunch functions tickets will not be reissued if lost or stolen. If you pre-registered and requested either gluten free or veganvegetarian special meal tickets will be given at registration check-in. Please bring your special meal tickets to the luncheons to present to your server. If you register onsite for special meals we will do our best to accommodate your request. Food orders cannot be changed and meal tickets are non-refundable. Meals are not guaranteed to anyone arriving more than 20 minutes late to meal functions. During the Wednesday Exhibit Hall lunch winners of exhibitors individual booth drawings will be announced. Be sure to attend as some of these drawings require attendance to win. Refreshment Breaks Refreshment breaks will be served in the morning and afternoon Monday through Wednesday in the Exhibit Hall and first level of the PCC on Thursday. Refreshment breaks are sponsored by 13 Cyber Cafs Cyber Cafs are located on the first floor as well as the lower level of the PCC in the Show Floor. Attendees will be able to access the Internet and print. Presenters may use the computers to upload their presentations without assistance online through our website at www.wmsym.org. The Cyber Cafs are sponsored by Newsletter This year the WM2016 daily newsletter will be prepared and distributed electronically by ExchangeMonitor Publications via email. Daily Exhibitor Meeting Each morning exhibitors will have the opportunity to meet with Jaclyn Russell Exhibits Manager at the Exhibitor Service Desk located on the show floor. An Exhibitor feedback form is included in the exhibitor welcome packet distributed to booths prior to the show opening. Please be sure to complete the form and bring it to the one of the meetings Monday March 7 0900 0930 Tuesday March 8 0900 0930 Wednesday March 9 0900 0930 Conference Proceedings The conference proceedings are included with any technical registration. Approx June 2016 they will be available online for all technical registrants. If you would like a CD-Rom mailed to you there will be a 20 handling fee for those with any technical registration and 105 purchase price for non-technical registrants. Roy G. Post Foundation The Roy G. Post Foundation is a charitable trust dedicated to the education for the safe management of nuclear materials honoring Dr. Roy G. Post and his substantial contributions in the field. Funds are raised through the official Roy G. Post Benefit Golf Tournament held annually preceding the WMS Conference. The tremendous support of the WMS community allows the Post Foundation to achieve their charitable goals. The charitable giving is directed toward scholarships for students throughout the world pursuing an education in nuclear waste management and provides assistance for students to attend the conference each year. In addition the Post Foundation sponsors the Student Poster Competition held on Monday afternoon during the conference. The student winner of the competition is awarded 500 cash. WM Symposia and the Post Foundation offer students housing assistance onsite student assistant positions and a Student Young Professionals Reception on Monday night. For more information on the Post Foundation please visit www.roygpost.org. PRESENTERS PANELISTS AND VOLUNTEERS Presenters and Co-Chair Check-In All Presenters oral panel and poster and Session Co-Chairs are required to check-in at registration located inside the Exhibit Hall on the lower level of the PCC. If you have any changes to your presentation or have other questions about your session please visit the Presenter and Co-Chair check-in room located inside Room 101A on level one of the PCC. WMS would like to thank Longenecker Associates Inc. for sponsoring the laser pointers used in the presentation rooms. Presenters Lounge Starting on Monday morning March 7 coffee will be available throughout the day and week for all presenters in the Presenter and Co-Chair Check-In Room 101A. Sponsored by Presenter and Co-Chairs Breakfast All Presenters Session Co-Chairs and Student Assistants are required to attend the Presenter and Co-Chairs Breakfast on the day of their session. Each session will have an assigned table. Session Co-Chairs will be available to discuss and organize their sessions. This breakfast is optional for Poster Presenters. The breakfast will be held at 0700 in Room 301A on the Third Level of the PCC Monday through Thursday. 14 Please note a conference name badge is required for entry. If you do not have a name badge please first visit the registration desk located in the Exhibit Hall on the lower level of the Convention Center. Presenters who have not checked in at registration before the breakfast begins or do not attend the breakfast will have their presentation shown as cancelled at the session room entrance. PowerPoint Presentations Presentations must be uploaded by 1200 the day before a scheduled presentation Presenters who have not uploaded their presentation by this deadline will have their presentation cancelled unless prior arrangements have been made with Amanda Tassoul Technical Program Coordinator and confirmed by email at amandawmarizona.org. WMS requires presenters to upload their presentations before the conference on the web at www.wmsym.org using their own login and password. Presentations should be in .PPTX format and any videos be inserted into the presentation using PowerPoint 2010 or later. AV Presentation Support If presenters need assistance with uploading or inserting videos into their PowerPoint presentations staff will be available in Room 101A at the specified times for their session number. Please see the table below by using your session number to locate the date and time assistance is available to you. Date Session Time Sun. March 6 1 - 29 1500 - 1900 Mon. March 7 32 - 39 1100 - 1300 52 - 70 1400 - 1700 Tue. March 8 73 - 86 0900 - 1300 90 - 104 1400 - 1700 Wed. March 9 106 - 122 0900 - 1300 125 - 134 1400 - 1700 AV Technical Support Presenters who have videos within their presentations or require additional assistance to finish their presentations are encouraged to schedule a 15 minute one-on-one technical support appointment the day before your scheduled session in Room 101A on level one of the PCC. Conference Support Service Center The UPS Store located in the PCC will provide copy services and is staffed Monday through Friday from 0700 - 1800 and Saturday from 0800 1400. SPECIAL MEETINGS TRAININGS AND EVENTS SATURDAY MARCH 5 2016 Track Co-Chair Meeting Program Advisory Committee PAC Meeting PAC Dinner 1630 2130 Hyatt Regency These pre-conference events will be held at the Hyatt Regency Phoenix. A separate invitation was sent to all PAC volunteers and their guests on the event details. For additional information contact Gary Benda PAC Chair at GBendawmarizona.org. SUNDAY MARCH 6 2016 Roy G. Post Foundation Benefit Golf Tournament 0700 Registration Open 0800 Shotgun Start The Legacy Golf Club 6808 S 32nd St Phoenix AZ 85042 Onsite registration fees are 195 per person and space is limited. Tournament registration includes continental breakfast lunch green fees range balls and awards. For more information about the Roy G. Post Foundation please visit www.roygpost.org. 15 Roy G. Post Foundation Benefit Golf Tournament Continued Thank you to our Tournament Sponsors Gold Level Longenecker Associates Bronze Level Bechtel Kurion Inc. We also thank the following companies for their generous donations Allan Consulting ARS International Diversified Metal Products Inc. Fiore Consulting Frank Douglas Consulting Indian Eyes LLC Merrick Co. Portage Radwaste Solutions Reef Industries ReNuke Services Workshop - US Environmental Protection Agency Superfund Radiation Risk Assessment Calculator Training - presented by Stuart Walker and Fred Dolislager 0800 1700 Room 106B US EPA Superfund Radiation Risk Assessment is a full-day advanced course that focuses on specific technical and regulatory issues that site managers and technical staff address when managing sites under the US Environmental Protection Agencies Superfund remediation program that have a risk assessment conducted for radioactive contaminants. By taking the course participants achieve the following objectives Learn a step-by-step approach to the Superfund remedial program risk assessment process for radioactive contamination. The course discusses of the major steps in Superfund remedial program risk assessment for radioactive contamination and the EPA recommended guidance documents and calculators and or models for conducting such risk assessments. Explore methods for conducting site-specific risk assessments. The course examines how to alter the default input parameters in the Superfund remedial program risk and dose assessment calculators. Discover practical recommendations for improving the radiation risk assessments conducted at your site. The course stresses some obvious and other less obvious aspects helpful in improving the radiation risk assessment process. Master information about the radiation risk assessment process. Participants obtain information from experienced professionals about the radiation risk assessment process. The instructional methodology for this course includes lectures and demonstrations of using EPA risk and dose assessment calculators developed by the Superfund remedial program. The target audience for this course is site managers risk assessors and others that want to obtain a working knowledge on conducting Superfund radiation risk assessments. Workshop - Critical Decisions and Tools for the First-Time and Experienced Managers Or How I Learned to Love the Org Chart - presented by James M. Hylko 1100 1700 Room 106C As technical professionals advance in their careers they may eventually find themselves as a department manager. However unless a company has a specific manager-trainee succession program an employees management style is learned on the job. This workshop provides the core elements of an effective leadershipmanagement training program derived from the Department of Energy Integrated Safety Management System and the Occupational Safety and Health Administrations Voluntary Protection Programs. Discussion topics and case studies cover the transition of an employee from a technical professional to a manager such as characteristics of a manager manager leader achiever the manager vs. leader mystique chain of command hiring and developing motivated autonomous employees communication and delegation periodic status checks and the E0 safety concept. Conference attendees from any work environment or discipline e.g. engineering safety quality assurance and students entering the workforce can begin using this information and accompanying handouts immediately to enrich their leadership managerial skills. First Time Attendee Orientation Program Advisory Committee PAC Introduction 1500 1600 Room 101B Join us for this open session to learn more about WM Symposia how to volunteer for our Program Advisory Committee PAC and the WM conference. Technical Session Student Assistant Training 1600 1645 Room 101C Calling all Student Assistants Be sure to attend this mandatory training session. Well cover the basics of your job duties as a Technical Session Assistant including the important details such as how to assist in the sessions and fill out necessary forms. There will also be time to meet other students to kick off your WM conference experience. 16 International Program Advisory Committee IPAC Meeting 1600 1645 Room 102A A separate invitation was sent to all IPAC volunteers on the meeting details but the meeting is open to all attendees. For additional information contact Gary Benda PAC Chair at GBendawmarizona.org. Welcome Reception 1700 2000 Lower Level Exhibit Hall Join us as we kick off the WM Conference with our opening welcome reception. The registration desk is open starting at 0800 so be sure to stop by and pick up your badge and ribbons any time before the reception begins. Light hors doeuvres and refreshments will be served. This event is sponsored by MONDAY MARCH 7 2016 ASME Radwaste Systems Committee Meeting 0730 1100 Cowboy Artists Room Hyatt Regency The annual meeting of the ASME Radwaste Systems Committee will be held on Monday morning at the Hyatt Regency Phoenix beginning with a Continental Breakfast. Any questions please contact Tom Kalinowski at tkalinowskidwjames.com. Plenary Session 0800 0945 Room 301BCD The Plenary Session will feature world leaders speaking on the pressing issues being faced by Waste Management in 2016 and beyond. WMS will provide coffee service starting at 0700 in the foyer located near Room 301BCD. This yearss plenary session panelists include John Clarke Chief Executive Officer Nuclear Decommissioning Authority Mr. Clarke has held the position of CEO and Accounting Officer since April 2012 having joined the NDA Board in 2008 initially as Commercial Director and subsequently as Business Planning Director. John has held a number of business leadership roles during his 30 years working in the nuclear sector including Sellafield Production Director for BNFL and Managing Director of International Nuclear Services Ltd. John is a Fellow of the Institution of Chemical Engineers and of the Nuclear Institute. Clive White President of AMEC Foster Wheelers Clean Energy Business Mr. White is President of AMEC Foster Wheelers Clean Energy business which employs over 2500 people. The business provides engineering consulting and project management services to the clean energy market including both new and existing civil nuclear renewables conventional power and nuclear defence. Its mission is to be the partner of choice for our customers in the new energy challenge. Clive is a physicist by training and has worked in the defence and nuclear industries. His early career was in safety case engineering engineering management and project management. The majority of his career has been in leading businesses including driving strong growth through businesses and setting strategy and strong direction. He has held a number of executive positions within Amec Foster Wheeler and was previously a director of National Nuclear Corporation Ltd the company responsible for designing and supporting all the nuclear reactors built in the UK. Clive is a director of the Sellafield parent company Nuclear Management Partners a non-executive director of the Energy Industries Council and a non-executive director of the National Skills Academy Nuclear. 17 Plenary Session Continued Dr. Monica Regalbuto Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management US DOE Having served in both the Office of Environmental Management and the Office of Nuclear Energy Monica is more than ready for her new role at the Department said Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz. Her hands-on experience in all aspects of nuclear waste cleanup and her tenure as an Argonne National Lab scientist have prepared her for the position of Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management. I thank the Senate for approving Monicas nomination and look forward to continuing to work with her on some of the most complex challenges facing the Department. As Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management Dr. Regalbuto will provide the leadership necessary to continue the safe cleanup of the environmental legacy brought about from five decades of nuclear weapons development and government-sponsored nuclear energy research. She will work closely with communities that have partnered with DOE and its predecessor agencies for many decades. Prior to her Senate confirmation Dr. Regalbuto served as Associate Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary in the Office of Environmental Management where she applied her deep technical expertise to reduce technical risk and uncertainty in Environmental Managements cleanup mission across the DOE complex. Previously she served as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Fuel Cycle Technologies in the Office of Nuclear Energy overseeing the development of our nations nuclear fuel cycle. From 2008 to 2010 Dr. Regalbuto worked for the Departments Office of Environmental Management as a Senior Program Manager with the former Office of Waste Processing. In 1988 she joined Argonne National Laboratory where she worked on the development of high level waste treatment technology. Dr. Regalbuto joined the BP-AMOCO team in 1996 to manage many of their projects and budgets. She would return to Argonne in 2001 as the head of the Process Chemistry and Engineering Department in the Laboratorys Chemical Sciences and Engineering Division. Dr. Regalbuto received her bachelors degree in Chemical Engineering from the Mexican Instituto Tecnologico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey ITESM. She then pursued a Masters and Doctorate in Chemical Engineering from the University of Notre Dame. Product Demonstration by Ortec 1045 1115 Demo Zone Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 The Integrated Cooling System ICS is a new electromechanical cooler for HPGe detectors which provides multi-directional LN2 free operation and versatility with different detector types and sizes has a long life robust design that incorporates a hardened cryostat. All these advantages minimize cost of ownership and maximize up time a longevity of cryocooling. Monday Keynote Luncheon 1200 1315 Room 301BCD Mondays Keynote Luncheon is included with a full technical registration. Attendees who wish to purchase a ticket may purchase one onsite for 40 if space allows. The Keynote Luncheon is sponsored by This years Keynote Speaker is Yasuharu Igarashi Executive Director NDF Mr. Igarashi is a very senior executive in the nuclear industry in Japan. With 40 years of experience he has worked throughout the industry in multiple executive capacities. Prior to joining the Nuclear Damage Compensation and Decommissioning Facilitation Corporation or NDF as its Executive Director in 2014 Mr. Igarashi served for several years in the Power Systems Company of Japan. Mr. Igarashi is a skilled and insightful executive well suited for the task of leading the challenges of NDF. 18 Check out our Show Floor located on the lower level Exhibit Hall 4 open today from 0930-1830 Product Demonstration by Megatech 1330 1400 Demo Zone Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 Mega-Tech Services LLC will be demonstrating two high pressure hydraulic cutting tools. They are the MT-2 which is a guillotine style cutting tool and the MT-SC-3 which is a scissor style cutting tool. They can be used in both manual and remote applications. Product Demonstration by Ultratech 1415 1445 Demo Zone Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 UltraTechs Macro Encapsulation is the ultimate LDR treatment of RCRA mixed low level waste debris radioactive lead solids and comes in fixed and mobile systems. Evening Reception 1700 1830 Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 Please join us for the WMS Evening Reception in the Exhibit Hall. We are appreciative of all of our attendees for their participation and contributions that make the WM Symposia Conference a truly worldwide event. Light hors doeuvres and refreshments will be served. This reception is sponsored by Student and Young Professionals Networking Reception 1800 1930 Near Student Poster Session Exhibit Hall 4 All students young professionals and conference attendees looking to meet and mingle with the next generation are welcome at the Student and Young Professionals Networking Reception Heres your chance to meet our student attendees and find out more about the next generation of WM professionals. Tuesday March 8 2016 Tuesday March 8 will be Wear LAVENDER for Cancer Prevention Day at the conference. Please join us in wearing lavender to celebrate the lives of those who have been affected by this disease and their selfless caregivers and be sure to join Fluor at the Woman of Waste Management Panel and Networking Session that evening. Product Demonstration by Attention IT Inc. 1045 1115 Demo Zone Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 Strategically Manage Trace Report all Waste Streams with eMWaste G2 Primary COTS Software. The eMWaste G2 Primary Application is the only Commercial-Off-The-Shelf COTS web-based software-written in Python that manages tracks and reports Radiological Hazardous and Mixed Waste Streams. The software includes profiles characterization processing and treatment and shipping records for waste materials. Additional modules that work with the eMWaste suite include Equipment Tracking Document Control and Tracking Training Surveillance Shipment Dispatch Management and LandfillDisposition Site Management. Honors Awards Luncheon 1200 1315 Room 301BCD Join us at the Tuesday Honors Awards Luncheon to honor the best presentations from the WM2015 conference and the 2016 award winners and scholarship recipients. The luncheon is included with the purchase of a full technical registration. For exhibitors and attendees who do not have a full technical registration limited tickets are available and can be purchased onsite for an additional cost of 40.00 per ticket. This lunch is sponsored by Product Demonstration by iRobot 1415 1445 Demo Zone Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 iRobots remotely operated mobile robots have significantly reduced dose and personal exposure by allowing human operators to remain outside of the radiation environment while performing tasks inspections investigations survey monitoring and manipulation extraction handling and packing of materials. As robot use increases significant dose has been saved especially for radioactive waste handling and packaging no human entry inspections and investigations. In the event of an emergency the routine use of robots develops operator familiarity and proficiency enabling an effective and safer response. These unmanned mobile robots have strong use cases saving dose 19 at BWR PWR and CANDU nuclear power plants radioactive waste handling locations and other environments where there are hazardous mixed or radiological materials or waste. These robots range from five pounds to 500 pounds and perform a variety of tasks. WMS Evening Reception 1700 1830 Lower Level Exhibit Hall Please join us for the WMS Evening Reception. We are appreciative of all of our attendees for their participation and contributions that make the WM Symposia Conference a worldwide event. Light hors doeuvres and refreshments will be served. This evening reception is sponsored by Women of Waste Management Panel and Networking Reception 1800 2000 Room 212ABC Put on your lavender and come to this exciting event for both men and women Trailblazers dont just lead they inspire. In this panel discussion well hear from some of the industrys standout women leaders sharing their personal and professional leadership journeys. Well learn about what experiences have influenced them most their perspectives on mitigating barriers to effective leadership and what they are doing to inspire the next generation. This event is sponsored by The evenings panelists will include Ann McCall - Director of Waste Management UK Nuclear Decommissioning Authority Joyce Connery - Chairwoman Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board Dyan Foss - Global Managing Director CH2M Nuclear Sector The panel will be moderated by Carol Johnson - President CEO Savannah River Nuclear Solutions. Following the panel join us for beverages hors doeuvres and networking. Fluor will donate 25 on behalf of each attendee to two organizations supporting the fight against cancer. The American Cancer Society and the Avon Foundation for Women. The American Cancer Society For over 100 years the American Cancer Society has worked relentlessly to save lives and create a world with less cancer. Together with millions of supporters worldwide they help people stay well and get well find cures and fight back against cancer. The Avon Foundation for Women For over 60 years the Avon Foundation for Women has worked tirelessly to promote or aid charitable scientific educational and humanitarian activities with a special emphasis on those activities that improve the lives of women and their families. In its work to realize those aspirations the Avon Foundations current mission focus is to lead efforts to eradicate breast cancer and end domestic and gender violence. March 8 will be Wear LAVENDER for Cancer Prevention Day at the conference. Please join us in wearing lavender to celebrate the lives of those who have been affected by this disease and their selfless caregivers Wednesday March 9 2016 Exhibit Hall Luncheon 1200 1315 Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 Join us for a casual boxed lunch in the Exhibit Hall on Wednesday. Its your last chance to visit with exhibitors before the hall closes this afternoon. This lunch is sponsored by Phoenix Art Museum Networking Reception 1745 Bus PickupHyatt Regency 1800 2100 Phoenix Art Museum This years networking event will take place at the Phoenix Art Museum. The Phoenix Art Museum has become the largest art museum in the southwestern United States providing access to art from all over the world. Popular international exhibitions are shown alongside the Museums outstanding collection of more than 18000 works of American Asian European Latin American Western American modern and contemporary art and fashion design. 20 You wont want to miss this wonderful evening There is a limited amount of tickets still available for this event. Tickets are 50 per person and can be purchased through the registration desk. The event will include an evening with wonderful food cocktails and a chance to peruse the artwork in the museum. Buses will load at the Hyatt Regency Phoenix Monroe Street exit starting at 1745 and will shuttle throughout the evening. Please bring your event ticket and name badge for entry. For more information about the Phoenix Art Museum please visit www.phxart.org. Thursday March 10 2016 Networking Luncheon 1200 1315 Room 301A Join us for the final networking luncheon. The luncheon is included with the purchase of a full technical registration. Panel Session 123 Thursday Topical Session - International Nuclear Power Plant Decommissioning - Time for Awareness and Planning 1330 1700 Room 102BC This panel focuses on the approximately 200 nuclear power plants around the world that are slated to be decommissioned over the next twenty years. It is important that regulators utilities and companies involved in decommissioning commence planning for this significant development. This panel will provide international views addressing regulatory issues decommissioning cost estimation remediation experience and expectations decommissioning challenges waste management issues and identification of sites planning decommissioning globally. The panel will consist of US and international experts. Closing Reception 1700 1800 Level One Foyer All attendees are invited to relax and enjoy a drink while networking after the wrap-up of the Thursday afternoon sessions. WM2016 CONTRACTING PROCUREMENT SESSIONS Four business and contracting sessions will discuss upcoming opportunities and administrative issues in the waste management industry. These sessions are open to all attendees including Exhibitors without a Technical registration badge who may attend at no additional cost. Tuesday March 8 2016 Panel Session 34 UK NDA - US DOE Perspective on Contracting Approaches 1015 1200 Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 This panel session will compare contracting methods of the UK NDA and the US DOE. Each organization spends between 5bn and 6bn a year and recognize the importance of engagement with the supply chain. The audience will gain an understanding of what has worked well and what challenges have had to be overcome to meet critical clean-up milestones. In addition many companies either work in or are considering working in both markets and the panel will also address the lessons learned by experienced companies to make this a success. Panel Session 55 Small Business Procurement and Contracting Opportunities with DOE and DOE Prime Contractors 1330 1510 Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 This panel session will focus on small business procurement and contracting opportunities within the DOE Complex. The DOE encourages prime contractors to obtain goods and services from small and disadvantaged businesses and often tie these goals to contract an award fee. Goods and services being considered for these procurements include decontamination and decommissioning services remediation services transportation and disposal of radioactive waste health physics equipment and services emergency response planning and training lab services RD products waste treatment services maintenance services AE services and professional consulting. This panel complements Session 78 US DOE Procurements and Contracting Opportunities and Session 56 which focuses on small business barriers to contracting with DOE. Panel Session 56 Addressing the Small Business Barriers in Contracting with the US DOE 1515 1700 Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 This panel focuses on the barriers for small businesses in contracting with the US DOE. For FY2016 the DOE has set goals for Small Businesses. Small businesses and Disadvantaged Woman-Owned Disadvantaged-Veteran Owned and HUB Zone Prime Contracts are included with ranges set from 3 to 6 for prime contracts and up to 50 for subcontracts. During a declining US federal budget with less contracting dollars and more going for base prime contractor services these goals are challenging. This panel will interact extensively with the audience in listening and discussing methods to achieve these goals and barriers that need to be mitigated. 21 Wednesday March 9 2016 Panel Session 78 US DOE Procurements Process Trends and Contractor Delivery Challenges 1015 1200 Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 This panel focuses on future US DOE EM procurements and process initiatives and contract implementation challenges. DOE procurement officials will provide an update on future procurement opportunities and process improvement initiatives underway. Representatives from the contracting community will discuss contract implementation trends and challenges. WM Exhibitors can attend this session without a WM technical registration badge as a conference service. SESSIONS OPEN TO ALL ATTENDEES The following sessions are open to all attendees including Exhibitors without a Technical registration badge who may attend at no additional cost. Monday March 7 2016 Panel Session 1 WM2016 Plenary Session 0800 0945 Room 301CD The plenary panel will focus on government and industry world leaders speaking on the pressing issues facing radioactive waste management in 2016 and beyond. Product Demonstration by Ortec 1045 1115 Demo Zone Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 The Integrated Cooling System ICS is a new electromechanical cooler for HPGe detectors which provides multi-directional LN2 free operation and versatility with different detector types and sizes has a long life robust design that incorporates a hardened cryostat. All these advantages minimize cost of ownership and maximize up time a longevity of cryocooling. Product Demonstration by Megatech 1330 1400 Demo Zone Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 Mega-Tech Services LLC will be demonstrating two high pressure hydraulic cutting tools. They are the MT-2 which is a guillotine style cutting tool and the MT-SC-3 which is a scissor style cutting tool. They can be used in both manual and remote applications. Panel Session 21 Interim Storage of Used Nuclear Fuel in the US What are the Options and how does Private Fuel Storage fit in 1330 1510 Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 This panel will focus on the plans requirements and status of efforts to establish one or more consolidated interim dry stores for used nuclear fuel UNF in the US. Discussion will include facilities required at a consolidated store for receiving UNF transport of the fuel to the facility siting and licensing lessons learned from previous private storage initiatives and the status and plans of two proposed private consolidated store facilities in the US. Product Demonstration by Ultratech 1415 1445 Demo Zone Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 UltraTechs Macro Encapsulation is the ultimate LDR treatment of RCRA mixed low level waste debris radioactive lead solids and comes in fixed and mobile systems. Panel Session 22 US DOE - Excess Facilities DD Implementation Plans 1515 1700 Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 This panel session focuses on the US DOE Office of Environmental Managements actions taken in response to the January 2015 Inspector Generals Audit Report on the Department of Energys Management of High Risk Facilities. DOE EM in collaboration with the National Nuclear Security Administration NNSA the Office of Science OS and Office of Nuclear Energy EN initiated a joint working group to aid in the risk prioritization life cycle cost analysis and improved disposition planning of excess facilities across the US DOE complex. WM attendees interested in DOEs plans to implement this strategy. Tuesday March 8 2016 Panel Session 34 UK NDA - US DOE Perspective on Contracting Approaches 1015 1200 Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 This panel session will compare contracting methods of the UK NDA and the US DOE. Each organization spends between 5bn and 6bn a year and recognize the importance of engagement with the supply chain. The audience will gain an understanding of what has worked well and what challenges have had to be overcome to meet critical clean-up milestones. In addition many companies either work in or are considering working in both markets and the panel will also address the lessons learned by experienced companies to make this a success. Product Demonstration by Attention IT Inc. 1045 1115 Demo Zone Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 Strategically Manage Trace Report all Waste Streams with eMWaste G2 Primary COTS Software. The eMWaste G2 Primary Application is the only Commercial-Off-The-Shelf COTS web-based software-written in Python that manages tracks and reports Radiological Hazardous and Mixed Waste Streams. The software includes profiles characterization processing and treatment and shipping records for wastematerials. Additional modules that 22 work with the eMWaste suite include Equipment Tracking Document Control and Tracking Training Surveillance Shipment Dispatch Management and LandfillDisposition Site Management. Product Demonstration by iRobot 1415 1445 Demo Zone Lower Level Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 iRobots remotely operated mobile robots have significantly reduced dose and personal exposure by allowing human operators to remain outside of the radiation environment while performing tasks inspections investigations survey monitoring and manipulation extraction handling and packing of materials. As robot use increases significant dose has been saved especially for radioactive waste handling and packaging not human entry inspections and investigations. In the event of an emergency the routine use of robots develops operator familiarity and proficiency enabling an effective and safer response. These unmanned mobile robots have strong use cases saving dose at BWR PWR and CANDU nuclear power plants radioactive waste handling locations and other environments where there are hazardous mixed or radiological materials or waste. These robots range from five pounds to 500 pounds and perform a variety of tasks. Panel Session 55 Small Business Procurement and Contracting Opportunities with DOE and DOE Prime Contractors 1330 1510 Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 This panel session will focus on small business procurement and contracting opportunities within the DOE Complex. The DOE encourages prime contractors to obtain goods and services from small and disadvantaged businesses and often tie these goals to contract an award fee. Goods and services being considered for these procurements include decontamination and decommissioning services remediation services transportation and disposal of radioactive waste health physics equipment and services emergency response planning and training lab services RD products waste treatment services maintenance services AE services and professional consulting. This panel complements Session 78 US DOE Procurements and Contracting Opportunities and Session 56 which focuses on small business barriers to contracting with DOE. Panel Session 56 Addressing the Small Business Barriers in Contracting with the US DOE 1515 1700 Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 This panel focuses on the barriers for small businesses in contracting with the US DOE. For FY2016 the DOE has set goals for Small Businesses. Small businesses and Disadvantaged Woman-Owned Disadvantaged-Veteran Owned and HUB Zone Prime Contracts are included with ranges set from 3 to 6 for prime contracts and up to 50 for subcontracts. During a declining US federal budget with less contracting dollars and more going for base prime contractor services these goals are challenging. This panel will interact extensively with the audience in listening and discussing methods to achieve these goals and barriers that need to be mitigated. Wednesday March 9 2016 Panel Session 78 US DOE Procurements Process Trends and Contractor Delivery Challenges 1015 1200 Show Floor Exhibit Hall 4 This panel focuses on future US DOE EM procurements and process initiatives and contract implementation challenges. DOE procurement officials will provide an update on future procurement opportunities and process improvement initiatives underway. Representatives from the contracting community will discuss contract implementation trends and challenges. WM Exhibitors can attend this session without a WM technical registration badge as a conference service. Program Advisory Commitee PAC Thursday Meeting Schedule Program Advisory Committee PAC Meeting - Part 1 0700 0815 Room 301A This meeting is for the individual Tracks to discuss WM2017 Topics. Program Advisory Committee PAC Meeting - Part 2 1200 1315 Room 301A This meeting is to gather the entire PAC to discuss the key PAC decisions and results from the morning meeting Part 1. Lunch will be provided at this meeting. Optional Program Advisory Committee PAC Meeting - Part 3 1800 1930 Hyatt Regency- Curtis Room This optional meeting will be held to discuss WM2016 lessons learned and improvements for WM2017. 23 Monday March 7 2016 Plenary Session 0830 0945 Room 301CD This plenary panel will focus on the government and industry world leaders speaking on the pressing issues facing radioactive waste management in 2016 and beyond. Panel Session 3 Featured Country - United Kingdom 1000 1200 Room 105AB This panel session will provide a high-level overview of the nuclear decommissioning and clean-up challenges in the UK against the backdrop of managing the legacy situation the existing nuclear programme and the advent of new nuclear build. This panel will discuss the roles of Government policy NDA strategy implementation at the site level and the importance of strong but flexible regulation. The NDA operates at a similar budget level to DOE-EM and comparisons between the UK and US programmes will also be explored and how collaboration between the two countries is helping to address strategy implementation in difficult economic times. Panel Session 13 Featured Country - United Kingdom 1330 1510 Room 105AB This panel session will provide a deeper perspective of the challenges associated with decommissioning and clean-up activities relating to the legacy nuclear sites in the UK and provide comparisons with the US. In a tough economic environment how does the UK prioritize its spend and balance the competing issues if cleaning up its sites and stakeholder expectations The panelists will further explore the importance of collaborating at the site level to address these challenges and how the respective National Labs feature in this. Panel Session 14 Featured Country - United Kingdom 1515 1700 Room 105AB This panel session will provide a perspective of the challenges related to waste management and disposal activities associated with the UKs nuclear programme. There will be a discussion of the current arrangements for LLW disposal and the foreword plans for geological disposal. These have to deal with the current waste arisings LLW HLW from reprocessing and spent nuclear fuel from legacy facilities operating nuclear plants and the new build power stations. With only one national LLW facility available and no site yet for a geological disposal facility how is the UK addressing the challenge Tuesday March 8 2016 Panel Session 32 US DOE Featured Site DOE-Oak Ridge Tennessee - Partnering for Success - Part 1 of 4 0830 1010 Room 102BC The theme of Oak Ridge Day is Purpose. Progress. Partnership. This session will explore the diverse partnerships that DOEs Oak Ridge Environmental Management program OREM has established to ensure the success of its program. These partnerships include community stakeholders the prime contractor labor unions and regulators. Each partner in the Oak Ridge Partnership requires a different pathway of communication but ultimately all the partners must work together with OREM to move forward with one voice. What tools work to accomplish this goal How do OREM and each partner develop trust Whats on the horizon for developing even stronger relationships for the success of OREMs programs Panel Session 33 US DOE Featured Site US DOE-Oak Ridge Tennessee - Responding to Current Challenges - Part 2 of 4 1015 1200 Room 102BC Like all DOE sites the Oak Ridge Environmental Management program OREM faces challenges. Some challenges occur because of circumstances elsewhere in the DOE Complex others stem from issues on the Oak Ridge Reservation. OREMs responses involve complex technical evaluations communication with its partners and a clear vision of the progress to which we are committed. What current challenges does OREM face What solutions are OREM and its partners developing Looking at the tough decisions that are made every day this session will explore how OREM makes progress in the face of its challenges. There will be ample time for discussion. Panel Session 52 US DOE Featured Site DOE-Oak Ridge Tennessee - Improving Performance in the Field - Part 3 of 4 1330 1510 Room 102BC This 3rd session in a series that highlights Purpose. Progress. Partnership. will focus on Purpose. By improving the Safety Conscious Work Environment and ensuring safe operations we exemplify purpose in the work of the Oak Ridge Environmental Management program OREM. What are some of the new ideas in contract execution and project management both of which give purpose to performance excellence Finally well get the contractors unique perspective of federal oversight experienced on the Oak Ridge cleanup site along with time for QA. FEATURED SESSIONS 24 Panel Session 53 US DOE Featured Site DOE-Oak Ridge Tennessee - Transitioning from Cleanup to Reuse - Part 4 of 4 1515 1700 Room 102BC Several years ago Oak Ridge accepted the challenge to make progress with expeditiously transitioning cleanup sites to the community for reuse through the Community Reuse Organization of East Tennessee CROET. What does that progress look like in 2016 A new airport slated for construction on the former K-25 Gaseous Diffusion Plant site is about to become a reality. Thriving small businesses have flourished as agreements on land reuse are reached. This panel will present the challenges of ensuring that all parties needs are met during negotiations and the Tennessee Community and Economic Development agency will talk about the states hopes for the site and the future of land reuse. Wednesday March 9 2016 Panel Session 79 UK Featured Site Sellafield Legacy Ponds and Silos 0830 1010 Room 104AB A group of historic facilities at Sellafield known as the legacy Ponds and Silos pose the greatest challenge that the NDA faces within its UK portfolio from a safety environmental engineering technical and economic perspective. Each of the facilities require immediate remediation due to the hazard potential that they contain and is the main focus for NDA as the clean-up mission is undertaken at Sellafield. The session will bring together key stakeholders from across the NDA estate where the approach to deal with these legacy facilities will be outlined and the progress to date demonstrated. Panel Session 90 US DOE Featured Site Sandia National Laboratories 1330 1700 Room 105AB This panel focuses on the Sandia National Laboratories a DOENNSA national laboratory. It will showcase Sandias roles and contributions in a wide variety of technical activities related to the back-end of the nuclear fuel cycle across multiple programs and in support of multiple sponsors and customers. Thursday March 10 2016 Panel Session 123 Thursday Topical Session - International Nuclear Power Plant Decommissioning - Time for Awareness and Planning 1330 1700 Room 102BC This panel focuses on the approximately 200 nuclear power plants around the world that are slated to be decommissioned over the next twenty years. It is important that regulators utilities and companies involved in decommissioning commence planning for this significant development. This panel will provide international views addressing regulatory issues decommissioning cost estimation remediation experience and expectations decommissioning challenges waste management issues and identification of sites planning decommissioning globally. The panel will consist of US and international experts. WECNuclear Westinghouse Electric Company NO COMPANY IS MORE COMMITTED TO ADVANCING WASTE MANAGEMENT TECHNOLOGY 25 SCHEDULED TOURS AND RECOMMENDATIONS All tours depart from the Monroe Street exit of the Hyatt Regency Phoenix. Boarding time is 15 minutes prior to scheduled departure. Be sure to pack a jacket hat sunscreen and your camera. Please refrain from wearing perfumes as some guests may be sensitive. Organized by WMS and provided by Detours of Arizona Arizona Outback Adventures and All Aboard America. Saturday March 5 2016 Day Tour of Grand Canyon Montezuma Castle Navajo Nation Flagstaff 0700 2000 - Buses load at 0645 After departing the Hyatt the first stop on the tour will be Montezuma Castle where guests will have a chance to walk around and view the Ancient Sinaguan Cliff Dwelling that is approximately 1000 years old. From there the tour will continue to the Navajo Nation where the guests will be treated to distant views of the Painted Desert. The Painted Desert is the perfect backdrop for our stop in the Navajo Nation at a prominent trading post. Guests will be able to get a glimpse into the past view the highest quality authentic Navajo artwork and craft work as well as a gift shop to bring back souvenirs for friends and family. Lunch will also be in the Navajo Nation at the Cameron Trading Post which is home to the Navajo Taco. From the Navajo Nation the tour will continue into the Grand Canyon National Park where guests will get close up views of the Little Colorado River Gorge and the full scope of the Grand Canyon. Guests will enjoy more than three hours within the National Park marveling at the beauty that makes up this natural wonder. We will begin by exploring the infamous 30-mile section of road that winds east along the rim of the canyon showcasing the best rim views and history along the way before arriving at the South Rim Village. While at the South Rim Village of the National Park guests will have the opportunity to walk the rim shop capture an unlimited amount of photographs or relax with the best seat in the house. Return time to Phoenix will be approximately 1930. The tour includes lunch park entry fees transportation and bottled water. Sunday March 6 2016 Sonoran Desert Guided Hike 1000 - 1400 - Buses load at 0945 An incredible asset to the Southwest Valley most of Estrella Mountain Regional Park remains in its natural state and offers 33 miles of trails which is where this desert hike will take place. The exploratory hikes are designed for individuals of all fitness levels. Witness breathtaking views of Arizona and capture photographs of the wildlife geology and flowers while hiking these trails. Hikers will be required to sign a Waiver of Liability from the tour company. Comfortable athletic shoes or hiking shoes are required. No flip flops or loose fitting footwear are permitted. Guests are strongly urged to wear a hat sunglasses and sunscreen. The estimated return time is 1400. The tour includes park entry fees transportation bottled water and snacks. All tours are accompanied by a First Aid Certified Guide. Enjoy Phoenix Arizona Below are some ideas to keep you busy during your stay in Phoenix. You may visit our WMS Concierge Booth located in the Phoenix Convention Center in Exhibit Hall 4 for recommendations. We can assist you in booking restaurant reservations transportation needs visitor information etc. Some of our recommendations include Spring Training Baseball Various Valley Locations Ticket Prices Vary www.cactusleague.com Enjoy an American tradition and attend a Spring Training game AZ is home of the Cactus League Today 15 teams train in the Phoenix metropolitan area in the greatest concentration of professional baseball facilities found anywhere in the United States. The Desert Botanical Garden 1201 N. Galvin Parkway Phoenix AZ 85008 General Admission 22.00 www.dbg.org The Desert Botanical Garden offers more than 50000 arid-land plants representing one of the finest collections in the world. Plants are represented from deserts of the world in a unique outdoor setting. Visit the Garden and enjoy specialized tours special events seasonal exhibits concerts family activities Gertrudes Restaurant 26 the Patio Cafe and the Garden gift and plant shop. Phoenix Art Museum 1625 N. Central Ave. Phoenix AZ 85004 General Admission 15.00 www.phxart.org Since it opened in 1959 Phoenix Art Museum has become the largest art museum in the southwestern United States. The collection has objects of American Asian European modern and contemporary art photography and fashion design. Visitors can also enjoy the interactive PhxArtKids gallery and the lush Dorrance Sculpture Garden. Musical Instrument Museum 4725 E. Mayo Blvd Phoenix AZ 85050 General Admission 20.00 www.mim.org The MIM displays more than 6000 instruments collected from approximately 200 countries and territories around the world. Most displays are enhanced by state-of-the-art audio and video technologies that allow guests to see the instruments hear their sounds and observe them being played in their original contexts performances are often as spectacular as the instruments themselves. Whats more all guests are invited to play instruments from around the world in the Experience Gallery. Shopping The biggest and most dazzling shopping center is Scottsdale Fashion Square. The expansive shoppers paradise has the favorite stores you recognize combined with top designer shops including Jimmy Choo Ted Baker and Carolina Herrera Nordstrom Barneys New York and Neiman Marcus to fulfill the luxury experience. Score big savings on luxury brands such as Coach Armani Michael Kors and dozens more at the Phoenix Premium Outlets. Transportation Transportation is readily available outside the Hyatt across from the PCC. For a group transportation we recommend you contact Transportation Inc at 480-820-0230. WMS is not responsible for any changes to the listed admission prices admission prices subject to change. Contact local companies or visit our Concierge Booth for visitor information Ask our knowledgeable Concierge Booth staff questions on local businesses venues special events and recommendations tailored to your needs WMS will now offer a new service to WMS attendees and their guests to assist with any conference questions restaurant reservations recreation requests car reservation etc. The WMS Concierge Booth is located near the Registration area at the Phoenix Convention Center Lower level inside Exhibit Hall 4. Hours Saturday March 5 1100 1700 Sunday March 6 0800 2000 Monday March 7 0700 1800 Tuesday March 8 0700 1800 Wednesday March 9 0700 1300 Thank you to our Concierge Booth Sponsor Other Resources Hyatt Regency Phoenix Concierge P 1 602-252-1234 www.phoenix.hyatt-concierge.com Phoenix Convention Visitors Bureau P 1 602-254-6500 www.visitphoenix.com Scottsdale Convention Visitors Bureau P 1 800-782-1117 www.experiencescottsdale.com Excellence across the facility lifecycle from RD to DD. Pajarito Scientific Corporation PSC is an internationally recognized supplier of comprehensive integrated solutions in the field of non-destructive assay NDA containment filtration and specialist shielding. 27 SCHOLARSHIPS HONORS AND AWARDS Roy G. Post Foundation Scholarships These scholarships are awarded in memory of Dr. Roy G. Post. This year the Post Foundation is awarding scholarships to its 100th student. The scholarships and the Foundation carry on Dr. Posts vision of education in this field and honor the Founder of the annual Waste Management Conference. The Roy G. Post Foundation is a 501c3 tax-deductible foundation dedicated to education in the safe management of nuclear materials. The 2015-2016 scholarship recipients are Graduate Awards - 5000 Timothy Ault Vanderbilt University Luke Boast Sheffield University United Kingdom Janelle Branch Vanderbilt University Ambar Deshkar Rutgers the State University of New Jersey Silvina Di Pietro Florida International University Wei Ding University of Leeds United Kingdom Jordan Evans Texas AM University Thilini Kaluarachchi United Nations University Japan Peter Martin University of Bristol United Kingdom Takenori Ozutsumi Tohoku University Japan Hannah Paterson Energus United Kingdom Dimitri Pletser Imperial College London United Kingdom Rachel Pope Clemson University Deepesh Poudel Idaho State University Stephanie Thornber University of Sheffield United Kingdom Jamie Weaver Washington State University Undergraduate Awards - 2500 Mariah Ashley Northern Arizona University Indranil Bisuri Amity University Noida India Hannah Irving TSTC Waco Colton Murphy University of Utah Joseph Nardone New York University Anna-Elina Pasi University of Helsinki Finland James A. Glasgow Scholarship This WM Symposia scholarship is given in recognition of the contributions of James Glasgow Esq. for his support of WMS and is designed to assist a second or third-year law student who demonstrates a meaningful interest in environmental law while studying at the University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law. The 2016 James A. Glasgow Scholarship recipients are Mari Toriyama Richard Michael McManus II Best Oral Presentations At each conference WMS recognizes the two best oral presentationspapers from the previous years conference. In order to honor high quality presentations the American Nuclear Society ANS and the American Society of Mechanical Engineers ASME presents an award for the Best PresentationsPapers. The WM2015 Winners are ANS Award - Best Oral PresentationPaper The Development and Initial Testing of the Ice Pig Cleaning Method for Nuclear Reprocessing Plants by Alex Jenkins Sellafield Ltd Joe Quarini Dan McBryde University of Bristol from Paper 15363 Track 6 Decontamination Decommissioning ASME Award - Best Oral PresentationPaper Uncertainty in Decommissioning the Benefits of 3D Simulation by Lawrence Wharmby Luc Ardellier OREKA Solutions from Paper 15124 Track 9 Special Topics Multi-Track Crosscutting Technology Topics ST Best Poster Presentations Judges select the best posterpaper based on technical quality and preparation of the work as described in the guidelines. Each track selects the best posterpaper which are then displayed and re-judged on Wednesday afternoon for the best of the conference. The WM2015 Winners are ANS Award - Best Poster PresentationPaper Achieving Groundwater Monitoring 28 Optimization at SRS A Core Team Process Based on Rigorous Technical Assessment Cathy Lewis Jeffrey Ross Mary Flora Christopher Bergren Teresa Eddy Savannah River Nuclear Solutions Brian Hennessey US DOE Paper 15273 from Track 7 - Environmental Remediation ASME Award - Best Poster PresentationPaper Tritiated Waste Management Opportunities Based on the Reduction of Tritium Activity and Out-gassing Christelle Decanis Daniel Canas Didier Dallava Jerome Pamela CEA Paper 15607 France from Track 3 - LLW ILW MW WMSASME Sarge Ozker Award Named in honor of M. Sacid Sarge Ozker and established in 1980 this award is bestowed for distinguished service and eminent achievement in the commercialization of nuclear powerenergy with particular emphasis in the field of radioactive waste management. It is presented by the Nuclear Engineering Division - Radwaste Systems Operating Committee of ASME. The 2016 WMSASME Sarge Ozker Award is presented to Larry W. Camper US NRC Retired Talisman Intl Advoco Professional Svcs WMS Fellow Award WMS established the honor of WMS Fellow in 2011 to recognize volunteers for distinguished contributions to the advancement of radioactive waste and radioactive material management. Elevation to the status of WMS Fellow is attained through peer recognition and confirmation by the WMS Board of Directors. The 2016 Fellow Award Recipients are Tom Brouns Market Sector Manager Energy Environment Directorate Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Judith D. Connell Senior Director Communications Strategic Planning Fluor Government Group George E. Dials President Pajarito Scientific Corporation Mark S. Lewis General Manager Cask Division EnergySolutions Inc Claudio Pescatore Private Practice Consultant WMS Wendell D. Weart Lifetime Achievement Award Named in honor of Wendell D. Weart the WMS Lifetime Achievement Award recognizes the long-term commitment of the recipient to solving major nuclear waste challenges which may include education research public policy or implementation of solutions for managing nuclear wastes and whose actions have contributed to the resolution of significant nuclear waste management issues. The 2016 WMS Lifetime Achievement Award sponsored by Sandia National Laboratories is presented to Dr. Enrique Biurrun Senior Adviser DBE TECHNOLOGY GmbH Program Advisory Committee Award WMS has established the Program Advisory Committee PAC Award to annually recognize an individual whose outstanding contributions have helped make and keep the annual Waste Management Conference the worlds premier technical conference on the management and disposal of nuclear waste. The 2016 Program Advisory Committee Award is presented to Larry Harmon Project Enhancement Corporation 29 WM2015 Papers of Note WM Symposia instituted a new award during WM2015 Papers of Note. This award is based solely on the paper submitted not its poster or oral presentation. The Paper Reviewers first determine eligibility and then the relevant Track Co-Chairs and subject matter experts select their Tracks Paper of Note. Twenty-one papers were selected representing the top 5 of the papers received. The Papers of Note for WM2015 are 1. 15111 - Measurement of the Plutonium Hold-Up in Glove Box before Dismantling - Jean Chevillon Raphal Oddou Maxime Vincent Hubert Schoech CEA 2. 15116 - Load Planning in the Dark RH-TRU Waste Container Load Planning at Sandia National LaboratoriesNew Mexico -Jesse Bland Betty Humphrey Weston Solutions Inc Michael Spoerner Randell Salyer Warren Strong Sandia National Laboratories 3. 15145 - Postclosure Assessment Modelling of a Deep Geologic Repository for Low and Intermediate Level Radioactive Waste in Ontario Canada - Russell Walke Richard Little Quintessa Ltd Helen Leung Nuclear Waste Management Organization 4. 15236 - A Paradigm Shift The Key to Optimal Defensible Transparent Waste Management Disposal Remediation Decisions - Paul Black Kelly Black Tom Stockton Neptune Company Inc Paul Dixon Los Alamos National Laboratory Laurel Boucher The Laurel Co. 5. 15294 - Vadose Zone Monitoring at the Radioactive Waste Management Sites at the Nevada National Security Site David Hudson David Black Vefa Yucel Greg Shott Pat Arnold National Security Technologies LLC 6. 15298 - Disposition of Hanford Tank Waste Sludge from Tank 241-AY-102 and the 241-A241-AX Farm Tanks Paul Certa Linda Eslin Riley Yarbrough Washington River Protection Solutions LLC Mark Gerboth Albin Pajunen Steve Schaus AEM Consulting LLC 7. 15359 - Development of Understanding of Disposability of High-Heat-Generating Wastes in the UK - Michelle Dickinson David Holton Amec Foster Wheeler Martin Cairns Radioactive Waste Management Dr. Phillip Bamforth 8. 15386 - Incorporating Climate and Regional Setting into Realistic-Efficacious End States for Contaminated Sites - Mark Kautsky Bill Dam US DOE Carol Eddy-Dilek Miles Denham Brian Looney Savannah River National Laboratory 9. 15409 - Validation Testing of Canberra-Obayashi TruckScan Calculation Method - Frazier Bronson Canberra Industries Inc. Atsuo Suzuki Canberra Japan KK Masaru Noda Naoya Takada Keizo Yamasaki Obayashi Corporation 10. 15423 - Performance Assessment Modeling of a Generic SNFHLW Repository in Salt with Coupled Thermal-Hydrologic Effects S. David Sevougian Geoff A. Freeze W. Payton Gardner Glenn E. Hammond Paul E. Mariner Robert J. MacKinnon Advanced Nuclear Energy Programs Group Sandia National Laboratories 11. 15458 - Siting Considerations for Consolidated Storage of Used Fuel in the United States Assessing the Impact of Key Developments since Release of the Blue Ribbon Commission Report in 2012 Chuck Bernhard Bernhard Consulting LLC 12. 15461 - Characterization of Unsaturated Hydraulic Conductivity in Fractured Media Using the Multistep Outflow Method Greg Flach Kenneth Dixon Ralph Nichols Savannah River National Laboratory 13. 15514 - Technetium Oxidation in Slag-Based Sodium Salt Waste Forms Exposed to Water and Moist Hanford Soil - C. A. Langton Savannah River National Laboratory Savannah River Nuclear Solutions 14. 15526 - A Summary of the Hanford Single-Shell Tank Structural Analysis of Record - F. George Abatt Ken L. Stoops Larry J. Julyk Brian M. Larsen Becht Engineering Co. Inc 30 15. 15603 - Application of the FW-CADIS Variance Reduction Method to Calculate a Precise N-Flux Distribution for the FRJ-2 Research Reactor - F. Abbasi R. Nabbi B. Thomauske J. Ulrich and F. Charlier Institute of Nuclear Engineering and Technology Transfer RWTH Aachen 16. 15609 - Licensing of the National Repository for LILW Waste in Bulgaria Enrique Biurrun Consultant Ira Stefanova SE RAW Emiliano Gonzalez Herranz Westinghouse Electric Spain 17. 15634 - Testing and Versatility of the SAVY 4000 Nuclear Material Container Paul Smith Tristan Karns Timothy Stone Jonathan Teague Kirk Veirs Los Alamos National Laboratory Nick Guadagnoli Curtis Marks Luke Anderson Ryan Clark NFT 18. 15648 - Minimum Detectable Activity for Tomographic Gamma Scanning System Ram Venkataraman Susan Smith John Kirkpatrick Canberra Industries AREVA BDNM Stephen Croft Oak Ridge National Laboratory 19. 15651 - Modern Sensitivity Analysis Tom Stockton Paul Black Paul Duffy Neptune and Company Inc. 20. 15681 - Using Spatial Statistical Methods to Determine an Effective Minimum Detectable Activity Matthew Knop Lynn Kidman Navarro 21. 15691 - Decontamination Methods Testing for the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant - Stephen Reese Rick Demmer Michael Ancho Battelle Energy Alliance Idaho National Laboratory WM2015 Papers of Note ENVIRONMENTALLY RESPONSIBLE WASTE MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS From characterization and remediation to storage transport and disposal CBI assists commercial and federal customers with solutions for cost-effective environmentally responsible radioactive and mixed-waste management. ENVIRONMENTAL REMEDIATION AND RESTORATION PROGRAM AND CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT DECOMMISSIONING AND DECONTAMINATION ENGINEERING AND CONSTRUCTION FACILITIES OPERATIONS AND MANAGEMENT 31 Learn how inspired leadership is shaping careers within the nuclear industry. Well hear from some of the industrys standout women leaders discussing their personal and professional journeys in leadership. They will share the experiences that have influenced them most their perspectives on overcoming barriers and what they are doing to inspire the next generation. Savannah River Nuclear SolutionsPresident CEO Carol Johnson will moderate the panel comprising three outstanding women leaders Joyce Connery Chairwoman Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board Dyan Foss Global Managing DirectorCH2MNuclear Sector Ann McCall Director of Waste Management UK Nuclear Decommissioning Authority Fluor will donate 25 on behalf of each attendee to two organizations supporting the fight against cancer - the American Cancer Society and the Avon Foundation for Women. The American Cancer Society For over 100 years the American Cancer Society has worked relentlessly to save lives and create a world with less cancer. Together with millions of supporters worldwide they help people stay well and get well find cures and fight back against cancer. The Avon Foundation for Women For over 60 years the Avon Foundation for Women has worked tirelessly to promote or aid charitable scientific educational and humanitarian activities with a special emphasis on those activities that improve the lives of women and their families. In its work to realize those aspirations the Avon Foundations current mission focus is to lead efforts to eradicate breast cancer and end domestic and gender violence. Join us in wearing something lavender on Tuesday March 8 to help celebrate those who have beaten cancer with courage and tenacity and support those who are still in the battle. We invite both men and women to hear this panel and enjoy some refreshments and heavy hors doeuvres. Women of Waste Management Reception Panel Tuesday March 8 6 8 p.m. Phoenix Convention Center Level Two 212ABC TRAILBLAZERS DONT JUST LEAD THEYINSPIRE 2016 Fluor Corporation. All Rights Reserved. ADGV128616 34 35 SPEAKERS BREAKFAST MONDAY-THURSDAY 700-800AM PLENARY SESSION MONDAY 800-945AM Featuring John Clarke Clive White Dr. Monica Regalbuto MONDAY KEYNOTE LUNCHEON Featuring Yasuharu Igarashi TUESDAY HONORS AWARDS LUNCHEON 1200-115PM 36 37 38 PHOENIX CONVENTION CENTER EXHIBIT HALL 4 WM2016 Show Floor Hours Sunday March 6th 1700 2000 Monday March 7th 0930 1830 Tuesday March 8th 0930 1830 Wednesday March 9th 0930 1330 Lounge Lounge Lounge Panel Zone Cyber Cafe Cyber Cafe Demo Zone Restroom Small Business Pavilion RestroomConcessionStandRestroom Student Posters Meeting Rooms Concierge Registration Aisle100 Aisle500 Aisle600 Aisle800 Aisle900 Aisle1000 Aisle700 Aisle400 Aisle300 Aisle200 Aisle1100 UK Pavilion 39 connected excellence in all we do Solving your solid and hazardous waste management needs around the world. twitter.comamec_fw linkedin.comcompanyamecfw youtube.comuseramecfw facebook.comamecfw amecfw.com Oil Gas Clean Energy Environment Infrastructure Mining ENERGY ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES AT LOCKHEED MARTIN WERE ENGINEERING A BETTER TOMORROW. We provide mission support and technology solutions to manage complex nuclear facilities critical to our national security. Visit www.lockheedmartin.comisgs WM2016 Comprehensive List of Acronyms Acronyms are US unless noted otherwise A ACRS Advisory Committee on Reactor Safety ADA Americans with Disabilities Act AEA Atomic Energy Agency or the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 AECL Atomic Energy of Canada Limited AFCEE Airforce Center for Engineering and the Environment AFR Away-From-Reactor Storage ALARA As Low As Reasonably Achievable ANDRA Agence nationale pour la gestion des dchets radioactifs French National Radioactive Waste Management Agency ANL Argonne National Laboratory ANS American Nuclear Society ANSTO Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation ARM Accelerator-Produced Radioactive Material ALARA As Low As Reasonably Achievable ASME American Society of Mechanical Engineers ASTM American Society for Testing Materials B BfS Bundesamt fr Strahlenschutz German Federal Office of Radiation Protection BNL Brookhaven National Laboratory BRC Below Regulatory Concern or Blue Ribbon Commission on Americas Nuclear Future BTP NRC Branch Technical Position BWR Boiling Water Reactor C CET Public Communication Participation Education Training CEA Commissariat a lEnergie Atomique French Atomic Energy Commission CERCLA Comprehensive Environmental Response Compensation and Liability Act CFR Code of Federal Regulations CH-TRU Contact-Handled Transuranic Radioactive Waste CNL Canadian Nuclear Laboratories CNSC Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission COVRA Dutch Nuclear Waste Storage Facility CPP Crosscutting Policies Programs D DAS Deputy Assistant Secretary DAW Dry Activated Waste DBE DBE TECHNOLOGY GmbH DCS Dry Container Storage DD Decontamination Decommissioning DNFSB Defense Nuclear Facility Safety Board DOD US Department of Defense DOE US Department of Energy DOT US Department of Transportation DU Depleted Uranium DWPF Defense Waste Processing Facility E EC European Commission EDF Electricite de France France Nuclear Utility EDRAM International Association for Environmentally Safe Disposal of Radioactive Materials EFCOG Energy Facilities Contractors Group EIA U.S. Energy Information Administration EIS Environmental Impact Statement EM Environmental Management ENEA National Agency for New Technologies Energy and Environment Italy ENRESA Empresa Nacional de Residuos Radiactivos Spain EPA US Environmental Protection Agency EPRI Electric Power Research Institute EPSRC Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Center ER Environmental Remediation EU European Union ESH Environment Safety Health FG FUSRAP Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program GAO United States Government Accountability Office GIS Geographical Information System GNEP Global Nuclear Energy Partnership GTCC Greater Than Class C Low-Level Radioactive Waste H HS Health and Safety HEPA High Efficiency Particulate Air HEU Highly Enriched Uranium HLW High-Level Radioactive Waste I IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency Austria ICRP International Commission on Radiological Protection IFNEC International Framework for Nuclear Energy Cooperation ILW Intermediate Level Radioactive Waste INL Idaho National Laboratory IPAC International Program Advisory Committee IPSN Institute de Protection et de Surete Institute for Protection and Nuclear Safety - France ISFSI Independent spent fuel storage installation ITRC Interstate Technology Roundtable Commission JK JAEA Japan Atomic Energy Agency KAERI Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute 42 L LAW Low-Activity Radioactive Waste LANL Los Alamos National Laboratory LBNL Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory LCA Life-cycle Assessment LEU Low Enriched Uranium LLILW Low- and Intermediate-Level Radioactive Waste LLNL Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory LLRWLLW Low-Level Radioactive Waste LM Office of Legacy Management US DOE LSA Low Specific Radioactive Activity LTM Long Term Monitoring LWR Light-Water Reactor M MI Management Integration MO Management Operation MRS Monitored Retrievable Storage MW Mixed Hazardous and Radioactive Wastes N NAGRA National Cooperative for the Disposal of Radioactive Waste Switzerland NCRP National Council on Radiation Protection NDA Nuclear Decommissioning Authority NDAA National Defense Authorization Act of 2005 NDF Nuclear Damage Compensation and Decommissioning Facilitation Corporation of Japan NEA Nuclear Energy Agency France NEI Nuclear Energy Institute NEPA National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 NFDI National Facility Disposition Initiative NNL National Nuclear Laboratory UK NNSA National Nuclear Security Administration NNSS Nevada National Security Site NORM Naturally Occurring Radioactive Material NPP Nuclear Power Plant NRC US Nuclear Regulatory Commission NTS Nevada Test Site NUMO Nuclear Waste Management Organization of Japan NWMO Nuclear Waste Management Organization Canada NWPA Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982 NWPAA Nuclear Waste Policy Amendments Act of 1987 NWTRB Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board O OECD Organization for Economic Cooperation Development France OPG Ontario Power Generation Inc. ORNL Oak Ridge National Laboratory P PA Performance Assessment PAC Program Advisory Committee PBO Parent Body Organization for Sellafield Ltd PCC Phoenix Convention Center PFP Plutonium Finishing Plant PHAI Port Hope Area Initiative Canada PNNL Pacific Northwest National Laboratory PM Particulate Matter or Project Manager PRA Probabilistic Risk Analysis PROC Peoples Republic of China PURAM Public Limited Company for Radioactive Waste Management Hungray PWR Pressurized Water Reactor Q QA Quality Assurance QAPP Quality Assurance Program Plan QC Quality Control R RD Research and Development RATA Lithuania State Enterprise Radioactive Waste Management Agency RAWRA Czech Radioactive Waste Repository Authority RCRA Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 RDD Radiological Dispersion Devices R DD Research Development and Demonstration RH-TRU Remote-Handled Transuranic Radioactive Waste RIFS Remedial InvestigationFeasibility Study ROK Republic of Korea RPV Reactor Pressure Vessel S SAR Safety Analysis Report SARP Safety Analysis Reports for Packaging SFEN Socit Franaise dEnergie Nuclaire French Nuclear Society SKB Swedish Nuclear Fuel and Waste Mgmt. Co SLC Site License Companies -UK SNF Spent Nuclear Fuel SNL Sandia National Laboratories SNM Special Nuclear Material SOGIN - Societ Gestione Impianti Nucleari Italian National Radioactive Waste Management Agency SPAs Special Packaging Authorizations SPRU US DOE Separations Process Research Unit SRNL Savannah River National Laboratory SRS Savannah River Site SRW Solid Radioactive Waste ST Special Topics including Security Safety Safeguards SVE Soil Vapor Extraction T TENORM Technologically-Enhanced Naturally Occurring Radioactive Material TER US NRC Technical Evaluation Report TRU Transuranic elements with atomic number than 92 TRUPACT Transuranic Waste Package Transporter TSD Treatment Storage and Disposal 43 U UK United Kingdom USUSA United States of America USACE US Army Corps of Engineers USAF US Air Force US DOD US Department of Defense US DOE US Department of Energy US DOT US Department of Transportation US EPA US Environmental Protection Agency US NRC US Nuclear Regulatory Commission UNF Used Nuclear Fuel WY WAC Waste Acceptance Criteria WD Waste Determination WERC Waste-Management Education Research Consortium WIPP Waste Isolation Pilot Plant WIR Waste Incidental to Reprocessing WM Waste Management WMS Waste Management Symposia Inc. WRAP Waste Receiving and Processing WS Wet Storage WTP Waste Treatment Plant at Hanford WVDP West Valley Demonstration Project WVDPA West Valley Demonstration Project Act YM Yucca Mountain 44 Track List with Related Sessions The WM Technical Program is organized by volunteers in nine Tracks. Listed below are the descriptions of these tracks and the sessions organized for WM2016. 1 - CROSSCUTTING POLICIES AND PROGRAMS CPP This track includes overall crosscutting policies and major programs. Similar sessions that are not crosscutting and thus specific to a single waste type e.g. HLW SNF LLW etc. or program e.g. ER DD etc. are in the specific track for that waste type or program. Presentations and panels of waste management programs and policies at the national multi-national and international level are found in this track. Other potential sessions include crosscutting regulatory issues contracting legal aspects permitting licensing and compliance activities criteria and standards development privatization issues legislation US Price-Anderson Act Paris Conventions enforcement agency and state issues including multi-party agreements interface and other high level crosscutting issues that involve multiple waste typesprograms or tracks. Related Sessions 1 2 3 13 14 22 31 32 33 34 37 38 52 53 54 55 56 57 73 74 78 79 80 90 91 92 105 106 109 112 121 2 - HIGH-LEVEL RADIOACTIVE WASTES HLW SPENTUSED NUCLEAR FUEL SNFUNF AND LONG-LIVED ALPHATRANSURANIC RADIOACTIVE WASTE TRU This track covers all long-lived alphaTRU waste SNF and HLW operations from generation and storage through characterization treatment and disposal. It also covers associated technology development and deployment recyclingreprocessing strategies and technologies periodic progress updates oriented to specific achievements in waste removal and disposal activities and overlapping issues including interim and final disposition strategies for SNF and HLW associated environmental permitting and monitoring of stored waste waste processing alternatives waste form deep geologic disposal and operating facility performance and risk assessment and the impacts of directly associated regulations and standards. Related Sessions 4 5 6 15 21 23 26 30 35 36 39 40 41 58 59 60 61 85 86 94 95 96 97 114 115 116 117 125 126 127 3 - LOW-LEVEL WASTE LLW INTERMEDIATE LEVEL WASTE ILW MIXED WASTE MW BY PRODUCT MATERIAL TENORM NORM RESIDUES DEPLETED URANIUM This track encompasses operations from generation through treatment and disposal technology development demonstration and deployment overlapping issues including waste minimization waste characterization and analysis effluent monitoring waste form and facility performance assessment regulations and standards and for all types of facilities from hospitals accelerators research reactors government facilities disposal sites etc. This track covers waste management of Uranium or Thorium ores as well as Greater than Class C - LLW byproducts or tailings NORM residues and waste and TENORM. This track also includes radioactive materials articles and consumer products. Related Sessions 8 16 17 18 44 50 66 75 76 77 99 110 122 134 4 - NUCLEAR POWER PLANT NPP WASTE MANAGEMENT This track encompasses waste characterization and minimization treatment packaging and management of NPP operational wastes and NPP SNFUNF storage and management. Related Sessions 45 51 62 63 98 45 5 - PACKAGING AND TRANSPORTATION PAT This track includes all activities and issues related to the safe secure and economical packaging and transportation of radioactive materials. This includes HLW TRU LLW ILW and MW fresh and irradiated nuclear fuel contaminated media and debris isotopes and radioactive sources Uranium Hexafluoride etc. Sessions include international regulatory activities issues and initiatives packaging development and related issues logistics and transportation operations including large items from decommissioning integrated planning and scheduling status and issues for large shipping campaigns and stakeholder and public interactions and issues. Related Sessions 9 64 65 88 100 128 6 - DECONTAMINATION DECOMMISSIONING DD This track includes all aspects of DD from shutdown and planning to license termination andor greenfield including characterization decontamination dismantling demolition waste handling final survey and associated new technology development for both government and commercial nuclear power and non-power facilities. It also includes decommissioning technologies and program strategies worldwide as well as the regulatory aspects. Related Sessions 24 25 46 67 84 87 101 102 108A 111 118 123 7 - ENVIRONMENTAL REMEDIATION ER This track includes all activities associated with the assessment cleanup and closure of contaminated sites. Sessions will explore how to restore and protect human health and the environment through investigation cleanup closure and long-term site management. The focus is on above and below ground remedial actions and cleanup activities including site inspection characterization and evaluation sampling and analysis compliance monitoring resolving regulatory issues that impact cleanup aquifer and soil remediation managing waste resulting from cleanup activities remedial design and implementation accelerating cleanup through technological or process improvements closure sustainable green remediation processes and legacy managementlong-term stewardship. Related Sessions 10 11 19 20 27 47 48 71 80 81 82 93 119 130 131 8 - COMMUNICATION OF TECHNICAL ISSUES AND IMPACTS EDUCATION AND TRAINING CET This track is divided into multiple diverse sessions including techniques for communicating technical issues education and training social justice and equity intergovernmental and sustainability issues knowledge management public involvement and risk communications preserving cultural resources while demolishing aging facilities and infrastructure. It incorporates a broad range of issues that shape decisions involving waste management including cultural equity social environmental policy communications training and education. It also addresses environmental assessment issues Environment Impact Statements in the context of the US National Environmental Policy regulations. Related Sessions 12 28 42 43 68 69 72 83 103 104 113 124 9 - SPECIAL TOPICS AND MULTI-TRACK CROSS CUTTING TECHNOLOGYST This track includes all special topics including the aspects of US and non-US international safety security and safeguards and US Homeland and international security issues. It also includes technical track crosscutting sessions or special WM topics on programs associated with orphan and sealed sources integrated risk management modeling compliance activities criteria and standards development Natural Resource Damage Assessment NRDA technology deployment instruments filtration advanced technologies extreme environment operations enabling technologies technology driven program implications and drivers andor other technical crosscutting issues that involve multiple waste forms or radioactive materials. Related Sessions 7 29 49 70 89 120 132 46 UPDATED Technical Program - Schedule at a Glance as of March 4 2016 Annotated Session Titles for full session titles please see individual listing Time Room 1PoliciesPrograms 2HLWSNFTRU 3LILWNORM 4NuclearPowerPl. 5Packag.Trans. 6DD 7Environ.Rem. 8Commun.ET 9SpecialTopics UnitedKingdom DDofNPP Monday Morning March 7 The 9 WM Tracks for Subject Reference 1 Waste Management Symposium 2016 Plenary Session 800 301CD X 2 Panel Hot Topics in US DOE Environmental Management 1000 102BC X 3 Panel Featured Country - United Kingdom 1000 105AB X X 4 Panel LANL Recovery - Re-Treatment of Problem TRU Waste Stream 1000 103AB X 5 HLW SNFUNF and Long-lived AlphaTRU Programs and Policies 1000 101B X 6 Structural Integrity and Wear in Nuclear Process Equipment 1000 101C X 7 Panel Managing Safety Culture During Transitions 1000 104AB X 8 Assessments of Disposal Systems Facilities and Sites for LLWILW 1000 102A X 9 Tools for Packaging and Transportation Policies 1000 106A X 10 Groundwater Remediation Projects Worldwide Experiences 1000 106B X 11 Environmental Remediation in Urban and Suburban Environments 1000 106C X 12 The Effectiveness of Advisory Boards the US DOE EM Site Specific Experience 1000 105C X Monday Afternoon March 7 13 Panel Featured Country United Kingdom 1330 105AB X X 14 Panel Featured Country United Kingdom 1515 105AB X X 15 Panel US DOE WIPP Lessons Learned and Return to Operations 1330 102BC X 16 Panel Hot Topics in US Commercial LLW Management 1330 103AB X 17 Selected Key Topics in US Commercial LLW Management 1515 106A X 18 Development and Use of Gamma and Neutron Waste Characterization Methods 1330 102A X 19 US DOE EM Risk-Informed Performance Based Decision Making 1330 104AB X 20 Panel Implementing Technically-Based Cleanup Balancing Regulatory Fiscal 1515 104AB X 21 Panel Interim Storage of Used Nuclear Fuel in the US What are the Options 1330 Ex Hall X 22 Panel US DOE - Excess Facilities DD Implementation Plans 1515 Ex Hall X 23 Experience in Salt Waste Processing Worldwide Examples 1330 106A X 24 PanelPapers Getting a Handle on DD Costs - a Global Perspective 1515 103AB X X 25 Application of Innovative DD Technologies - Part 1 of 2 Global Experience 1330 106B X 26 Development of Novel Waste Forms and Processes for TRU and HLW 1330 105C X 27 ER Post Closure Challenges and Long Term StewardshipLegacy Management 1330 101C X 28 Innovations and Performance Solutions in Workplace Management 1330 106C X 29 Developments in Deep Borehole Disposal Around the World 1330 101B X 30 Posters HLW SNFUNF and Long-Lived AlphaTRU Waste 1330 1_ Foyer X 31 Student Posters The Next Generation - Industry Leaders of Tomorrow 1330 Ex Hall X Tuesday Morning March 8 32 Panel US DOE Featured Site Oak Ridge - Partnering for Success Part 1 of 4 0830 102BC X 33 Panel US DOE Site Oak Ridge - Responding to Current Challenges Part 2 of 4 1015 102BC X 34 Panel UK NDA US DOE Perspective on Contracting Approaches 1015 Ex Hall X X 35 Panel DOE Hanford - Direct Feed Low Activity Waste - Update - Part 1 of 4 0830 105AB X 36 DOE Hanford - Direct Feed Low Activity Waste - Program Overview - Part 2 of 4 1015 106C X 37 Worldwide Regulatory and Oversight for Waste Management and Disposal 0830 106C X 38 Panel Emerging Issues that Challenge Contractors at Federal Sites Worldwide 1015 105AB X 39 Panel Consent Based SitingOpportunities and Challenges for Disposal Facilities 0830 104AB X 40 Storage and Retrieval of SpentUsed Nuclear Fuel - Part 1 of 2 0830 105C X 41 Storage and Retrieval of TRU 1015 106A X 42 Panel Graduates Wants and Needs Does it Differ Between Countries 0830 103AB X X 43 Panel Young Professionals in Nuclear Science and Engineering 1015 103AB X X 44 Assessments of Performance of Disposal Systems Facilities Sites for LLWILW 0830 102A X 45 Perspectives on Management of Nuclear Power Plant Liquid and Wet Waste 0830 106B X 46 DD of Nuclear and Non-Power Generating Facilities Both Large and Small 0830 101C X 47 Technical Innovations in Environmental Remediation and Site Closure 0830 101B X 48 Experience with ER Challenges Alternative Approaches to Achieving End State 1015 101B X 49 A Global Perspective on Advances in Nuclear Safety Management 0830 106A X 50 Posters LILW 0830 1_ Foyer X 51 Posters Nuclear Power Plant NPP Waste Management 0830 1_ Foyer X 47 UPDATED Technical Program - Schedule at a Glance as of March 4 2016 Annotated Session Titles for full session titles please see individual listing Time Room 1PoliciesPrograms 2HLWSNFTRU 3LILWNORM 4NuclearPowerPl. 5Packag.Trans. 6DD 7Environ.Rem. 8Commun.ET 9SpecialTopics UnitedKingdom DDofNPP Tuesday Afternoon March 8 52 Panel US DOE Site Oak Ridge- Improving Performance in the Field-Part 3 of 4 1330 102BC X 53 Panel US DOE Site Oak Ridge-Transitioning from Cleanup to Reuse-Part 4 of 4 1515 102BC X 54 Panel UK USA Canada Partnering - Accomplishments and Lessons Learned 1330 105AB X X 55 Panel Small Business Contracting Opportunities with DOE Prime Contractors 1330 Ex Hall X 56 Panel Addressing the Small Business Barriers in Contracting with the US DOE 1515 Ex Hall X 57 Worldwide Perspectives of Radioactive WM - Challenges and Solutions 1330 102A X 58 Panel Progress on Deep Repository Programmes Around the World 1330 103AB X 59 Global Advances in HLW Retrieval Equipment 1515 105C X 60 DOE Hanford - Direct Feed Low Activity Waste - Program Execution-Part 3 of 4 1330 106C X 61 DOE Hanford - Direct Feed Low Activity Waste-Technology Maturation-Part 4 of 4 1515 106C X 62 Panel US Nuclear Power Plant Waste Management - US LLW Disposal Issues 1330 104AB X 63 Panel Nuclear Power Plant Waste Management - LLW Processor Issues 1515 104AB X 64 Type B Cask Packaging Design 1330 105C X 65 Panel Worldwide Challenges in Radioactive Material Packaging 1515 103AB X 66 Operating Experience in the Treatment and Storage of LLWILW 1330 101B X 67 DD of US DOE Facilities 1330 101C X 68 Communication of Technical Issues Worldwide Experiences 1330 106B X 69 Decision Making Tools Frameworks for ER that Enhance Communication 1515 106B X 70 Integrated Performance Risk Assessments Decision Analyses Risk Mgmt 1330 106A X 71 Posters Environmental Remediation 1330 1_ Foyer X 72 Posters Communications Involvement Education and Training 1330 1_ Foyer X Wednesday Morning March 9 73 Panel Cleanup of Fukushima NPP DD and Waste Management - Part 1 of 2 0830 102BC X X 74 Panel WM from Remediation of Legacy Sites or Unplanned Releases 0830 105AB X 75 Panel Problematic US DOE Mixed Waste Streams Policy Changes 0830 103AB X 76 Panel Industry and Public Feedback Site-Specific PA - US NRC Rulemaking 1015 103AB X 77 Global Use of Cementitious Waste Forms for LLWILW 0830 102A X 78 Panel US DOE Procurement and Contracting Opportunities 1015 Ex Hall X 79 Panel UK Featured Site - Sellafield Legacy Ponds and Silos 0830 104AB X X 80 Lessons Learned from the Safety Pause of Operations at SRNS September 2015 1015 104AB X 81 International Experience in Complex Site Characterization and ER Technologies 0830 105C X 82 FUSRAP and US Army Corp of Engineers Projects 0830 106A X 83 Records Knowledge and Memory RKM Nuclear Waste Geologic Repositories 0830 106B X 84 Plans for and Experience in Transitioning to Decommissioning World Examples 0830 106C X X 85 Geologic Disposal of HLW SNFUNF and Long-lived AlphaTRU - Status Plans 0830 101C X 86 Experience in Waste Treatment Process Updates an International Perspective 0830 101B X 87 Posters DD 0830 1_ Foyer X X 88 Posters Packaging and Transportation 0830 1_ Foyer X 89 Posters Special Topics and Track Crosscutting Technology Topics 0830 1_ Foyer X X Wednesday Afternoon March 9 90 Panel US DOE Featured Site Sandia National Laboratories 1330 105AB X 90B DOE Update on US Disposal of GTCC LLW and the Release of the EIS 1630 105AB 91 Panel Cleanup of Fukushima -Offsite Cleanup and Intl Collaboration -Part 2 of 2 1330 102BC X X 92 ESPRC DISTINCTIVE Research Programme 1330 106C X X 93 Panel ER Projects in Eastern Europe Central Asia IAEA TC Project RER 9121 1330 104AB X 94 Panel Challenges in US DOE HLW Tank Management 1330 103AB X 95 Novel Inspection Tools and Equipment to Support Tank Storage 1515 102A X 96 Technical Advancements in HLWSNF Disposal - Part 1 of 2 1330 101C X 97 Storage and Retrieval of SpentUsed Nuclear Fuel - Part 2 of 2 1330 101B X 98 Advances Around the World in the Management of NPP Dry Waste 1515 101B X 99 Regulatory and Programmatic Issues and Solutions for LLWILW 1330 106B X 100 Packaging and Transportation of Radioactive Hazardous Materials and Wastes 1330 106A X 101 DD of Nuclear Power Plants - Part 1 of 2 1330 105C X X 102 Experience in Waste OptimizationMinimization and Harmonization During DD 1515 105C X X 103 International Experience in Community Involvement and Education Initiates 1330 102A X 104 Panel Approaches to Risk-Informed Regulations for Radwaste Management 1515 103AB X 104B Panel The Richland Operations Office Cleanup Mission - Beyond the 2015 Vision 1515 103AB X X 105 Non-Paper Posters Emerging Issues and Late Abstracts 1330 1-Foyer X 48 UPDATED Technical Program - Schedule at a Glance as of March 4 2016 Annotated Session Titles for full session titles please see individual listing Time Room 1PoliciesPrograms 2HLWSNFTRU 3LILWNORM 4NuclearPowerPl. 5Packag.Trans. 6DD 7Environ.Rem. 8Commun.ET 9SpecialTopics UnitedKingdom DDofNPP Thursday Morning March 10 106 Panel Transition to GoCO at Canadian Nuclear Laboratories 0830 102BC X 107 Panel Emerging Middle East Nuclear States Status and Plans - WITHDRAWN 107B Consent Based Siting Dialogue with DOE 900 105AB 108 Panel International Collaboration for Safe WM and DD- WITHDRAWN 108A Application of Innovative DD Technologies - Part 2 of 2 Merged with 129 1330 103AB X 109 Panel US DOE Lexington KY Office Portsmouth Paducah Sites 1015 103AB X 110 Roundtable WM Energy Facilities Contractor Operating Group EFCOG 0830 105C X 111 Approaches to Fast Track Technology Development and Demonstration 0830 106A X 112 MOVED TO WEDNESDAY PM 104B 113 Experience of Records Knowledge and Memory for Waste Geologic Repositories 1015 104AB X 114 Investigations of Problematic Wastes and New Candidates for Immobilization 0830 106B X 115 Issues in Tank Chemistry Are There Worldwide Similarities 1015 106B X X 116 Advances in Nuclear Facility Operation and Optimization 0830 106C X 117 Future Alternate Fuel Cycle HLW Management Worldwide Experiences 1015 106C X 118 DD of Nuclear Power Plants - Part 2 of 2 0830 101B X X 119 Sustainable Remediation Processes - Global Insights or Applications 0830 102A X 120 Panel Interagency Community of Practice in Risk and Performance Assessment 0830 104AB X 121 Global Insights into Disposal Site Selection 1015 106A X 122 Experience with Waste Certification Acceptance and Disposal for LLWILW 0830 101C X Thursday Afternoon March 10 123 Topical Session - International NPP DD Time for Awareness and Planning 1330 102BC X X 124 Integration of Human Development with Modeling for Disposal or ER Decisions 1330 105AB X 125 Panel Lessons Learned from Yucca Mountain License Application Process 1330 103AB X 126 Experience with Closure Monitoring of HLW SNFUNF AlphaTRU Facilities 1330 102A X 127 Technical Advancements in HLWSNF Disposal - Part 2 of 2 1515 102A X 128 Radioactive Material Packaging and Transportation Regulatory Issues 1330 101C X 129 Merged with Session 108A 130 Innovative Field Monitoring for Environmental Remediation 1330 106A X 131 ER Progress Towards Closure of Contaminated Sites Around the World 1330 106B X 132 Global Management of Used Radioactive Sealed Sources Orphan Materials 1330 106C X 133 Social Sciences as a Resource for Improving Public Involvement - WITHDRAWN 134 Emerging Treatment Technologies for LLWILW 1330 101B X 135 Panel Russian Technologies Update -WITHDRAWN 136 MOVED TO THURSDAY AM 107B Technical Program Schedule Start times listed for papers are estimated. Please check the session signage outside of each room to obtain the current presentation times. If a paper is withdrawn the reaming presentations will move up in time. Names bolded by a paper is the proposed presenter. The UK flag designates a speaker from our WM2016 featured country. Thank you to our Technical Program Signage Sponsor 49 Fluor Government Group 2300 Clarendon Blvd. Suite 1110 Arlington Virginia 22201 703.351.1204 For more information on Fluor visit www.fluor.com. 2016 Fluor Corporation. All Rights Reserved. ADGV128615 Safe.Efficient.Reliable.Fluor. TechnicalSophisticationin aComplexIndustry Todays complex nuclear missions require technical sophistication matched with the expertise and fortitude to get the job done. We leverage our knowledge of the nuclear industrys evolving landscape with strong project management and a collaborative approach.The end result we deliver performance and value. For more than 70 years Fluor has provided the depth of experience and excellence in execution that our customers have come to rely on in this dynamic environment. Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant Deactivation Project Magnox Decommissioning Project AECL Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant DD Project Savannah River Site Management ContractCopyright Magnox Limited Photo provided courtesy of Canadian Nuclear Laboratories MARCH 7 MONDAY AM Session 1 0800 - 0945 Room 301CD Waste Management Symposium 2016 Plenary Session Session Co-Chairs Jim Fiore Fiore Consulting James Gallagher Gallagher Consulting Lead Organizer Gary Benda AVANTech Inc. Additional Organizers Jim Fiore Fiore Consulting James Voss Predicus LLC Panel Reporter Linda Lehman CH2M HILL Inc. The plenary panel will focus on government and industry world leaders speaking on the pressing issues facing radioactive waste management in 2016 and beyond. Panelists John Clarke CEO NDA United Kingdom Clive White President of Clean Energy Europe Amec Foster Wheeler United Kingdom Dr. Monica Regalbuto Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management US DOE Session 2 1000 - 1200 Room 102BC Panel Hot Topics in US DOE Environmental Management Session Co-Chairs James Gallagher Gallagher Consulting Martin Schneider Longenecker Associates Lead Organizer Gary Benda AVANTech Inc. Additional Organizers Jim Fiore Fiore Consulting Mark Gilbertson US DOE Panel Reporter Martin Schneider Longenecker Associates This panel focuses on Senior US DOE Managers from Washington D.C. speaking on the pressing issues facing US DOE EM sites. Panelists Frank Marcinowski Associate Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary DAS for Environmental Management EM Acting US DOE Barton Barnhart EM DAS for Program Planning and Budget US DOE Melody Bell EM DAS for Human Capital and Corporate Services Acting US DOE Christine Gelles EM DAS for Waste Management Acting US DOE Mark Gilbertson EM DAS for Site Restoration US DOE James Hutton EM DAS for Safety Security and Quality Programs US DOE Kenneth Picha EM DAS for Tank Waste and Nuclear Materials US DOE Jack Surash EM DAS for Acquisition and Project Management US DOE EM Session 3 1000 - 1200 Room 105AB Panel Featured Country - United Kingdom Session Co-Chairs Larry Camper USNRC Retired Advoco Professional Svcs LLC John Mathieson NDA United Kingdom Lead Organizer John Mathieson NDA United Kingdom Additional Organizers Angie Jones Amec Foster Wheeler Graham Jonsson NDA United Kingdom Panel Reporter Angie Jones Amec Foster Wheeler This first panel session will provide a high-level overview of the nuclear decommissioning and clean-up challenges in the UK against the backdrop of managing the legacy situation the existing nuclear programme and the advent of new nuclear build. This panel will discuss the roles of Government policy NDA strategy implementation at the site level and the importance of strong but flexible regulation. The special relationship between the US DOE and the UK NDA will also be discussed with particular emphasis on the collaboration between the two Governments on innovative technology development and implementation operational lessons learned and management approaches. Panelists John Clarke CEO NDA United Kingdom Dr. Monica Regalbuto Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management US DOE Rob Middleton Head of Decommissioning and Radioactive Waste Policy UK Department of Energy and Climate Change United Kingdom Mina Golshan Deputy Chief Nuclear Inspector Office for Nuclear Regulation United Kingdom Juliet Long Legacy Waste Issues Manager Environment Agency United Kingdom Clive White President of Clean Energy Europe Amec Foster Wheeler United Kingdom MONDAY AM 52 Paul Howarth Managing Director National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Session 4 1000 - 1200 Room 103AB Panel LANL Recovery - Re-Treatment of Problem Waste Stream Nitrate Salts Session Co-Chairs Doug Hintze US DOE Bruce Robinson Los Alamos National Laboratory Lead Organizer Panel Reporter Roger Nelson US DOE Additional Organizers Christine Gelles US DOE Bruce Robinson Los Alamos National Laboratory This panel focuses on the treatment of nitrate salt TRU waste drums currently stored at Los Alamos National Laboratory including those in which a thermally sensitive mixture was created from the use of an organic absorbent during previous remediation operations. Technical regulatory and programmatic aspects of this challenging campaign will be described. The session will also provide a high-level discussion of activities of the recently constituted DOE Environmental Management Los Alamos office responsible for managing legacy environmental cleanup at LANL. Panelists David Funk Deputy Associate Director Environmental Programs Los Alamos National Laboratory David Nickless Environmental Management Los Alamos US DOE J.R. Stroble TRU Sites and Transportation Division Manager US DOE Kathryn Roberts Resource Protection Division State of New Mexico Environment Department Session 5 1000 - 1200 Room 101B HLW SNFUNF and Long-lived AlphaTRU Programs and Policies Session Co-Chairs Sal Golub US DOE Chuan-Fu Wu ESH Solutions Lead Organizer Andrew Griffith US DOE Additional Organizers Sal Golub US DOE Bruce Robinson Los Alamos National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Sal Golub US DOE 1005 Benefits of a Full Waste Cost Recovery Program - 16322 Stacy Nottestad Rob Black Idaho National Laboratory 1030 Technology Maturation in Support of DOE 413.3B Project Execution - 16436 Karthik Subramanian Paul Cavanah Washington River Protection Solutions Janet Diediker US DOE 1055 U.S. Senate Bill S.854-IS A Maladjusted Politicized Maze for Consent-Based Siting of New HLW-Repositories - 16019 Leif G Eriksson Nuclear Waste Dispositions Session 6 1000 - 1200 Room 101C Structural Integrity and Wear in Nuclear Process Equipment Session Co-Chairs Larry Ling AECOM - Savannah River Remediation Glyn Trenchard US DOE Lead Organizer Bill Wilmarth Savannah River National Laboratory Additional Organizers Jonathan Bricker Savannah River Remediation Vijay Jain Savannah River Remediation Terry Sams Washington River Protection Solutions Paper Reviewer Terry Sams Washington River Protection Solutions 1005 Corrosion Testing of Carbon Steel Exposed to Sludge Heel Chemical Cleaning Solutions - 16109 Bruce Wiersma William Bill King Richard Wyrwas Savannah River National Laboratory 1030 Determination of ErosionCorrosion Rates in Hanford Tank Farms Radioactive Waste Transfer System Pipelines - 16395 Dennis Washenfelder AEM Consulting LLC Jeremy Johnson US DOE Dan Baide Kayle Boomer Jim Castleberry Gary A. Cooke Jason Engeman Crystal Girardot Jason Gunter Joel Larson Jason Page Eric Wilson Washington River Protection Solutions 1055 Material Properties and Temperature Effects Quantified for Slurry Wear - 16141 Consuelo Guzman-Leong Steve Gosselin Joseph Cluever LPI Inc. 1120 Hanford Single-Shell Tank and Double-Shell Tank Integrity Program - 16390 Dennis Washenfelder AEM Consulting LLC Jeremy Johnson US DOE Crystal Girardot Kayle Boomer Theodore Venetz Washington River Protection Solutions MONDAY AM 53 Session 7 1000 - 1200 Room 104AB Panel Managing Safety Culture during Transitions Session Co-Chairs Jan Preston Bill Shingler Fluor Corporation Lead Organizer Kim Auclair KD Auclair Associates Additional Organizers Judith Connell Fluor Corporation Jan Preston Fluor Corporation Jim Schildknecht Lucas Engineering Management Services Panel Reporter Jeannette Hyatt Savannah River National Laboratory This panel focuses on the application of Human Performance Improvement HPI and other approaches to the management of cultural change during transition transition of the managing contractor transition of a mission andor transition of a workforce. Change of this nature is one of the only certainties in the DOE complex today the panel will discuss their challenges and experiences successful and otherwise driving change with the objective of yielding a strong safety culture on the other side of a transition. Topics will include respect for a historical legacy of performance reinforcement of changed requirements and expectations and blending cultures. Panelists Linda Bauer VP Transformation Consolidated Nuclear Security LLC Jeff Smith Deputy Director for Operations Oak Ridge National Laboratory Tara Neider Senior Vice President Business Development and Sales AREVA Inc. Brad Frazee Chief Operating Officer NorthWind Group Session 8 1000 - 1200 Room 102A Assessments of Disposal Systems Facilities and Sites for LLWILW a Global Perspective Session Co-Chairs Kent Rosenberger Savannah River Remediation Linda Suttora US DOE Lead Organizer Panel Reporter Linda Suttora US DOE Additional Organizers Bob Hiergesell Savannah River National Laboratory Billie Mauss US DOE Office of River Protection Kent Rosenberger Savannah River Remediation 1005 Simplifying the Tracking of Waste Disposal Inventories Process Improvement for Rapid Data Interpretation and Reduced Errors - 16143 Steven Hommel Savannah River Remediation 1030 Testing of Novel Application of GOTHIC to Modelling of Hydrogen Distribution in Intermediate Level Waste Storage Facilities - 16499 Gustavo Rubio Rajan Kumar Graham Tucker Nigel Thornton Atkins Limited United Kingdom 1055 Migration Rates of Some Cations in Unsaturated Layer around the Near-Surface Disposal Facilities of Radioactive Wastes - 16116 Takenori Ozutsumi Yuichi Niibori Taiji Chida Tohoku University Japan Session 9 1000 - 1200 Room 106A Tools for Packaging and Transportation Policies Session Co-Chairs Edward Ketusky Savannah River National Laboratory Chi-Fung Tso Arup United Kingdom Lead Organizer Kent McDonald Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Additional Organizers Larry Harmon Project Enhancement Corporation Paul Jones Ameriphysics Anna Wikmark Swedish Nuclear Fuel and Waste Management Co. Sweden Paper Reviewer Mike Nolan Energy NW Columbia 1005 Development and Application of a Stakeholder Tool for Assessing Radioactive Transportation START - 16516 Mark Abkowitz Vanderbilt University Erica Bickford US DOE 1030 Training on Transport Security of NuclearRadioactive Material for Key Audiences - 16149 Ronald Pope Yung Liu Argonne National Laboratory James Shuler US DOE 1055 Planning for Future Implementation of Section 180c of the Nuclear Waste Policy Act DOEs Policy Implementation Exercise - 16612 Erica Bickford US DOE Elizabeth Helvey Tim Runyon North Wind Services LLC MONDAY AM 54 Session 10 1000 - 1200 Room 106B Groundwater Remediation Projects Worldwide Experiences Session Co-Chairs Skip Chamberlain US DOE John Kristofzski Retired Lead Organizer Panel Reporter John Kristofzski Retired Additional Organizers Kurt Gerdes US DOE Robert Vellinger TerranearPMC LLC 1005 Simulating Regional Groundwater Flow in the Vicinity of the Nevada National Security Site Nye County Nevada - 16104 Wayne Belcher Donald Sweetkind Claudia Faunt US Geological Survey 1030 Treatment of Chlorinated Solvents in Groundwater Beneath an Occupied Building at The Young - Rainey STAR Center - 16342 Joe Daniel Charles Tabor Navarro Research and Engineering Inc. Scott Surovchak US DOE 1055 The Effect of Bicarbonate on Autunite Dissolution in the Presence of Shewanella Oneidensis under Oxygen Restricted Conditions - 16429 Yelena Katsenovich Sandra Herrera Vasileios Anagnostopoulos Applied Research Center - FIU Shonali Laha Florida International University Brady Lee Hope Lee Pacific Northwest National Laboratory 1120 DNAPL Source Area Delineation Using MIP and HPT Technology at Space Launch Complex 16 Cape Canaveral Air Force Station FL - 16352 Tim Jellett HydroGeologic Inc. John Langett Air Force Civil Engineer Center Ronald Jackson USACE Session 11 1000 - 1200 Room 106C Environmental Remediation in Urban and Suburban Environments Session Co-Chairs Robert Vellinger TerranearPMC LLC Nelson Walter Amec Foster Wheeler Lead Organizer Panel Reporter Nelson Walter Amec Foster Wheeler Additional Organizers Ella Feist CH2M HILL Inc. United Kingdom Robert Vellinger TerranearPMC LLC Robert Zelmer Environmental Legacy Associates Canada 1005 Conducting Gamma Radiation Surveys on Municipal Roadways in Support of the Port Hope Area Initiative - 16602 Stuart Bailey David Raymond Jeffrey Lively Amec Foster Wheeler Canada Erwin Santiago Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Canada 1030 Comparison of Laboratory Analytical Methods for Uranium Analysis - 16606 Natalie Watson Scott McCabe USACE Nelson Walter Jeffrey Lively Amec Foster Wheeler 1055 Public Outreach in FUSRAP - 16201 Neil Miller John Busse William Frederick Jane Staten Arleen Kreusch Michelle Barker Karen Keil Stephen Buechi USACE 1120 Online Interactive Reporting of Groundwater Monitoring and Remediation Progress at the Hanford Site Washington - 16485 Craig Arola Art Lee Bill Faught Mark Byrnes CH2M HILL PRC Kevin Smith Intera Inc. Benjamin Vannah US DOE MONDAY AM 55 Session 12 1000 - 1200 Room 105C The Effectiveness of Advisory Boards the US DOE EM Site Specific Experience Session Co-Chairs Kimberly Brinkley South Carolina Dept of Health Environmental Control Jenny Freeman Strata-G Lead Organizer Jenny Freeman Strata-G Additional Organizers Kimberly Brinkley South Carolina Dept of Health Environmental Control Paper Reviewer David Borak US DOE 1005 How The US DOE EM Office Engages the Public on Complex Issues - 16532 David Borak US DOE Donna Hruska Nevada Site Specific Advisory Board 1030 Public Participation at the Savannah River Site Citizen Advisory Board Meetings - 16343 Nina Spinelli Savannah River Site Citizens Advisory Board 1055 Oak Ridge Site Specific Advisory Board Adapts to Engage - 16459 Belinda Price David Hemelright Oak Ridge Site Specific Advisory Board 1120 Grassroots Efforts to Clarify the High-level Waste HLW Definition - 16433 Rick McLeod Savannah River Site Community Reuse Organization MARCH 7 MONDAY PM Session 13 1330 - 1510 Room 105AB Panel Featured Country United Kingdom Session Co-Chairs Graham Jonsson NDA United Kingdom Michael Rosenfeld UKTI Lead Organizer John Mathieson NDA United Kingdom Additional Organizers Graham Jonsson NDA United Kingdom Fred Sheil Sheil Consulting Ltd United Kingdom Panel Reporter Angie Jones Amec Foster Wheeler This two -part panel session will provide a deeper perspective of the challenges associated with decommissioning and clean-up activities at legacy nuclear sites in the UK and provide comparisons with the US. In a tough economic environment how does the UK prioritize its spending and balance the competing issues of the costs of cleaning up its sites while meeting stakeholder expectations including those of the regulator The panelists will further explore the importance and experiences of collaborating at the site and institution level to address these challenges. A US perspective will be provided. Panelists Peter Lutwyche Sellafield Programme Director Nuclear Decommissioning Authority United Kingdom Tom Foster Chief Decommissioning Officer Sellafield Ltd United Kingdom Victoria Winspear -Roberts Superintending Inspector Office for Nuclear Regulation United Kingdom Martin Grant CEO Atkins Energy United Kingdom Myrian Wood Acting Director National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Stacy Charboneau Manager Richland Operations Office US DOE Session 014 1515 - 1700 Room 105AB Panel Featured Country United Kingdom Session Co-Chairs Eric Knox AECOM John Mathieson NDA United Kingdom Lead Organizer John Mathieson NDA United Kingdom Additional Organizers Angie Jones Amec Foster Wheeler Graham Jonsson NDA United Kingdom Panel Reporter Angie Jones Amec Foster Wheeler This panel session will provide a perspective of the challenges related to waste management and disposal activities associated with the UKs nuclear programme. There will be a discussion of the current arrangements for LLW disposal and the forward plans for geological disposal. These have to deal with the current waste arisings LLW HLW from reprocessing and spent nuclear fuel from legacy facilities operating nuclear plants and the new build power stations. With only one national LLW facility available and no site yet for a geological disposal facility how is the UK addressing the challenge Scotland has its own policy on radioactive waste and its influence will be discussed. A US view will also be provided from the perspective of the Yucca Mountain programme. MONDAY AM MONDAY PM 56 Panelists Bruce Cairns Head of Geological Disposal UK Department of Energy and Climate Change United Kingdom Juliet Long Legacy Waste Issues Manager Environment Agency United Kingdom Dennis Thompson Managing Director Low Level Waste Repository United Kingdom Bruce McKirdy Managing Director Radioactive Waste Management United Kingdom Jim Cochrane Radioactive Substances Policy Nuclear Regulation Unit Scottish Environment Protection Agency United Kingdom Session 15 1330 - 1700 Room 102BC Panel US DOE WIPP Lessons Learned and Return to Operations Session Co-Chairs Philip Breidenbach Nuclear Waste Partnership LLC Todd Shrader US DOE Lead Organizer Panel Reporter Roger Nelson US DOE Additional Organizers J.R. Stroble US DOE This panel focuses on the WIPP recovery efforts following the equipment fire and airborne radiation release incidents in February 2014 lessons learned ongoing recovery activities and impacts on affected DOE TRU waste complex sites. WIPP recovery officials generator sites and facility regulators will discuss the recovery plans status and plans for resumption of TRU waste operations across the DOE complex. Panelists Sean Dunagan WIPP Recovery Manager Carlsbad Field Office US DOE CBFO Jim Blankenhorn Deputy General Manager Nuclear Waste Partnership - AECOM J.R. Stroble TRU Sites and Transportation Division Manager US DOE Kathryn Roberts Resource Protection Division State of New Mexico Environment Department Thomas Peake Director Center for Waste Management and Regulations US EPA James Malmo Assistant Manager for INL Waste Disposition US DOE Doug Hintze Manager EM Los Alamos Field Office US DOE Session 16 1330 - 1510 Room 103AB Panel Hot Topics in US Commercial LLW Management Session Co-Chairs Todd Lovinger LLW Forum Inc Rusty Lundberg State of Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control Lead Organizer Panel Reporter Todd Lovinger LLW Forum Inc Additional Organizers Rusty Lundberg State of Utah Division of Waste Management and Radiation Control This panel focuses on emerging issues in commercial LLW management in the US from the perspective of representatives of the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Forum. State federal and industry officials will share their views on a variety of timely and significant topics including the proposal to license a disposal cell for NRC classified Greater-Than-Class-C GTCC GTCC-like and Transuranic waste through means other than deep geologic disposal at the Waste Control Specialists facility in Texas an initiative to develop implementation guidance for the Branch Technical Position on Concentration Averaging and Encapsulation status of the proposed rule to amend 10 CFR Part 61 Licensing Requirements for Land Disposal of Radioactive Waste the depleted uranium performance assessment license and permit updates and current waste disposal volumes and types at the Clive facility in Utah and broker and processor perspectives on the management and disposition of disused sources. Panelists Charles Maguire Director Radioactive Materials Division Texas Commission on Environmental Quality Lisa Edwards LLW Radiation Management Sr. Program Manager EPRI Gregory Suber Chief of the Low-Level Waste Branch US NRC Daniel Shrum Senior Vice President Regulatory Affairs EnergySolutions John McCormick Vice President Bionomics Inc. MONDAY PM 57 Session 17 1515 - 1700 Room 106A Selected Key Topics in US Commercial LLW Management Session Co-Chairs Ted Buckner Southeast Compact Commission Colleen Owens ATL Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Colleen Owens ATL Additional Organizers Ted Buckner Southeast Compact Commission The Richard S. Hodes M.D. Honor Award will be presented during this session to Dr. Louis Centofanti President and Chief Executive Officer of Perma-Fix Environmental Services Inc. The awards ceremony is followed by the WM2016 Honors Award Lecture The Evolution of Chemical Waste Treatment in the Nuclear Industry. After the awards ceremony and lecture two additional selected key presentations will follow on LLW management. 1520 The Evolution of Chemical Waste Treatment in the Nuclear Industry - 16694 Lou Centofanti Perma-Fix Environmental Services 1610 Implementation Guide for the Revised Branch Technical Position on Concentration Averaging and Encapsulation - 16021 Michael Snyder EPRI Thomas Kalinowski DW James Consulting LLC 1635 Disposal of Greater than Class C Low-Level Radioactive Waste in Andrews County Texas - 16408 Scott Kirk Waste Control Specialists LLC Session 18 1330 - 1700 Room 102A Development and Use of Gamma and Neutron Waste Characterization Methods Session Co-Chairs Frazier Bronson Canberra Industries Inc Loong Yong Spectra Tech Inc Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Frazier Bronson Canberra Industries Inc Additional Organizers Dale Bignell Portage Inc Heinz Kroeger TV NORD EnSys Hannover Germany Lance Mezga Oak Ridge National Laboratory 1335 Using Greens Functions to Compute 3 Dimensional Neutron Flux Maps - 16016 Sylvain Janski EDF DP2D France 1400 Characterization of Sr-90 Drums at the Hanford 618-10 Burial Ground - 16132 Bruce Gillespie Timothy Southworth Canberra Industries Inc - AREVA Group 1425 WIPP Certification of the Retrieval Box Assay System at the Advanced Mixed Waste Treatment Plant Idaho - 16241 Alan Simpson Jim Seamans Jacob Stirler Keith Gainer Pajarito Scientific Corporation United Kingdom Doug Dinneen Steve Turner Idaho Treatment Group LLC 1450 Development of a Wide Range Segmented Gamma Scanner for Measuring Radioactive Wastes Arising in the Chinese Nuclear Industry - 16261 John Mason Antony Towner Marc Looman Lawrence Odell William Tansey Matt Piotrowski ANTECH Corporation United Kingdom Zhang Wei CNNC China Nuclear Power Engineering CO. LTD. China 1520 An Advanced ISOCS Uncertainty Estimator Tool to Reduce Uncertainties in Waste Characterization Projects - 16311 Patrick Chard Ludovic Bourva Thomas Kirk Canberra UK Ltd - AREVA Group United Kingdom Frazier Bronson Canberra Industries Inc Gabriela Ilie Henrik Jderstrm Wilhelm Mueller Canberra Industries Inc - AREVA Group 1545 Performance of Canberra TruckScan Waste Assay Measurement System - 16361 Frazier Bronson Brian Young Canberra Industries Inc Amol Patil Mark Vicuna Canberra Industries Inc - AREVA Group Atsuo Suzuki Canberra Japan KK Japan 1610 Status of Electronics Upgrades to the LANL Green is Clean Phoswich Detector Systems - 16419 Randy Lucero Pajarito Scientific Corporation Felicia Archuleta Lucas Gallegos Kathleen Gruetzmacher Wynn Christensen Los Alamos National Laboratory Wofgang Hennig XIA LLC MONDAY PM 58 Session 19 1330 - 1510 Room 104AB Panel US DOE EM Risk-Informed Performance Based Decision Making Session Co-Chairs Skip Chamberlain US DOE Leonel Lagos Applied Research Center - FIU Lead Organizer Kurt Gerdes US DOE Additional Organizers Skip Chamberlain US DOE Leonel Lagos Applied Research Center - FIU Hope Lee Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Panel Reporter Christine Wipfli Applied Research Center - FIU This panel will focus on highlighting the progress that has been made on the development of tools relative to closure of complex sites throughout the DOE Complex. Panelists will include both National Laboratory principal investigators and student interns performing related studies at test beds located at Savannah River Site and the Hanford Reservation. The topics to be presented will include chemical physical and biological approaches to in-situ sequestration of contaminants and methods to monitor both performance and long term effectiveness to ensure reduction of risk to human health and the environment. Panelists Carol Eddy-Dilek Scientist Savannah River National Laboratory Hope Lee Senior Scientist Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Tim Johnson Research Scientist Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Miles Denham Fellow Scientist Savannah River National Laboratory Session 20 1515 - 1700 Room 104AB Panel Implementing Technically- Based Cleanup Balancing Regulatory and Fiscal Complexities Session Co-Chairs Kurt Gerdes US DOE Moses Jaraysi CH2M HILL PRC Lead Organizer Panel Reporter Moses Jaraysi CH2M HILL PRC Additional Organizers Kurt Gerdes US DOE This panel focuses on progress and challenges in implementing remediation approaches in the DOE complex that are technically feasible and balance regulatory and fiscal responsibilities. Panelists will include contractors and government perspectives on successes and challenges. Panelists John Price Section Manager Washington State Department of Ecology Dennis Faulk Hanford Program Manager US EPA Session 21 1330 - 1510 Exhibit Hall 4 Panel Interim Storage of Used Nuclear Fuel in the US What are the Options Session Co-Chairs Chris Phillips EnergySolutions Stephen Unwin Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Lead Organizer Tom Brouns Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Additional Organizers Chris Phillips EnergySolutions Stephen Unwin Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Panel Reporter Tom Brouns Pacific Northwest National Laboratory This panel will focus on the plans requirements and status of efforts to establish one or more consolidated interim dry stores for used nuclear fuel UNF in the US. Discussion will include facilities required at a consolidated store for receiving UNF transport of the fuel to the facility siting and licensing lessons learned from previous private storage initiatives and the status and plans of two proposed private consolidated store facilities in the US. Panelists Andrew Griffith Acting Associate DAS for Fuel Cycle Technologies US DOE Scott Moore Acting Director Office of Nuclear Materials Safety Safeguards US NRC Lisa Williams Licensing Supervisor Energy Northwest John Donnell Vice President Project Engineering Services AECOM Stefan Anton Vice President of Engineering Holtec International Scott Kirk Vice President Licensing and Regulatory Affairs Waste Control Specialists LLC MONDAY PM 59 Session 22 1515 - 1700 Exhibit Hall 4 Panel US DOE - Excess Facilities DD Implementation Plans Session Co-Chairs Cathy Hickey CH2M HILL Inc. Andrew Szilagyi US DOE Lead Organizer Cathy Hickey CH2M HILL Inc. Additional Organizers Shannon Farrell CH2M HILL Inc. Tania Smith US DOE - NNSA Andrew Szilagyi US DOE Panel Reporter Shannon Farrell CH2M HILL Inc. This panel session focuses on the US DOE Office of Environmental Managements actions taken in response to the January 2015 Inspector Generals Audit Report on the Department of Energys Management of High Risk Facilities. DOE EM in collaboration with the National Nuclear Security Administration NNSA the Office of Science OS and Office of Nuclear Energy NE initiated a joint working group to aid in the risk prioritization life cycle cost analysis and improved disposition planning of excess facilities across the US DOE complex. WM attendees interested in DOE plans to implement this strategy are encouraged to attend this panel session. Panelists Jeff Smith Deputy Director for Operations Oak Ridge National Laboratory Deborah Couchman-Griswold Deputy Director NNSA US DOE Andrew Szilagyi Director Office of DDFacility Engineering US DOE Session 23 1330 - 1510 Room 106A Experience in Salt Waste Processing Worldwide Examples Session Co-Chairs Harold Adkins Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Steven Thomson National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Lead Organizer Robert Jubin Oak Ridge National Laboratory Additional Organizers Paul Bredt Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Steven Thomson National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Paper Reviewer Paul Bredt Pacific Northwest National Laboratory 1335 Developing Waste-Driven Design Requirements for Filtration and Ion- Exchange at the Hanford LAWPS Facility - 16394 Jacob Reynolds Cliff Winkler Washington River Protection Solutions Benjamin Tardiff AEM Consulting LLC 1400 Filtration Improvements in Support of Increased Salt Waste Processing Throughput at the Savannah River Site - 16173 Jay McCrary Azadeh Azi Samadi Mark Keefer John Neuville Jeffrey Bentley Savannah River Remediation 1425 Common Issues in Projects Separated Only by an Ocean - 16050 Graham Jonsson NDA United Kingdom 1450 Mercury Speciation in Savannah River Site High-Level Waste Determination and Implications for Waste Handling and Disposal - 16178 Bill Wilmarth Christopher Bannochie Charles Crawford Marissa Reigel Thomas P Peters Savannah River National Laboratory Patrick Garcia-Strickland Eurofins Frontier Global Sciences Hasmukh Shah Savannah River Remediation Session 24 1515 - 1700 Room 103AB PanelPapers Getting a Handle on DD Costs - a Global Perspective Session Co-Chairs Jorge Borque ENRESA Spain Jas Devgun Consultant Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Jas Devgun Consultant Additional Organizers Al Freitag Consultant Thomas LaGuardia LaGuardia Associates LLC Panel Reporter Michelle Claggett Project Enhancement Corporation This panel focuses on decommissioning costs as they are difficult to assess without significant uncertainty. Data comparisons from completed decommissioning projects from those that are in progress and those that are being planned have shown steep escalation in project costs. This panel will focus on the cost control issues methodologies and experience in national and international projects. Specifically the panel discussion will include improving cost estimation models reasons for cost escalation and strategies for reining in the overall decommissioning costs. MONDAY PM 60 Panelists Joseph Boucau Manager Westinghouse Electric Company Belgium Simon Carroll Analyst Swedish Radiation Safety Authority SSM Sweden Jeff Hays Vice President Commercial Decommissioning AREVA Decommissioning Cost Estimate Uncertainty What is It How Do You Deal with It - 16527 Thomas LaGuardia LaGuardia Associates LLC Session 25 1330 - 1700 Room 106B Application of Innovative DD Technologies Part 1 of 2 Global Experience Session Co-Chairs Rick Demmer Idaho National Laboratory Robert Vellinger TerranearPMC LLC Lead Organizer Rick Demmer Idaho National Laboratory Additional Organizers Rateb Boby Abu Eid US NRC Julia Tripp Idaho National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Con Lyras ANSTO Australia 1335 Accelerating the Decommissioning of the Sellafield Pile Fuel Storage Pond Using Innovative Remote Tooling - 16437 Shannon Callahan James Fisher Technologies Ltd James Cruickshank Mark Donnelly James Fisher Nuclear Ltd United Kingdom David Birks Thomas Lacey Sellafield Ltd United Kingdom 1400 The Pursuit of Incombustible Fixatives Mitigating Release of Contaminants in Fire Conditions - 16393 Peggy Shoffner Leonel Lagos Joseph Sinicrope Applied Research Center - FIU 1425 Size Reduction of Contaminated Magnox Pond Skips Using Laser Cutting - 16192 Ali Khan Jon Blackburn TWI Ltd United Kingdom Terry Woodcock Herbert Cruickshank Magnox Ltd United Kingdom 1450 Friction Stir Cutting for Decommissioning - 16130 Kathryn Beamish Chris Punshon TWI Ltd United Kingdom 1520 Diamond-Based Radiation Detectors for Very High Dose Rate Environments - 16207 Chris Hutton Liam Payne Thomas Scott University of Bristol United Kingdom Alex Jenkins Sellafield Ltd United Kingdom 1545 Decommissioning Experience at Rokkasho Standing Type Manipulator A1000S for Dismantling Tasks - 16434 Hubert Hafen Claudia Reich Jean-Michel Wagner Wlischmiller Engineering GmbH Germany 1610 Characterization and Clearance of ms SIGYN - 16412 Jonatan Jiselmark Studsvik Consulting Sweden Patrick Vreede Studsvik ALARA Engineering Sweden 1635 Designing Decommissioning Equipment Fit for Purpose Chute Silo ILW Project Berkeley - 16649 Chris Thomson Aquila Nuclear Engineering United Kingdom Session 26 1330 - 1700 Room 105C Development of Novel Waste Forms and Processes for Transuranic and High-Level Wastes Session Co-Chairs Sharon Marra Savannah River National Laboratory John Vienna Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Lead Organizer Sharon Marra Savannah River National Laboratory Additional Organizers Andrew Fellinger Savannah River National Laboratory Mark Shepard Los Alamos National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Harry Babad Author Consultant 1335 Technology Development in Support of Accelerating the Waste Treatment Mission - 16409 Albert Kruger Rodrigo Rimando US DOE 1400 Analysis of Legacy 85Kr Waste Form Samples - 16319 Robert Jubin Stephanie Bruffey Oak Ridge National Laboratory 1425 Processing and Disposition of Remote- Handled Transuranic Liquid Waste Generated at Oak Ridge National Laboratory - 16031 Sharon Robinson Robert Jubin Lee McGetrick Bradley Patton Paul Taylor Oak Ridge National Laboratory 1450 The Countermeasure for the Noble Metal in the HLW Vitrification - the Behavior of the Needle Shape Ruthenium Particle - 16107 Kunihiko Nakano Shunichiro Ueno Hiromichi Maekawa IHI Corporation Japan Takayuki Nagai Yasuo Ayame Japan Atomic Energy Agency Japan MONDAY PM 61 1520 Development of High Alumina Glass Property Data for Hanford High-Level Waste Glass Models - 16231 John Vienna Michael Schweiger Charles Bonham Jesse Lang Benjamin McCarthy Yeong-Shyung Chou Scott Cooley Jodi Mayer Vivianaluxa Gervasio Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Albert Kruger US DOE 1545 Development of Treatment Process for Radioactive Wastewater Generated from Molybdenum-99 Study - 16415 Chang-Liang Hu Hsiao Hsien-Ming Institute of Nuclear Energy Research Taiwan 1610 Results of Sodium and NaK Reaction Demonstrations in an Argon Repackaging Station - 16148 Kenneth Krivanek Krivanek Engineering Jacob Arvizu CH2M-WG Idaho LLC 1635 The Effect of Quartz Particle Size and Melt Viscosity on HLW Melter Feed Using Pellet Test response - 16226 SeungMin Lee Zachary Hilliard Pavel Hrma Michael Schweiger Jayven Heilman-Moore Charles Bonham Derek Dixon Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Albert Kruger US DOE Session 27 1330 - 1700 Room 101C ER Post Closure Challenges and Long Term StewardshipLegacy Management Session Co-Chairs Mark Kautsky US DOE Joy Shoemake Mission Support Alliance Lead Organizer Dale Bignell Portage Inc Additional Organizers Mark Kautsky US DOE Joy Shoemake Mission Support Alliance Robert Vellinger TerranearPMC LLC Paper Reviewer Mark Kautsky US DOE 1335 Design and Construction of the Paddys Run Streambank Stabilization Project at the Fernald Preserve Harrison Ohio - 16165 William Hertel John Homer Navarro Research and Engineering Inc. Gwen Hooten US DOE 1400 Efforts to Improve Efficiency of Extraction Well Operation at the Fernald Preserve Harrison Ohio - 16177 Cathy Glassmeyer Ken Broberg William Hertel Navarro Research and Engineering Inc. Gwen Hooten US DOE 1425 Lessons Learned Concerning the Onsite Disposal Facility at the Fernald Preserve Harrison Ohio - 16176 Ken Broberg William Hertel Cathy Glassmeyer Navarro Research and Engineering Inc. Gwen Hooten US DOE 1450 Lessons Learned from FUSRAP - 16200 Michele Miller Navarro Research and Engineering Inc. Darina Castillo Cliff Carpenter US DOE 1520 Long-Term Stewardship and Streamlined CERCLA Five-Year Review at Hanford - 16403 Rick Moren Mission Support Alliance 1545 Transfer and Transition Interagency Coordination for Managing Public Lands at UMTRCA Title II Sites in Wyoming - 16614 David Shafer Tim Vanek Tracy Ribeiro April Gil US DOE Cheri Bahrke S.M. Stoller Corporation 1610 Groundwater Remediation in a Floodplain Aquifer at Shiprock New Mexico - 16097 Dave M. Peterson David Miller David Dander Navarro Research and Engineering Inc. Joni Nofchissey Navajo AML Reclamation Mark Kautsky US DOE 1635 Environmental Restoration of Diesel-Range Organics from Project Chariot Cape Thompson Alaska - 16147 Rick Hutton SN3 Judy Miller Navarro Research and Engineering Inc. Mark Kautsky US DOE Session 28 1330 - 1700 Room 106C Innovations and Performance Solutions in Workplace Management Session Co-Chairs Andrew Fellinger Savannah River National Laboratory Laurie Ford Critical Path Management Lead Organizer W.T. Goldston EnergySolutions Additional Organizers Andrew Fellinger Savannah River National Laboratory Laurie Ford Critical Path Management Paper Reviewer Laurie Ford Critical Path Management 1335 Improving Workplace Management and Performance A Lost Art - 16004 Peter Booth Hylton Environmental United Kingdom 1400 Upgrade Your Work Plans for Better Performance - 16103 Laurie Ford Critical Path Management 1425 High Performance Teams Enable Mission Success for SRNL - 16363 Jeannette Hyatt Connie Herman Rudy Goetzman Savannah River National Laboratory MONDAY PM 62 1450 Healthier Workers Improve Safety Productivity and Absenteeism Rates - 16196 Katie Hughes UCORStrataG Felicia Phillips UCOR Kristie Cziep UCOREdgewater 1520 Development of a Workforce for the Nuclear Industry - 16513 Leonel Lagos Ravi Krishna Prasanth Gudavalli Applied Research Center - FIU 1545 Improving the Safety Culture by Strengthening Leadership Skills - 16563 Vicki Bogenberger Peter Diaz CH2M HILL PRC 1610 Employee Transition Plan at the Plutonium Finishing Plant - 16570 Connie Simiele CH2M HILL PRC Session 29 1330 - 1700 Room 101B Developments in Deep Borehole Disposal around the World Session Co-Chairs Leif G Eriksson Nuclear Waste Dispositions Bertil Grundfelt Kemakta Konsult AB Sweden Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Leif G Eriksson Nuclear Waste Dispositions Additional Organizers Geoff Freeze Sandia National Laboratories Timothy Gunter US DOE Stefan Mayer IAEA Austria 1335 Deep Borehole Disposal Options Issues and Challenges - 16250 Fergus Gibb University of Sheffield United Kingdom 1400 Hydrogeologic Lessons Learned from Deep Drilling Projects Applied to Deep Borehole Disposal of Radioactive Wastes - 16133 Margaret Butzen University of Wisconsin Madison Bret Leslie US Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board 1425 Cleaning-Up Hanford A Deep Borehole Disposal Concept for the CsSr Capsules - 16249 Karl Travis Fergus Gibb University of Sheffield United Kingdom 1450 Integrated Systems Analysis for a Regional Deep Borehole Repository for Commercial Spent Nuclear Fuel - 16291 Robert Geringer University of Illinois Casey Trail William Nutt Argonne National Laboratory 1520 Safety Case Considerations for Deep Borehole Disposal of CsSr Capsules - 16294 Geoff Freeze Patrick Brady Ernest Hardin Robert MacKinnon David Sevougian Emily Stein Teklu Hadgu Sandia National Laboratories 1545 Deep Borehole Disposal Waste Emplacement Mode Cost-Risk Study - 16346 Ernest Hardin Andrew Clark John Cochran John Finger David Sevougian Jiann Su Sandia National Laboratories Karen Jenni Insight Decisions LLC 1610 Development of a Universal Canister for Disposal of High-Level Waste in Deep Boreholes - 16482 Laura Price Sandia National Laboratories Steven Gomberg US DOE 1635 Views on Long-Term Safety of Deep Borehole Disposal - 16657 Bertil Grundfelt Lars Birgersson Kemakta Konsult AB Sweden Erik Setzman SKB Sweden Session 30 1330 - 1700 1st Floor Foyer HLWSNFUNF Long-Lived AlphaTRU - Topic A Posters Reprocessing Waste Management Strategy Session Co-Chairs Paul Bredt Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Robert Jubin Oak Ridge National Laboratory Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Robert Jubin Oak Ridge National Laboratory A1. Nuclear Waste Facility Siting 40 Years of Experience - 16521 James Voss Predicus LLC Gerald Nagtzaam Monash University Australia Andrew Newman Nuclear Threat Initiative A2. Prioritizing and Managing Technology Needs to Meet River Protection Project Mission Objectives - 16462 Mike Thien Theodore Ted Wooley Washington River Protection Solutions Amy Ramsey AEM Consulting LLC MONDAY PM 63 Topic B Posters Spent Fuel Management Session Co-Chairs John Gregory AREVA Federal Services LLC Tom Michener Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Lead Organizer Robert Jubin Oak Ridge National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Tom Brouns Pacific Northwest National Laboratory B1. The Recommendation of Public Engagement Commission on Spent Nuclear Fuel in Korea - 16074 Sungil Kim Byungsoo Lee Hojin Lee Korea Institute of Nuclear Safety South Korea B2. Development of the Licensing Procedure and Regulatory Framework for the Spent Fuel Storage Facility in Korea - 16423 Daesik Yook Ho Jin Lee Dongmyung Lee Korea Institute of Nuclear Safety South Korea B3. Thermo-Hydro-Geochemical Evolution Influences on the Concrete Cask in Long- Term Storage Facility of Spent Fuel - 16171 Wen-Sheng Lin Chen-Wuing Liu National Taiwan University Taiwan Ming-Hsu Li National Central University Republic of China B4. Comparisons of Peak Cladding Temperature and Effective Thermal Conductivity CFD Simulation on PWR Spent Fuel Assemblies - 16278 Hyungjin Kim Gyeong-Uk Kang Chun-Hyung Cho Korea Radioactive Waste Agency South Korea B5. Gas Retention and Release from Nuclear Legacy Waste - 16449 Michael Johnson Timothy Hunter Jeff Peakall Michael Fairweather David Harbottle University of Leeds United Kingdom Simon Biggs University of Queensland Australia Topic C Posters Tank Waste Session Co-Chairs Elizabeth Hoffman Savannah River National Laboratory Terry Sams Washington River Protection Solutions Lead Organizer Robert Jubin Oak Ridge National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Harry Babad Author Consultant C1. Sonar Testing Imaging and Visualization for Rapid Scan Applications in High-Level Waste Tanks - 16386 David Roelant Hadi Fekrmandi Gene Yllanes Applied Research Center - FIU C2. Improving the Accuracy of Computational Fluid Dynamics Simulations of Nuclear Waste Mixing using Direct Numerical Simulations - 16260 Maximiliano Edrei Dwayne McDaniel Applied Research Center - FIU Ahmadreza Abbasi Baharanchi Seckin Gokaltun Florida International University C3. Noxious Vapor Incidents in Hanford Tank Farms - 16481 Stephen Agnew Columbia Energy Environmental James Poppiti US DOE Topic D Posters Facility Structural Integrity All Posters Merged into Other Sessions Topic E Posters Waste Treatment Processes Session Co-Chairs Aruna Arakali AECOM Robert Jubin Oak Ridge National Laboratory Lead Organizer Robert Jubin Oak Ridge National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Aruna Arakali AECOM E1. Testing of New Technetium Selective Media TcTreat - 16497 Risto Harjula Ilkka Vlimaa Benjamin Salo Risto Koivula University of Helsinki Finland Esko Tusa Pasi Kelokaski Fortum Power and Heat Oy Finland E2. Spent Fuel Reprocessing Development and Usage of Fishing Products as Starting Precursor for Ceramic Waste-Forms - 16498 Yury Pokhitonov V.G. Khlopin Radium Institute Russian Federation Topic F Posters Stabilization and Immobilization Session Co-Chairs Aruna Arakali AECOM Sharon Marra Savannah River National Laboratory Lead Organizer Robert Jubin Oak Ridge National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Harry Babad Author Consultant F1. Effect of Feed Composition on Cold-Cap Formation in Laboratory-Scale Melter - 16336 Derek Dixon Michael Schweiger SeungMin Lee Jayven Heilman-Moore Pavel Hrma Pacific Northwest National Laboratory MONDAY PM 64 F2. The Countermeasure for the Noble Metal in the HLW Vitrification - the Removal Technology of Ru Rh and Pd from the System - 16118 Shunichiro Ueno Kunihiko Nakano Hiromichi Maekawa IHI Corporation Japan Takayuki Nagai Yasuo Ayame Japan Atomic Energy Agency Japan F3. Comparison of High Level Waste Glass Feeds Containing Frit and Glass Forming Chemicals - 16154 Bradley VanderVeer Michael Schweiger David Peeler Pavel Hrma Zachary Hilliard Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Topic G Posters Disposal Lead Organizer Robert Jubin Oak Ridge National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Roger Nelson US DOE G1. Interaction of Cesium and Barium Ions with Calcium Silicate Hydrate under a Geological Temperature Condition - 16239 Taiji Chida Yuta Saito Yuichi Niibori Tohoku University Japan G2. Alteration Behavior of Granite Minerals Forming Calcium Silicate Hydrate under a Ca-Rich Highly Akaline Condition - 16160 Hiten Fujita Taiji Chida Yuichi Niibori Ryo Tashiro Tohoku University Japan G3. Deposition Behavior of Supersaturated Silicic Acid on Ca-type Bentonite in Geological Disposal System - 16033 Tsuyoshi Sasagawa Taiji Chida Yuichi Niibori Tohoku University Japan G4. A New Manufacturing Method of Bentonite Pellets as a Gap Filling Material for HLW Repository - 16110 Hitoshi Nakashima Shimizu Corporation Japan Hidekazu Asano Radioactive Waste Management Funding and Research Center Japan G5. Influence of Closure Welding on the Reliability of Geological Disposal Canisters for Spent Nuclear Fuel and High Level Waste - 16136 Chris Punshon TWI Ltd United Kingdom G6. Directional Drilling Technology for HLW Disposal - Outline of the System and its Application- 16078 Kenzo Kiho Kimio Miyakawa Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry Japan Kazunori Hase Sumiko Resources Exploration Development Japan G7. Directional Drilling Technology for HLW Disposal - Long Term Monitoring in the Borehole - 16079 Akira Shidai Kenzo Kiho Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry Japan Manabu Murata Tokyo Electric Power Company Japan G8. Impact of Corrections to the Spallings Volume Calculation on Waste Isolation Pilot Plant Performance Assessment - 16135 Courtney Herrick Todd Zeitler Sandia National Laboratories Dwayne Kicker Stoller Newport News Nuclear G9. Reevaluation of ActinideIV-Humic Complexation in the WIPP Performance Assessment - 16547 Paul Mariner Sandia National Laboratories Session 31 1330 - 1700 Exhibit Hall 4 Student Posters The Next Generation - Industry Leaders of Tomorrow Session Co-Chairs Robert Berry Foxfire Scientific Inc United Kingdom Leonel Lagos Applied Research Center - FIU Lead Organizer Leonel Lagos Applied Research Center - FIU Paper Reviewer Robert Berry Foxfire Scientific Inc United Kingdom S1. The High Level Waste Vitrification Test Rig and Predictive Modelling - 16695 Hannah Paterson nucleargraduates United Kingdom S2. Electron Beam Processing of Flue Gases - 16696 Archita Rajkumari Amity university Uttar Pradesh India S3. Thermal Impact in the Geometrical Settings in Deep Geological Repositories for HLW with Retrievability - 16086 Rocio Leon Vargas Joachim Stahlmann TU Braunschweig-Inst. for Soil Mechanics and Foundation Engineering Germany S4. Ensuring Nuclear Waste Glass Longevity How Studying Ancient Glasses can Help Predict the Durability of Nuclear Waste Glass - 16100 Jamie Weaver Nathalie Wall John McCloy Washington State University Rolf Sjblom Lule University of Technology Sweden David Peeler Michael Schweiger Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Albert Kruger US DOE MONDAY PM 65 S5. Strategic Planning as Competitive Differential Using BSC A Case Study in CTRIPEN - USP Brazil - 16400 Imario Vieira IPEN - Instituto de Pesquisas Energtica e Nucleares Brazil Fernando Codelo do Nascimento Faculdade SENAI de Tecnologia Ambiental Brazil Wilson Aparecido Parejo Calvo USP - IPEN Brazil S6. Green Sustainable Remediation Analysis of a Packed Tower Air Stripper Used to Remediate Groundwater Contaminated with CVOCs - 16511 Yoel Rotterman US DOE David Roelant Applied Research Center - FIU Ralph Nichols Savannah River National Laboratory S7. Synthesis of Bismuth Functionalized Grapheme Oxide for Radioactive Iodine Gas Removal - 16114 Sangsoo Han Pohang Universtiy of Science and Technology South Korea Wooyong Um Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Won-Seok Kim Pohang University of Science and Technology South Korea S8. Crystallization Behavior of Nepheline Na2OAl2O32SiO2 Based Glasses Designed in Na2O CaO Al2O3 SiO2 System - 16271 Ambar Deshkar Ashutosh Goel Rutgers University Scott Southern Libor Kobera David Bryce University of Ottawa Canada John McCloy Jose Marcial Washington State University S9. Radiochemical Method for Characterization of the Filter Cartridges from the IEA-R1 Reactor- 16324 Bianca Geraldo Nuclear and Energy Research Institute - IPENCNEN-SP Brazil Marcos Goes Maciel Instituto de Pesquisas Energticas e Nucleares - IPEN-CNENSP Brazil Roberto Vicente Jlio Takehiro Marumo Robson de Jesus Ferreira Marcelo Francis Mduar Nuclear and Energy Research Institute Brazil S10. In-situ Analysis of Legacy Pond Sludge using Raman Spectroscopy - 16296 Kate Wyness University of Bristol United Kingdom S11. Effect of B on Crystallization of Li and Na Aluminosilicates - 16323 Jose Marcial Joey Kabel Muad Saleh John McCloy Washington State University Ashutosh Goel Yaqoot Shahrayar Rutgers University S12. Modelling the Interaction of Corroded Magnox Surfaces with Nuclear Fission Products - 16464 Eszter Makkos Nikolas Kaltsoyannis University College London United Kingdom Andrew Kerridge Lancaster University United Kingdom Jonathan Austin National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom S13. Synthesis and Characterisation of Calcium Uranate Particles via an Aqueous Route - 16533 Wei Ding Bruce Hanson Ian T. Burke University of Leeds United Kingdom S14. Sludge Hygienization Research Irradiator - 16593 Indranil Bisuri Amity Institute of Nuclear Science and Technology India S15. Study of an Unrefined Humate Solution as a Possible Remediation Method for Groundwater Contamination at SRS - 16660 Hansell Gonzalez Raymat Yelena Katsenovich Leonel Lagos Applied Research Center - FIU S16. Ammonia Gas Injection for Remediation of Uranium Contamination - 16661 Silvina Di Pietro Applied Research Center - FIU S17. Kinetic and Mechanistic Studies of UVI Bearing Groundwater Treated with Sodium Silicate at the Savannah River Site - 16662 Alejandro Hernandez Applied Research Center - FIU S18. Application of Geospatial Tools to Support Development of a Hydrological Model of the Tims Branch Watershed Aiken SC - 16663 Awmna Rana Angelique Lawrence Mehrnoosh Mahmoudi Shimelis Setegn Applied Research Center - FIU S19. Stainless Steel Corrosion Feed Properties Affecting Material Selection for LAWPS Piping at Hanford Site - 16664 John Conley Applied Research Center - FIU S20. Radial Jet Impingement Correlation Investigation - 16665 Maximiliano Edrei Applied Research Center - FIU S21. Innovative Process for Abatement of Mercury - 16667 Janesler Gonzalez Applied Research Center - FIU S22. Topographic Analysis of Time Series Data to Support the Hydrology Model of the Tims Branch Watershed Aiken SC - 16668 Christopher Strand Mehrnoosh Mahmoudi Angelique Lawrence Shimelis Setegn Applied Research Center - FIU S23. Nonmetallic Materials Testing for Hanfords HLW Transfer System - 16670 Anthony Fernandez Amer Awwad Dwayne McDaniel John Conley Applied Research Center - FIU S24. Development of a DAQ Unit for UT Sensing Designed for the Integrity Analysis of Hanford Transfer Components - 16671 Brian Castillo Applied Research Center - FIU MONDAY PM 66 S25. ModificationsEnhancements to the Robotic Pipe Inspection Tool Utilized for the DOE High Level Waste Project at Hanford Site - 16672 Erim Gokce Applied Research Center - FIU S26. Rapid Imaging of Solids in High Level Waste Tanks at Hanford - 16673 Gene Yllanes Applied Research Center - FIU S27. A Study of Sodium Silicate Treatment for the UVI-Impacted Acidic Groundwater at Savannah River Sites FH Areas - 16674 Christine Wipfli Applied Research Center - FIU S28. Heat Transfer Calculations for the Use of an Infrared Temperature Sensor - 16675 Meilyn Planas Applied Research Center - FIU Terry Sams Washington River Protection Solutions S29. The Characterization of Uranium Phases Produced by the NH3 Injection Remediation Method under Hanford 200 Area Conditions - 16676 Robert Lapierre Applied Research Center - FIU S30. Fixatives Decision Model on KM-IT Platform - 16677 Jorge Deshon Himanshu Upadhyay Applied Research Center - FIU S31. The Expanding Nuclear Niche and Growing Requirement for Standardized Testing Protocols and Performance Metrics for DD Tech. - 16678 Jesse Viera Applied Research Center - FIU S32. Development of a Miniature Motorized Inspection Tool for the Hanford DOE Site Tank Bottoms - 16679 Ryan Sheffield Hadi Fekrmandi Dwayne McDaniel Applied Research Center - FIU S33. A Model to Simulate Flow in Tims Branch Savannah River Site SC - 16680 Natalia Duque Mehrnoosh Mahmoudi Angelique Lawrence Shimelis Setegn Applied Research Center - FIU S34. Investigation of the Concentration and Distribution of C14 in Magnox Nuclear Graphite - 16683 Liam Payne University of Bristol United Kingdom S35. Optimizing the Allocation Strategy for Used Nuclear Fuel - 16684 Gordon Petersen University of Tennessee S36. Imaging Spent Nuclear Fuel using Cosmic Ray Muons - 16685 Stylianos Chatzidakis Chan Choi Lefteri Tsoukalas Purdue University S37. Solid Formations Within Effluent Discharge Pipelines in a Nuclear Treatment Plant - 16686 Robert Jones University of Manchester United Kingdom S38. Towards a Resilient Dry Storage Cask System for Earthquakes - 16690 Ahmed Maree University of Nevada Reno S39. Quantification of the Enthalpy of UVI Complexation to Graphene Oxide Using Microcalorimetry - 16688 Yu Xie Brian Powell Clemson University MARCH 8 TUESDAY AM Session 32 0830 - 1010 Room 102BC Panel US DOE Featured Site DOE-Oak Ridge Tennessee - Partnering for Success - Part 1 of 4 Session Co-Chairs Susan Cange US DOE Betsy Child Restoration Services Inc. Lead Organizer Jenny Freeman Strata-G Additional Organizers Susan Cange US DOE Betsy Child Restoration Services Inc. Panel Reporter Ray Parrish Restoration Services Inc. The theme of Oak Ridge Day is Purpose. Progress. Partnership. This session will explore the diverse partnerships that DOEs Oak Ridge Environmental Management program OREM has established to ensure the success of its program. These partnerships include community stakeholders the prime contractor labor unions and regulators. Each partner in the Oak Ridge Partnership requires a different pathway of communication but ultimately all the partners must work together with OREM to move forward with one voice. What tools work to accomplish this goal How do OREM and each partner develop trust Whats on the horizon for developing even stronger relationships for the success of OREMs programs Panelists Jenny Freeman Visualization Manager Strata-G Kenneth Rueter President URS CH2M Oak Ridge LLC Michael Thompson President Atomic Trades Labor Council Shari Meghreblian Deputy Commissioner TN Department of Environment Conservation David Hemelright Secretary Oak Ridge Site Specific Advisory Board MONDAY PM TUESDAY AM 67 Session 33 1015 - 1200 Room 102BC Panel US DOE Featured Site DOE-Oak Ridge Tennessee - Responding to Current Challenges - Part 2 of 4 Session Co-Chairs Susan Cange US DOE Betsy Child Restoration Services Inc. Lead Organizer Jenny Freeman Strata-G Additional Organizers Susan Cange US DOE Cathy Hickey CH2M HILL Inc. Panel Reporter Ray Parrish Restoration Services Inc. Like all DOE sites the Oak Ridge Environmental Management program OREM faces challenges. Some challenges occur because of circumstances elsewhere in the DOE Complex others stem from issues on the Oak Ridge Reservation. OREMs responses involve complex technical evaluations communication with its partners and a clear vision of the progress to which we are committed. What current challenges does OREM face What solutions are OREM and its partners developing Looking at the tough decisions that are made every day this session will explore how OREM makes progress in the face of its challenges. There will be ample time for discussion. Panelists Laura Wilkerson-Ortiz Acting Director Planning and Execution Division US DOE Oak Ridge Office of EM Frederick Heacker Waste Operations and Program Manager TWCPOak Ridge National Laboratory Alan Stokes Associate Director Planning and Execution Division US DOE Oak Ridge Office of EM Ken Harrawood Senior Director Consolidated Nuclear Security Y-12 Lance Mezga Program Manager Oak Ridge National Laboratory William McMillan Project Manager US DOE Michelle McNutt Nuclear and High Hazard Operations Manager URS CH2M Oak Ridge Session 34 1015 - 1200 Exhibit Hall 4 Panel UK NDA US DOE Perspective on Contracting Approaches Session Co-Chairs Graham Jonsson NDA United Kingdom Michael Rosenfeld UKTI Lead Organizer Graham Jonsson NDA United Kingdom Additional Organizers Angie Jones Amec Foster Wheeler John Mathieson NDA United Kingdom Panel Reporter Angie Jones Amec Foster Wheeler This panel session will compare contracting methods models of the UK NDA and the US DOE. Each organization spends between 5bn and 6bn a year on their respective missions which are similar in many respects and recognizes the importance of engagement with the supply chain. The audience will gain an understanding of what has worked well and what challenges have had to be overcome to meet the respective critical clean-up milestones. In addition many companies either work in or are considering working in both markets and the panel will address the lessons learned on this and how to make this a success. Panelists Peter Lutwyche Sellafield Programme Director Nuclear Decommissioning Authority United Kingdom Jack Surash EM DAS for Acquisition and Project Management US DOE EM Dyan Foss Global Managing Director Nuclear Sector CH2M HILL Inc. Julianne Antrobus Strategy Director Atkins United Kingdom Greg Meyer Senior Vice President Environmental Nuclear Fluor Corporation Session 35 0830 - 1010 Room 105AB Panel DOE Hanford - Direct Feed Low Activity Waste DFLAW Update - Part 1 of 4 Session Co-Chairs Mark Lindholm Washington River Protection Solutions Kevin Smith US DOE Lead Organizer Panel Reporter Karthik Subramanian Washington River Protection Solutions Additional Organizers Briant Charboneau US DOE - ORP TUESDAY AM 68 This panel session focuses on the approach of direct feeding the low-activity DFLAW waste from Hanfords double-shell tanks to the Waste Treatment Plant WTP Low-Activity Waste Vitrification facility. This approach is the quickest means of beginning to treat and dispose of tank waste and provides many benefits to the overall River Protection Project mission. The One System organization was established to perform integration functions between DOE-ORP DOE-RL Tank Operations Contractor TOC Waste Immobilization and Treatment Plant and other Hanford Site contractors to successfully and efficiently commence the Hanford tank waste treatment and disposition mission. WM attendees interested in the innovative DFLAW approach status and direction of RPP Mission and effective One System management should attend this panel. Panelists Briant Charboneau Federal Project Director US DOE - ORP Thomas Fletcher Tank Farms Project Manager US DOE William Hamel WTP Assistant Manager US DOE Margaret McCullough Project Director Bechtel National Inc. William Condon One System Manager Washington River Protection Solutions Session 36 1015 - 1200 Room 106C DOE Hanford - Direct Feed Low Activity Waste DFLAW Overview - Papers - Part 2 of 4 Session Co-Chairs Briant Charboneau US DOE - ORP Martin Wheeler Washington River Protection Solutions Lead Organizer Karthik Subramanian Washington River Protection Solutions Additional Organizers Paper Reviewer Martin Wheeler Washington River Protection Solutions 1020 One System Overview - 16579 William Condon Washington River Protection Solutions Michael Hughes Bechtel National Inc. Wendell Wrzesinski US DOE Briant Charboneau US DOE - ORP 1045 Direct Feed Low-Activity Waste DFLAW Program Development Progression and Risk Management - 16476 Martin Wheeler Washington River Protection Solutions Tom Wintczak Bechtel National Inc. Wendell Wrzesinski US DOE 1110 Direct Feed Low Activity Waste Program Integration - 16638 Jack Donnelly WRPS ESHQ One System Wendell Wrzesinski US DOE Janice Harmon WTP Richard Garrett Waste Treatment Plant - One System 1135 Direct Feed Low Activity Waste Integrated Permitting - 16642 Jack Donnelly WRPS ESHQ One System Lori Huffman Mary Burandt US DOE Roger Landon WTP Tom Beam Washington River Protection Solutions LLC Session 37 0830 - 1010 Room 106C Worldwode Regulatory and Oversight for Radioactive Waste Management and Disposal Session Co-Chairs Ray Clark US EPA Ann McCall UK NDA United Kingdom Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Ray Clark US EPA 0835 The UK National Policy Programme for the Management of Spent Fuel and Radioactive Waste - 16574 Rob Middleton UK Department of Energy and Climate Change United Kingdom Rene McTaggart Department of Energy and Climate Change United Kingdom 0900 Development and Delivery of National Strategic Approaches to Radioactive Waste Management in the UK - 16595 Juliet Long Environment Agency United Kingdom James McKinney NDA United Kingdom William Turner Office for Nuclear Regulation United Kingdom Jim Cochrane Scottish Environment Protection Agency United Kingdom 0925 Regulation of the Shutdown Defueling and Decommissioning Reactors in the United Kingdom - 16576 Mina Golshan Peter Rothwell Peter Hayes John Jacobs Office for Nuclear Regulation United Kingdom 0950 Collaborative Working Using the G6 at Sellafield - 16387 Victoria Winspear -Roberts Office for Nuclear Regulation United Kingdom Graham Jonsson NDA United Kingdom Phil Hallington Sellafield Ltd United Kingdom TUESDAY AM 69 Session 38 1015 - 1200 Room 105AB Panel Emerging Issues that Challenge Contractors at Federal Sites Worldwide Session Co-Chairs John Longenecker Longenecker Associates Bill Shingler Fluor Corporation Lead Organizer Judith Connell Fluor Corporation Additional Organizers John Longenecker Longenecker Associates Bill Shingler Fluor Corporation Panel Reporter Jeannette Hyatt Savannah River National Laboratory This panel features senior executives from national and international venues who will discuss how industry consolidations evolving risk-reward scenarios and regulations changing leadership within contracting agencies and contractors the complexities of teaming arrangements and client partnership programs are affecting their corporate business strategy as well as their ability to safely meet mission priorities on schedule and within budget. Panelists will open their session by briefly sharing how these trends are impacting their respective organization and the industry. The short individual presentations will be followed by an interactive discussion of specific issues within the broad topic areas. Panelists James Taylor Executive Vice President AECOM Bob Cochran CEO CTG LLC Kenneth Camplin Vice President Chief Business Development Officer BWX Technologies Inc. Michael Graham General Manager Bechtel National Inc. Carol Johnson CEO Savannah River Nuclear Solutions William Johnson President Mission Support Alliance Colin Jones Vice President Key Accounts CH2M HILL Inc. William Morrison Chief Operating Officer EnergySolutions David Olson Vice President Environmental Nuclear Operations Fluor Corporation Session 39 0830 - 1200 Room 104AB Panel Consent Based Siting Opportunities and Challenges for Siting Disposal Facilities Session Co-Chairs Eric Knox AECOM Roger Nelson US DOE Lead Organizer Eric Knox AECOM Additional Organizers Robert Edmonds AREVA Federal Services Roger Nelson US DOE Panel Reporter Abraham Van Luik US DOE This panel focuses on the technical institutional as well as broader political issues associated with engaging the public and industry as well as local and State governments regarding the challenges and opportunities related to obtaining public consent for hosting and siting nuclear waste disposal facilities. Panelists John Kotek Acting Assistant Secretary of Nuclear Energy US DOE Betsy Madru VP Government Affairs WCS John Heaton Energy Development Coordinator City of Carlsbad NM James Voss Senior Partner Predicus LLC Chuck Bernhard Sr. Business Development Manager Bernhard Consulting LLC Bruce McKirdy Managing Director Radioactive Waste Management United Kingdom Session 40 0830 - 1200 Room 105C Storage and Retrieval of SpentUsed Nuclear Fuel Part 1 of 2 Session Co-Chairs John Gregory AREVA Federal Services LLC William Nutt Argonne National Laboratory Lead Organizer John Gregory AREVA Federal Services LLC Paper Reviewer Tom Michener Pacific Northwest National Laboratory 0835 An Evaluation of Standardized Canisters in the Waste Management System - 16317 Josh Jarrell Robert Joseph Riley Cumberland Oak Ridge National Laboratory Jeffrey Fortner Argonne National Laboratory Elena Kalinina Sandia National Laboratories Thomas Severynse Savannah River National Laboratory Gordon Petersen University of Tennesee TUESDAY AM 70 0900 Feasibility Study Standardized Transportation Aging and Disposal STAD Canister Testing in CPP-603 - 16622 Richard Berry Jack Clemmens CBI Federal Services LLC Richard Williams CH2M-WG Idaho LLC Melissa Bates DOE-NE Kyle Vogel US DOE-NE 0925 Extended Storage of High Burn-up Fuel Cask RD Project - 16591 Don McGee Gary Clark AREVA Federal Services LLC 0950 Perspective of Dry Interim Storage of SNF in Germany - 16504 Christoph Gastl Julia Palmes Federal Office for Radiation Protection Germany 1020 NUHOMS EOS Robust Advanced and Dual Purpose Dry Storage System - 16472 Jayant Bondre AREVA TN 1045 Results of Modeling and Simulation Support to Special Nuclear Material Handling Facility Operations - 16053 Nick Drucker Stefani Werner Newport News Shipbuilding 1110 Embedded Cluster Calculations of Water Adsorption on the UO2 111 Surface - 16503 Joseph Wellington University College London United Kingdom Andrew Kerridge Lancaster University United Kingdom Nikolas Kaltsoyannis University of Manchester United Kingdom Session 41 1015 - 1200 Room 106A Storage and Retrieval of TRU Session Co-Chairs Kapil Goyal Los Alamos National Laboratory Ed Gulbransen Nuclear Waste Partnership LLC Lead Organizer Roger Nelson US DOE Additional Organizers Kapil Goyal Los Alamos National Laboratory Betty Humphrey Weston Solutions Inc Terry Wickland Nuclear Filter Technology Paper Reviewer Kapil Goyal Los Alamos National Laboratory 1020 Assessment of Options for the Treatment of Nitrate Salt Wastes at Los Alamos National Laboratory - 16541 Bruce Robinson David Funk Patrice Stevens Los Alamos National Laboratory 1045 AK Re-evaluation of Rocky Flats Pond Sludge Planning for Surprises - 16218 Randall Morris North Wind Group 1110 Remote-Handled TRU Storage Challenges at Sandia National LaboratoriesNew Mexico - 16071 Betty Humphrey Weston Solutions Inc Bryan Green Michael Torneby Dave Siddoway Michael Spoerner Sandia National Laboratories 1135 Thermochemical Reactivity Hazards of TRU- Waste Constituents - 16075 Randall Scheele Michael Minette Bruce McNamara Jon Schwantes Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Session 42 0830 - 1010 Room 103AB Panel Graduating Scientists and Engineers Wants and Needs Does it Differ Between Countries Session Co-Chairs Robert Berry Foxfire Scientific Inc United Kingdom Leonel Lagos Applied Research Center - FIU Lead Organizer Leonel Lagos Applied Research Center - FIU Additional Organizers Panel Reporter Robert Berry Foxfire Scientific Inc United Kingdom This panel will focus on new hires and graduating engineers having open lines of communication with employers. Considering the projected shortfalls in the workforce effective communication of wants-and-needs of both the employer and employee must exist. Currently it seems that both sides must work harder to achieve this level of communication. With this new approach both sides can express their wants and needs for a more satisfied workforce and a better work environment. Panelists Melody Bell EM DAS for Human Capital and Corporate Services Acting US DOE Hope Lee Senior Scientist Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Christine Wipfli DOE Fellow Applied Research Center - FIU Christine Lennon National Graduate Programme Manager nucleargraduates United Kingdom TUESDAY AM 71 Session 43 1015 - 1200 Room 103AB Panel Young Professionals in Nuclear Science and Engineering an International Perspective Session Co-Chairs Robert Berry Foxfire Scientific Inc United Kingdom Leonel Lagos Applied Research Center - FIU Lead Organizer Robert Berry Foxfire Scientific Inc United Kingdom Additional Organizers Panel Reporter Leonel Lagos Applied Research Center - FIU This panel focuses on young professionals and covers views on radioactive waste management from young persons perspectives from all around the world. An informal panel will enable the future leaders of our industry to share ideas and experiences and of course develop contacts within their peer group on a truly international level. By selecting this format it is hoped that the topic will be interactive stimulating valuable discussion among the participants and the audience. The panel will be led by young professionals who will actively encourage participation from all those attending including a discussion of mentoring. The aim is to encourage fresh thinking and provide an opportunity for an open and frank discussion on issues. Panelists Duriem Calderin Sr. Nuclear Engineer Bechtel Marissa Reigel Senior Materials Engineer Savannah River National Laboratory Alys Gardner Nuclear Safety Consultant Abbott Risk Consulting United Kingdom Abbey Donahue Nuclear Engineer AREVA TN Melissa Loyley 2015 Chair Responsible Engineer YGN Ansaldo NES United Kingdom Session 44 0830 - 1200 Room 102A Assessments of Performance of Disposal Systems Facilities Sites for LLWILW Session Co-Chairs Bob Hiergesell Savannah River National Laboratory Linda Suttora US DOE Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Linda Suttora US DOE Additional Organizers Kapila Fernando ANSTO Australia Bob Hiergesell Savannah River National Laboratory Sherri Ross US DOE 0835 Design and Construction of a Loess-Cement Cushion as an Integral Component of an SL- LILW Repository - 16077 Gerald Nieder-Westermann Enrique Biurrun Bernt Haverkamp DBE Technology GmbH Germany Mariano Navarro ENRESA Spain Marin Jordanov EQE Bulgaria AD Bulgaria Ira Stefanova SERAW Bulgaria Emiliano Gonzalez Herranz Fernando Moraleda Gamero Westinghouse Electric Spain Spain 0900 Effect of Radiation from Low-Level Radioactive Waste Leachate on Antioxidant Depletion in HDPE Geomembrane - 16087 Kuo Tian Craig Benson CRESPUniversity of Virginia Youming Yang Stanford University James Tinjum University of Wisconsin Madison 0925 Role of Human Intrusion in Decision- Making for Radioactive Waste Disposal - Results of the IAEA HIDRA Project - 16287 Roger Seitz Savannah River National Laboratory Thomas Beuth GRS mbH Germany Yumiko Kumano IAEA Austria Eva Andersson SKB Sweden Lucy Bailey UK NDA United Kingdom Chris Markley US NRC 0950 Mechanical Failure Modes and Longevity of Geomembranes - 16365 Kevin Foye Te-Yang Soong CTI and Associates Inc. 1020 Issues and Challenges for the Disposal of Solid Radioactive Wastes in the UK - 16597 Juliet Long David Bennett Stephen Hardy Doug Ilett Environment Agency United Kingdom William Turner Office for Nuclear Regulation United Kingdom Richard McLeod Scottish Environment Protection Agency United Kingdom 1045 Technetium Management for Hanford Tank Waste Processing and Disposition - 16399 Tatiana Levitskaia Jeffrey Serne Syandev Chatterjee Brian Riley Jarrod Crum Sam Bryan Reid Peterson Pacific Northwest National Laboratory 1110 The Importance of Getting it Right Lessons from the Failure and Subsequent Approval of the LLWR Environmental Safety Case - 16691 Dennis Thompson Low Level Waste Repository United Kingdom TUESDAY AM 72 Session 45 0830 - 1200 Room 106B Perspectives on Management of Nuclear Power Plant Liquid and Wet Waste Session Co-Chairs Joshua Mertz Kurion Inc. Clint Miller Pacific Gas Electric Co Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Clint Miller Pacific Gas Electric Co Additional Organizers Lisa Edwards EPRI Mark Lewis EnergySolutions Chi-Fung Tso Arup United Kingdom 0835 Removal of Trace Amounts of Co-60 from NPP Waste Water Using UV-C Irradiation TiO2 and CoTreat Inorganic Ion Exchange Media - 16025 Leena Malinen University of Helsinki Finland Jussi-Matti Mki Fortum Oyj Finland 0900 Experimental Seismic Response of Scaled Dry Storage Containers under Identical Loading Conditions - 16318 Sharad Dangol Luis Ibarra Chris Pantelides University of Utah Ahmed Maree Taylor Nielsen David Sanders University of Nevada Reno 0925 Utilization and Application of Kurion Mobile Processing System in Remediation of Radioactively Contaminated Water - 16370 Joshua Mertz Brett Simpson Whitney LaMarche Ja-kael Luey Kurion Inc. Zane Walton Vista Engineering Technologies LLC 0950 AVANTechs Innovative LLW Concentrate Treatment System Reducing Environmental Releases - 16416 Dennis Brunsell AVANTech Inc. Ivan Smiesko Slovenske Elektrarne Slovakia 1020 Solidification Technology for Organic Liquid Waste Combined with Solid Materials from Cernavoda NPP Romania - 16453 Teodorov Gabriela Toro Laszlo Adina Sandru Aurelia Musat MATE-FIN Romania Dorin Dumitrescu Cernavoda NPP Romania Dennis Kelley Pacific Nuclear Solutions 1045 Freestanding Liquids in a Resin Disposal Container How Unidentified Legacy Issues and Decisions Can Affect Current Radwaste Processing Activities - 16605 Mike Nolan Energy NW Columbia 1110 Lessons Learned New Resin Processing System Selection Procurement Delivery Set-up Training and Operation - 16615 Mike Nolan Energy NW Columbia 1135 Development of a Holistic Waste Management Flow Sheet for Nuclear New Build in China - 16634 Tim Milner EnergySolutions Session 46 0830 - 1200 Room 101C DD of Nuclear and Non-Power Generating Facilities both Large and Small Session Co-Chairs Rateb Boby Abu Eid US NRC Fred Sheil Sheil Consulting Ltd United Kingdom Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Fred Sheil Sheil Consulting Ltd United Kingdom Additional Organizers Anthony Banford National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Al Freitag Consultant Julia Tripp Idaho National Laboratory 0835 Sellafield FGMSP First Generation Magnox Storage Pond Additional Sludge Retrieval Project - 16180 Jonathan Smee Ian Grant Udo Weintrager Westinghouse Electric Company United Kingdom Dave Wilson Mike Gull Energy Solutions Ian Richardson Sellafield Ltd United Kingdom 0900 Major Achievements of the Springfields Decommissioning Program - 16512 Paul Lomas Westinghouse Electric Company United Kingdom 0925 Strategies for Decommissioning the Fuel Storage and Reprocessing Complex at Chalk River Laboratories - 16183 Kerry Weisenberg Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Canada 0950 DD of the CALLISTO PWR Loop as Part of the Refurbishment of the BR2 Research Reactor - 16168 Kurt Van den Dungen SCK-CEN Belgium 1020 Top 10 Facility Decommissioning Risks and Mitigation Strategies to Prevent Them - 16487 Bill Bailey PolestarTechnical Services Inc. Jerel Nelson The Delphi Groupe Inc. Mark Morton Richard Wilkinson WorleyParsons Steven Whittall WorleyParsons United Kingdom Michael Kruzic WorleyParsons Canada Gavin Love WorleyParsons Australia TUESDAY AM 73 1045 NitroJets Verification Test of Contaminated Water Storage Tank Decontamination in Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant - 16489 Tomoko Yamamoto Akito Yamasaki Masafumi Kitamura Kensuke Hirata Tomoo Kusumi Peng Wang IHI Corporation Japan 1110 Mobile Robots and Remote Characterisation Systems for Nuclear Decommissioning - 16028 Farshad Arvin Olusola Ayoola Benjamin Bird Liam Brown Joaquin Carrasco Wei Cheah Jose Espinosa Peter Green Arron Griffiths Barry Lennox Simon Watson Thomas Wright University of Manchester United Kingdom 1135 The Magnox Clean-Up Programme - Integrating and Making Best Use of the Supply Chain - 16603 Peter Walkden Amec Foster Wheeler United Kingdom Session 47 0830 - 1010 Room 101B Technical Innovations in Environmental Remediation and Site Closure Session Co-Chairs Del Baird Pro2Serve Rick Dearholt Information International Associates Lead Organizer Del Baird Pro2Serve Additional Organizers Dale Bignell Portage Inc Ella Feist CH2M HILL Inc. United Kingdom Leo van Velzen Netherlands Paper Reviewer Hope Lee Pacific Northwest National Laboratory 0835 Final Closure of the Maxey Flats Low Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Site - 16088 Mark Day AECOM Te-Yang Soong CTI and Associates Inc. Tim Hubbard Scott Wilburn Kentucky Department for Environmental Protection Pam Scully US EPA 0900 Impact of High Performance Computing on the Detailed Simulation of Subsurface Flow and Contaminant Transport Using eSTOMP - 16341 Vicky Freedman Diana Bacon Mark Rockhold Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Kearn Lee AREVA 0925 A Frozen Soil Barrier to Control Groundwater Inflow into Damaged Reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station - 16613 Brian Looney Dennis Jackson Savannah River National Laboratory Michael Truex Chris Johnson Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Noriyoshi Nakamura Ryosuke Kobayashi Tokyo Electric Power Company Japan Session 48 1015 - 1200 Room 101B Worldwide Experience with ER Challenges Alternative Approaches to Achieving End State Session Co-Chairs Kurt Gerdes US DOE Moses Jaraysi CH2M HILL PRC Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Moses Jaraysi CH2M HILL PRC Additional Organizers Peter Booth Hylton Environmental United Kingdom Kurt Gerdes US DOE Hope Lee Pacific Northwest National Laboratory 1020 Developing a Remediation Strategy for Hanfords Central Plateau Long-Term Waste Management Area - 16545 James Hansen Steven Golian US DOE 1045 Assessing the Performance of Pump-and- Treat Systems - 16380 Hope Lee Michael Truex Chris Johnson Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Dave Becker USACE 1110 Assessing Cumulative Impacts from Source Units within Hanfords Inner Area - 16546 Alaa Aly Intera Inc. James Hansen US DOE 1135 Implementation of Enhanced Attenuation at the US DOE Mound Site OU-1 Landfill Accelerating Progress and Reducing Costs - 16270 Gwen Hooten US DOE Rebecca Cato Navarro Research and Engineering Inc. Brian Looney Brian Rhia Savannah River National Laboratory Session 49 0830 - 1010 Room 106A A Global Perspective on Advances in Nuclear Safety Management Session Co-Chairs Paul Black Neptune Company Inc. Christopher Timm PECOS Mgmt Svcs Inc Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Christopher Timm PECOS Mgmt Svcs Inc Additional Organizers Robert Brounstein TerranearPMC Judith Connell Fluor Corporation Simon Kwong National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom TUESDAY AM 74 0835 Safeguarding Nuclear Waste - A Study in Risk Management and Overcoming Significant Challenges - 16439 Gerald Curry US DOE 0900 Advancements in the H-Canyon Exhaust Ventilation System Inspections at the Savannah River Site - 16030 Bill Giddings Jane Carter Lee Sims Savannah River Nuclear Solutions Eric Kriikku Savannah River National Laboratory Jay Ray US DOE 0925 Design of Removable Shield Modules for Nuclear Plant Applications Using Monte Carlo Modeling - 16264 Alan Simpson Martin Clapham Alexander Couture Pajarito Scientific Corporation United Kingdom Edward Williams Duke Energy Progress John Kremer Radiation Protection Systems Session 50 0830 - 1200 1st Floor Foyer LLWILWMixed WasteBY Product Material Tenorm NORM Residues and Depleted Uranium - Topic A Posters Waste Characterization Session Co-Chairs Steven Brown SHB INC Erich Tiepel Golder Associates Lead Organizer Erich Tiepel Golder Associates Paper Reviewer Loong Yong Spectra Tech Inc A1. Calibration of a Passive Neutron Counter with Pu242 Standards - 16450 Joseph Wachter Robert McElroy Marcel Villani Bruce Gillespie Sean Stanfield Canberra Industries Inc - AREVA Group Adam Gallegos Pajarito Scientific Corporation Joe Harvill Washington TRU Solutions LLC A2. Use of iPIX a New Gamma Camera with Quantitative Gamma Spectroscopy and Dose Rate Modelling - 16316 Patrick Chard Thomas Kirk Martin Rushby Nikolay Vasilev Sin Nutbeam-Tuffs Canberra UK Ltd - AREVA Group United Kingdom Florent Bonnet Dominique Rothan Canberra Industries Inc France A3. Waste Information Management System with 2015-16 Waste Streams - 16463 Himanshu Upadhyay Walter Quintero Leonel Lagos Peggy Shoffner David Roelant Applied Research Center - FIU A4. Characterization of Low Level and Intermediate Nuclear Waste Improvements in Calorimetric Measurement Combined Radiological Modelling - 16144 Alain Godot Clment Deyglun Christophe Mathonat Guillaume Jossens KEP Technologies France A5. Preparation of Waste Fingerprints for the Miscellaneous Beta Gamma Waste Feeds to the Box Encapsulation Plant at Sellafield - 16080 Jeremy Hastings Colin Zimmerman Paul Little Robert Mills Anthony Banford National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Michelle Wise NSG Environmental Ltd United Kingdom John Clifford Sellafield Ltd United Kingdom A6. Evaluation of Computed Tomography Techniques for Material Identification in Low Level and Intermediate Level Waste - 16648 Steve Halliwell Apostolos Christodoulou VJ Technologies Inc. Topic B Posters Waste Packaging Session Co-Chairs Steven Brown SHB INC Erich Tiepel Golder Associates Lead Organizer Erich Tiepel Golder Associates Paper Reviewer Billie Mauss US DOE Office or River Protection B1. Development of Cement Solidification Technique for Sodium Borate Waste Produced in PWR Plants - 16061 Hirofumi Okabe Kanae Matsuyama Tatsuaki Sato Masumitsu Toyohara Yohei Sato Tetsuo Motohashi Masaaki Kaneko Toshiba Co. Japan B2. Verification of UO2 pellet and UF6 Cylinders using the Quad-CZT Array - 16484 Heejun Chung Jung-Ki Shin Uk Ryang Park Sung-Woo Kwak Korea Institute of Nuclear Nonproliferation and Control South Korea Yongkwon Kim NuCare Medical Systems Inc South Korea B3. Effects of Gamma Radiation on Cementitious Materials in Repository Environment - 16300 Eduardo Ferreira Roberto Vicente Margareth Franco Luis Gallego Martinez Jlio Takehiro Marumo Nuclear Energy Research Institute Brazil Alexandre Carvalho Brazilian Synchrotron Light Source Brazil Fabiano Yokaichiya Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin fr Materialien und Energie HZB Germany Xabier Turrillas Institut de Cincia de Materials de Barcelona Spain TUESDAY AM 75 B4. Radioactive Waste Management in HANARO High-flux Advanced Neutron Application Reactor - 16076 Sung Paal Yim Choong Sung Lee Ki Hyun Kim In-Cheol Lim Hoan Sung Jung Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute South Korea Cheo Kyung Lee Handong Global University South Korea Topic C Posters Waste Repository Session Co-Chairs Steven Brown SHB INC Erich Tiepel Golder Associates Lead Organizer Erich Tiepel Golder Associates Paper Reviewer David Eaton CH2M-WG Idaho LLC C1. Update on Construction Planning for the Bulgarian Low and Short-Lived Intermediate Level Radioactive Waste Repository - 16159 Gerald Nieder-Westermann Enrique Biurrun DBE Technology GmbH Germany Mariano Navarro ENRESA Spain Marin Jordanov Penka Sofronieva EQE Bulgaria AD Bulgaria Ira Stefanova SERAW Bulgaria Emiliano Gonzalez Herranz Westinghouse Electric Spain Spain C2. Nuclide Release Pathways in and Around a Trench Repository for Radioactive Waste - 16014 Youn-Myoung Lee Heui-Joo Choi Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute South Korea Topic D Posters Waste Treatment Session Co-Chairs Steven Brown SHB INC Erich Tiepel Golder Associates Lead Organizer Erich Tiepel Golder Associates Paper Reviewer Sherri Ross US DOE D1. Electrorefining of Zircaloy-4 in LiCl-KCl to Decontaminate Irradiated Cladding - 16238 Jaeyeong Park Hyeong Ki Shin Korea Institute of Nuclear Safety South Korea Sungjune Sohn Il-Soon Hwang Seoul National University South Korea D2. Stability of Super Absorbent Polymers in Sodium Nitrate - 16222 Martin Matushek M2 Polymer Technologies Inc D3. Corrosion Kinetics of Stainless Steel by Hydrogen Measurement Under Deep Geological Repository Conditions - 16047 Tomofumi Sakuragi Satoshi Yoshida Radioactive Waste Management Funding and Research Center Japan Junichiro Kinugasa Osamu Kato Kobe Steel Ltd. Japan Tsuyoshi Tateishi Kobelco Research Institute Inc. Japan D4. A Simple Solution to a Complex Problem Hexavalent Chromium in Landfill Stormwater - 16129 Jeff Grindstaff Annette Primrose Mark Cleveland Robin Manning Matt Hagenow Andrew Jacobs URS CH2M Oak Ridge LLC Brian Henry OREM D5. Behavior of Radioactive Cesium in MSW Thermal Treatment Plant after Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant Accident - 16626 Hiroshi Fujiwara Hidetoshi Kuramochi Tomoharu Maeseto Kazutaka Nomura Yukio Takeuchi Masahiro Osako National Institute for Environmental Studies Japan Katsuya Kawamoto Okayama University Japan Session 51 0830 - 1200 Room 1st Floor Foyer Topic E Posters Nuclear Power Plant NPP Waste Management Session Co-Chairs Mark Lewis EnergySolutions Joshua Mertz Kurion Inc. Lead Organizer Mark Lewis EnergySolutions Paper Reviewer Clint Miller Pacific Gas Electric Co E1. Radioactive Waste Water Treatment for Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant - 16081 Hiroko Abe Shunsuke Susa Toshiaki Sugimori Naoki Tajima Seiji Yamamoto Hisao Oomura Akira Ikeda Michitaka Saso Toshiba Co. Japan Keiji Ishikawa Tokyo Electric Power Company Japan E2. Studies on Oxidation Treatment of Spent Ion Exchange Resin - 16083 Toshiaki Sugimori Seiichi Murayama Takaaki Murata Shinya Miyamoto Masaaki Kaneko Hirofumi Okabe Yu Yamashita Yumi Yaita Toshiba Co. Japan E3. Experience on Safety Review of Liquid and Gaseous Effluent Monitoring System for Nuclear Power Plants in Korea - 16237 Jeongken Lee JungJoon Lee Sungil Kim Byung Soo Lee Korea Institute of Nuclear Safety South Korea E4. A Study on the Temperature Correlation between a Surface of Dry Storage Canister and Spent Fuel Clad - 16446 Jeonghun Cha Soonkyoo Han Daesik Yook Korea Institute of Nuclear Safety South Korea TUESDAY AM 76 15. RO Concentrated Water Treatment Equipment for Risk Reduction of Contaminated Water Stored in Tank in Fukushima NPS - 16655 Yuko Kani Mamoru Kamoshida Fumio Takahashi Hitachi Ltd. Japan Takashi Asano Takashi Nishi Yusuke Kitamoto Takako Sumiya Kenji Noshita Hitachi-GE Nuclear Energy Ltd. Japan MARCH 8 TUESDAY PM Session 52 1330 - 1510 Room 102BC Panel US DOE Featured Site DOE-Oak Ridge Tennessee - Improving Performance in the Field - Part 3 of 4 Session Co-Chairs Susan Cange US DOE Betsy Child Restoration Services Inc. Lead Organizer Jenny Freeman Strata-G Additional Organizers Susan Cange US DOE Cathy Hickey CH2M HILL Inc. Panel Reporter Ray Parrish Restoration Services Inc. This session will focus on Purpose. By improving the Safety Conscious Work Environment and ensuring safe operations we exemplify purpose in the work of the Oak Ridge Environmental Management program OREM. What are some of the new ideas in contract execution and project management both of which give purpose to performance excellence Finally well get the contractors unique perspective of federal oversight experienced on the Oak Ridge cleanup site along with time for QA. Panelists James Hutton EM DAS for Safety Security and Quality Programs US DOE Chelsea Hubbard Branch Chief Facilities Oversight US DOE Oak Ridge Office of EM Karen Shears Director Procurement and Contracts Division US DOE Ron Slottke Director Project Services and Support URS CH2M Oak Ridge LLC Session 53 1515 - 1700 Room 102BC Panel US DOE Featured Site DOE-Oak Ridge Tennessee - Transitioning from Cleanup to Reuse - Part 4 of 4 Session Co-Chairs Susan Cange US DOE Betsy Child Restoration Services Inc. Lead Organizer Jenny Freeman Strata-G Additional Organizers Susan Cange US DOE Cathy Hickey CH2M HILL Inc. Panel Reporter Ray Parrish Restoration Services Inc. Several years ago Oak Ridge accepted the challenge to make progress with expeditiously transitioning cleanup sites to the community for reuse through the Community Reuse Organization of East Tennessee CROET. What does that progress look like in 2016 A new airport slated for construction on the former K-25 Gaseous Diffusion Plant site is about to become a reality. Thriving small businesses have flourished as agreements on land reuse are reached. This panel will present the challenges of ensuring that all parties needs are met during transition from a cleanup site to a private sector industrial park. Panelists David Adler Reindustrialization Program Manager US DOE Oak Ridge Office of EM Sherry Browder Reindustrialization Manager URS CH2M Oak Ridge LLC Barry Stephenson PresidentCEO Materials and Chemistry Laboratory Inc. Jeff Smith Deputy Director for Operations Oak Ridge National Laboratory TUESDAY AM - TUESDAY PM 77 Session 54 1330 - 1700 Room 105AB Panel UK USA Canada Partnering Accomplishments and Lessons Learned Session Co-Chairs Laurie Judd Longenecker Associates John Mathieson NDA United Kingdom Lead Organizer Angie Jones Amec Foster Wheeler Additional Organizers Christine Fahey Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Canada Graham Jonsson NDA United Kingdom Laurie Judd Longenecker Associates Panel Reporter Christine Fahey Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Canada This panel will give an update on progress made under the bilateral agreements between Canada UK and US. Representatives of DOE NDA NNL CNL and AECL will identify benefits to the respective national programs through cooperation. Examples of the collaboration include lessons learned exchange in areas including startup and commissioning of new plant safe interim storage of reactors and Vertical Pipe UnitTile Hole retrieval as well as technology transfer and collaboration in management of problematic orphan wastes innovative DD technologies and tank waste management. There has also been significant activity in National Laboratory collaboration. Panelists Rosa Elmetti International Program US DOE Rodrigo Rimando Senior Policy Advisor US DOE Graham Jonsson National Programme Manager ILW Nuclear Material NDA United Kingdom Richard Sexton VP Decommissioning WM Oversight AECL Canada Anthony Banford Chief Technologist National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Sharon Marra Associated Laboratory Director Environmental Stewardship Savannah River National Laboratory Brian Wilcox Director Project Delivery Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Canada Pamela Marks Salt Waste Processing Facility DOE Federal Project Director Session 55 1330 - 1510 Exhibit Hall 4 Panel Small Business Procurement and Contracting Opportunities with DOE and DOE Prime Contractors Session Co-Chairs Vanessa Hatfield E2 Consulting Engineers Inc. Roger Merrick EngineeringRemediation Resources Group Inc Lead Organizer John Coffman ReNuke Services Inc. Additional Organizers Vanessa Hatfield E2 Consulting Engineers Inc. Roger Merrick EngineeringRemediation Resources Group Inc Panel Reporter Vanessa Hatfield E2 Consulting Engineers Inc. This panel session will focus on small business procurement and contracting opportunities within the DOE Complex. The DOE encourages prime contractors to obtain goods and services from small and disadvantaged businesses and often tie these goals to contract award fee. Goods and services being considered for these procurements include decontamination and decommissioning services remediation services transportation and disposal of radioactive waste health physics equipment and services emergency response planning and training lab services RD products waste treatment services maintenance services AE services and professional consulting. This panel complements Session 56 Small Business Procurement and Contracting Opportunities with DOE and DOE Prime Contractors and Session 78 US DOE Procurements Process Trends and Contractor Delivery Challenges both of which are open to all WM2016 participants including Exhibitors. Panelists Ralph Holland Deputy Director Environmental Management Consolidated Business Center US DOE William Badger Vice President Business Development Strategy CH2M HILL Inc. Lisa Tribuce-Leoung Tat Supply Chain Resource ManagerSmall Business Manager Bechtel National Inc. Sharon Brady Vice President Stoller Newport News Nuclear Marty Gray Capture Manager Fluor Corporation Joni Blizzard Manager Small Business Program AECOM TUESDAY PM 78 Session 56 1515 - 1700 Exhibit Hall 4 Panel Addressing the Small Business Barriers in Contracting with the US DOE Session Co-Chairs John Coffman ReNuke Services Inc. Jim Fiore Fiore Consulting Lead Organizer Gary Benda AVANTech Inc. Additional Organizers John Coffman ReNuke Services Inc. John Hale US DOE Vanessa Hatfield E2 Consulting Engineers Inc. Panel Reporter Vanessa Hatfield E2 Consulting Engineers Inc. This panel focuses on the barriers for small businesses in contracting with the US DOE. For FY2016 the DOE has set goals for Small Businesses. Small businesses and Disadvantaged Woman-Owned Disadvantaged-Veteran Owned and HUB Zone Prime Contracts are included with ranges set from 3 to 6 for prime contracts and up to 50 for subcontracts. During a declining US federal budget with less contracting dollars and more going for base prime contractor services these goals are challenging. This panel will interact extensively with the audience in listening and discussing methods to achieve these goals and barriers that need to be mitigated. All WM Exhibitors can attend this session in the Exhibit Hall without a WM technical registration badge as a conference service. Panelists Jack Surash EM DAS for Acquisition and Project Management US DOE EM John Hale Director Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization US DOE Greg Gonzales Small Business Program Manager US DOE - NNSA Session 57 1330 - 1700 Room 102A Worldwide Perspectives of Radioactive Waste Management - Challenges and Solutions Session Co-Chairs Ray Clark US EPA Stratis Vomvoris NAGRA Switzerland Lead Organizer John Mathieson NDA United Kingdom Paper Reviewer Leif G Eriksson Nuclear Waste Dispositions 1335 The U.S. DOE-EM International Program - 16647 Ana Han Rosa Elmetti US DOE Jay Roach Terranear PMC Benjamin Rivera US DOE - EM 1400 Canadas Nuclear Legacy Liabilities Program - Ten Years of Progress and Achievements - 16456 Doug Metcalfe Catherine Badke Dave McCauley Natural Resources Canada Canada 1425 Addressing the Legacy Waste Challenge IAEA Activities in Support of Member States - 16304 Rebecca Robbins Michael Ojovan IAEA Austria 1450 Site Selection in Germany - Status of the Evaluation of the Site Selection Law - 16122 Frank Charlier Bruno Thomauske RWTH Aachen University NET Germany 1520 A National Disposal Facility for Radioactive Waste for Iraq - 16610 Enrique Biurrun Bernt Haverkamp Thilo Von Berlepsch DBE Technology GmbH Germany 1545 Progress of the Czech Republic Deep Geological Repository Program - 16255 Jiri Slovak Radioactive Waste Repository Authority Czech Republic Frantisek Woller Consultant Czech Republic 1610 Developing a New National Programme for the Management and Disposal of Spent Fuel and Radioactive Waste in Romania - 16391 Bill Miller Florian Glodeanu Sorin Patrascoiu Amec Foster Wheeler United Kingdom Florin Tatar Alice Mariana Dima Agentia Nucleara si Pentru Deseuri Radioactive ANDR Romania 1635 The Joint Convention Its Global Impact and US Continuing Involvement - 16645 Lisa Phillips US DOE Daniel Schultheisz US EPA Mathews George US NRC Session 58 1330 - 1510 Room 103AB Panel Progress on Deep Repository Programmes Around the World Session Co-Chairs Andrew Griffith US DOE Abraham Van Luik US DOE Lead Organizer Anthony Banford National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Additional Organizers Grald Ouzounian Andra France Abraham Van Luik US DOE Thilo Von Berlepsch DBE Technology GmbH Germany Panel Reporter Abraham Van Luik US DOE TUESDAY PM 79 This panel session focuses on the progress of deep repository programs worldwide. While efforts on a deep geological repository for SNFUNF and HLW in the USA were terminated in 2010 several other repository programs continue to make considerable progress. Panelists will be invited from national repository programs and organizations to report upon the current status and future plans as well as the perceived reasons underlying the success and the failure of components of their respective repository program. This panel will provide a forum for interested parties to present exchange and take advantage of as appropriate repository progress challenges conceptsdesigns and other lessons learned around the world including site characterization site selection research and development licensing construction operation and public acceptance and participation. Panelists George Dials President and Project Manager Pajarito Scientific Corporation Grald Ouzounian Director International Department Andra France Thilo Von Berlepsch DBE Technology GmbH Germany Bruce McKirdy Managing Director Radioactive Waste Management United Kingdom Session 59 1515 - 1700 Room 105C Global Advances in HLW Retrieval Equipment Session Co-Chairs Kent Fortenberry Savannah River Remediation Terry Sams Washington River Protection Solutions Lead Organizer Bill Wilmarth Savannah River National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Larry Ling AECOM - Savannah River Remediation 1520 A Unique Design Approach for Extending Service Life of a Failed Thermosyphon Evaporator - 16330 Sandeep Patil Ratan Kumar Brian Dennis University of Texas Arlington RK Gupta Anil kumar Singh Bhabha Atomic Research Centre India 1545 Overcoming Waste Removal Challenges at Savannah River Site A Case Study of Tank 15 - 16198 Seth Campbell Toby Hess Scott Plummer Savannah River Remediation 1610 Leak Testing with Simulated Waste of Hanford Tank Farm Valves Utilized for Double Valve Isolation - 16108 Carl Enderlin Harold Adkins Jr Beric Wells Jeromy Jenks Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Jason Engeman Washington River Protection Solutions Session 60 1330 - 1510 Room 106C DOE Hanford - Direct Feed Low Activity Waste DFLAW Program Execution - Part 3 of 4 Session Co-Chairs Garth Duncan Bechtel National Inc. Rose Russell Washington River Protection Solutions Lead Organizer Karthik Subramanian Washington River Protection Solutions Additional Organizers Renee Davis Washington River Protection Solutions Garth Duncan Bechtel National Inc. Paper Reviewer Renee Davis Washington River Protection Solutions 1335 Integrated Waste Feed Qualification Program for Direct LAW Feed to WTP - 16421 Aruna Arakali Peter Benson AECOM Garth Duncan Bechtel National Inc. Renee Davis Mike Thien Stuart Arm Washington River Protection Solutions 1400 Low Activity Waste Pretreatment System Conceptual Design Approach - 16568 Cliff Winkler David Houghton Washington River Protection Solutions 1425 WTP Modifications to Support DFLAW LAW BOF Lab - 16219 Kim Irwin Robert Henckel Bruce Schapell Bechtel National Inc. Jeffrey Bruggeman Jason Young US DOE 1450 Integrated Readiness Activities for the Direct Feed LAW Program - 16221 Scott Booth AECOM - URS Alisa Sheridan URS-AECOM Rob Glibert US DOE Martin Wheeler Glenn Beaumier Washington River Protection Solutions Richard Garrett Waste Treatment Plant - One System TUESDAY PM 80 Session 61 1515 - 1700 Room 106C DOE Hanford - Direct Feed Low Activity Waste DFLAW Technology Maturation - Part 4 of 4 Session Co-Chairs Karthik Subramanian David Swanberg Washington River Protection Solutions Lead Organizer Karthik Subramanian Washington River Protection Solutions Additional Organizers Paper Reviewer David Swanberg Washington River Protection Solutions 1520 Integration of National Laboratory and Low-Activity Waste Pre-Treatment System Technology Service Providers - 16435 Karthik Subramanian Mike Thien Washington River Protection Solutions Dawn Wellman Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Connie Herman Savannah River National Laboratory 1545 Secondary Waste Form Development and Data Package for Hanfords Integrated Disposal Facility Performance Assessment - 16479 David Swanberg Washington River Protection Solutions Gary Pyles DOEORP Jeffrey Serne Wooyong Um Joseph Westsik Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Alex Cozzi Savannah River National Laboratory 1610 Low Activity Waste Glass Waste Form Performance Data Package for Hanford Integrated Disposal Facility Performance Assessment - 16480 David Swanberg Elvie Brown Washington River Protection Solutions Diana Bacon Vicky Freedman Joseph Ryan Pacific Northwest National Laboratory 1635 LAWPS Technology Maturation Program and Scaled Testing - 16589 Matt Landon Kevin Ard Washington River Protection Solutions Clark Carlson Pacific Northwest Naitional Laboratory Sahid Smith US DOE Session 62 1330 - 1510 Room 104AB Panel US Nuclear Power Plant Waste Management - US LLW Disposal Issues Session Co-Chairs Mark Lewis EnergySolutions Clint Miller Pacific Gas Electric Co Lead Organizer Panel Reporter Clint Miller Pacific Gas Electric Co Additional Organizers Mark Lewis EnergySolutions This panel focuses on senior utility managers discussing issues with disposal site operators. Panelists Dan Burns Senior Vice President Planning and Business Development Waste Control Specialists LLC Josseph J. Weismann Vice President Radiological Programs US Ecology Michael Benjamin Director Barnwell Operation EnergySolutions Session 63 1515 - 1700 Room 104AB Panel Nuclear Power Plant Waste Management - LLW Processor Issues Session Co-Chairs Mark Lewis EnergySolutions Clint Miller Pacific Gas Electric Co Lead Organizer Panel Reporter Clint Miller Pacific Gas Electric Co Additional Organizers Mark Lewis EnergySolutions This panel focuses on senior utility managers discussing issues with commercial LLW processors. LLW processors will have an opportunity to update utilitiesNPPs on new or different services or technologies being offered to assist in their radioactive waste management goals. Panelists Joe Heckman General Manager Bear Creek Processing EnergySolutions Andy Avila Business Development Manager Omega Technical Services Tammy Monday National Sales Manager Perma- Fix Environmental Services Gregg Johnstone Director Sales Marketing UniTech Services Group Inc TUESDAY PM 81 Session 64 1330 - 1510 Room 105C Type B Cask Packaging Design Session Co-Chairs Mike Nolan Energy NW Columbia Anna Wikmark Swedish Nuclear Fuel and Waste Management Co. Sweden Lead Organizer Ashok Kapoor US DOE Additional Organizers Paul Jones Ameriphysics Olaf Oldiges DAHER Nuclear Technologies GmbH Germany Paper Reviewer Christopher Brandjes Ameriphysics 1335 The New TN-MW Cask System Focused on Facilities End-of-Life Waste Management - 16627 Florence Lefort-Mary Christine Lamouroux AREVA France Gilles Clement AREVA NC France Bruno Dumont Jay Thomas Sandrine Toupiol AREVA TN France Bruno Dumont Jay Thomas Sandrine Toupiol AREVA TN 1400 Inerting of Casks Cavity Atmospheres - The GNS Approach to Treat Hydrogen Generation in Sealed ILW Packages - 16043 Linus Bettermann Uwe Spielmann Torsten Kahl GNS mbH Germany 1425 Transportation Cask for Bare High Burnup UNF - 16362 Sven Bader Slade Klein Charles Temus AREVA Federal Services LLC 1450 Packaging for Transport of the ILW-LL of EDF First Generation Power Plant Dismantling - 16517 Aurelie Brasch-Serres EDF DP2D France Mathias Chazot ROBATEL Industries France Session 65 1515 - 1700 Room 103AB Panel Worldwide Challenges in Radioactive Material Packaging Session Co-Chairs Paul Jones Ameriphysics Karlan Richards Bechtel Lead Organizer Christopher Brandjes Ameriphysics Additional Organizers Ashok Kapoor US DOE Olaf Oldiges DAHER Nuclear Technologies GmbH Germany Chi-Fung Tso Arup United Kingdom Panel Reporter Karlan Richards Bechtel This panel focuses on challenges for fabricators of radioactive material packaging. Worldwide companies are encouraged to participate. Participants will provide their perspectives and suggestions on how to increase efficiencies through eliminating inconsistencies between specifications and other requirements in order to provide products at a reasonable cost and enhance communication to enable better service. Panelists Ann McCall Director for Waste Management UK NDA United Kingdom Dean Ricker Vice President of Sales Skolnik Industries Inc Bill Smart Director of Nuclear Sales PacTec Inc Scott Dempsey Vice President Director of Sales Marketing MHF Services an EnergySolutions Company Holger Ruechel Eisenwerk Bassum m.b.H. Session 66 1330 - 1700 Room 101B Operating Experience in the Treatment and Storage of LLWILW a Global Perspective Session Co-Chairs Kapila Fernando ANSTO Australia Felix Himmerkus WAK GmbH Germany Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Kapila Fernando ANSTO Australia Additional Organizers Gabriele Bandt TV NORD EnSys Hannover Germany Christine Langton Savannah River National Laboratory 1335 Daher-TLI UCSC Wash Process Lessons Learned from Handling a Legacy Cylinder - 16506 Alex Clark Ron Noe Bill Muiter Norman Kent DAHER-TLI 1400 Proven Uranium Recovery Solutions for the Nuclear Fuel Manufacturing Market - 16060 Kevin Askew Westinghouse Electric Company United Kingdom 1425 The Advanced Mixed Waste Treatment Project Optimizing Use of this National Asset to Treat Waste from Other DOE Sites - 16064 James Joyce Ben Roberts Scott Van Camp Julia Shenk Darina Castillo Alton Harris Eric Huang US DOE 1450 Treatment of LLW Components for Waste Minimization and Recycling - 16258 Craig Broadbent Studsvik UK Ltd United Kingdom Arne Larsson Gregor Krause Bjrn Amcoff Studsvik Nuclear AB Germany Arne Larsson Gregor Krause Bjrn Amcoff Studsvik Nuclear AB Sweden 1520 Innovative Waste Packaging and Associated VentingHydrogen Management - 16594 Conrad Izatt Arup United Kingdom Daniel Fisher Croft Associates Ltd United Kingdom Chris Chadwick Porvair Filtration Group United Kingdom TUESDAY PM 82 1545 Large Cask Small Building AREVAs Safe MLLW Disposal Solution Despite Facility Limitations - 16295 Ronnie Broughton Adam Jones AREVA Paul Scott URS CH2M Oak Ridge LLC 1610 Experience with the Quality Control of Radioactive Waste Packages for the German Repository Konrad - 16493 Fabienne Anton Elke.-D. Kohlgarth Daniel Schaper Tobias Wels TV NORD EnSys Hannover GmbH Co. KG Germany Anne Glindkamp Ralf Ohlhof TV NORD EnSys Hannover GmbH Co KG Germany Session 67 1330 - 1700 Room 101C DD of US DOE Facilities Session Co-Chairs Andrew Szilagyi US DOE Julia Tripp Idaho National Laboratory Lead Organizer Andrew Szilagyi US DOE Additional Organizers Michelle Claggett Project Enhancement Corporation Julia Tripp Idaho National Laboratory Robert Vellinger TerranearPMC LLC Paper Reviewer Julia Tripp Idaho National Laboratory 1335 Liquid Waste Cell Decommissioning at the West Valley Demonstration Project - 16454 Scott Anderson CH2M HILL BWXT West Valley. LLC Cynthia Dayton Thomas Dogal Scott Chase Mark Agnew CH2M HILL BWXT West Valley LLC Thomas Vero US DOE - WVDP 1400 Nuclear Safety at Post Shutdown Gaseous Diffusion Plants - 16298 Stuart Severns Atkins Limited 1425 Operational Stewardship Program Development and Execution Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory - 16353 Mark Costella Susan Lind Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory 1450 In-Situ Gamma-Ray Assay of the 235-F Plutonium Fuel Form Facility at the Savannah River Site - 16293 Alexander Couture Pajarito Scientific Corporation David DiPrete Donald Pak Timothy Aucott Alexander Brand Savannah River National Laboratory John Musall Michael Gilles Savannah River Nuclear Solutions 1520 Survey and Remediation Project at the DOE Bannister Site - 16280 Richard Creed John Mason Douglas Walraven Sammy Garcia ANTECH Corporation Joseph Baker Honeywell FMT Sheldon Lefkowitz Pentek Inc. 1545 Development and Testing of a First-of-a- Kind Process to Support Commissioning a New Hazard Category 2 Nuclear Facility - 16573 Raymond Geimer CH2M HILL PRC 1610 Developing a New Model to Estimate the Costs to Decommission DOEs Active Facilities - 16368 Peter Sanford Consultant William Hombach Team Analysis Inc. Evangeline Labador Stacy Goetz Richard Heller US DOE 1635 Progression of Safe and Compliant Demolition of Hanfords Plutonium Finishing Plant - 16566 Mike Swartz CH2M HILL Session 68 1330 - 1510 Room 106B Communication of Technical Issues Worldwide Experiences Session Co-Chairs Margaret MacDonell Argonne National Laboratory Mindy Toothman AECOM Lead Organizer W.T. Goldston EnergySolutions Additional Organizers Jeannette Hyatt Savannah River National Laboratory Linda Suttora US DOE Paper Reviewer Linda Suttora US DOE Mindy Toothman AECOM 1335 Successful Integration of LLW Disposal Performance Assessment Analyses with the CERCLA Process at the DOE Portsmouth Site Pi - 16520 John Patterson Strata-G Jyh-Dong Chiou Richard Abitz Fluor BW Portsmouth LLC Changsheng Lu Jacobs Engineering Group 1400 Regulatory Compliance Strategy for Recovery-Driven Underground Ventilation System Changes - 16355 Mindy Toothman William Most Larry Madl Brent Blunt AECOM 1425 Macroencapsulation as Manufactured Components for Disposal at the Nevada National Security Site NNSS - 16213 Max Saad Dwight Stockham Sandia National Laboratories Jeanne Poling National Security Technologies 1450 Approaches for Communicating Technical Information - 16012 Peter Booth Hylton Environmental United Kingdom TUESDAY PM 83 Session 69 1515 - 1700 Room 106B Decision Making Tools and Frameworks for ER Cleanup Programs that Enhance Communication Session Co-Chairs Jeannette Hyatt Savannah River National Laboratory Leonel Lagos Applied Research Center - FIU Lead Organizer Jeannette Hyatt Savannah River National Laboratory Additional Organizers W.T. Goldston EnergySolutions Paper Reviewer Leonel Lagos Applied Research Center - FIU 1520 Applications Using the Advanced Simulation Capability for Environmental Management Toolset - 16335 Mark Freshley Mark Rockhold Vicky Freedman Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Haruko Wainwright Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory David Moulton Paul Dixon Los Alamos National Laboratory Greg Flach Savannah River National Laboratory John Morse US DOE 1545 PHOENIX Web-Based Application for Accessing Hanford Tank Monitoring - 16157 Patrick Royer Alicia Gorton Mitch Pelton Mark Triplett David J. Watson Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Thomas Fletcher Jeremy Johnson US DOE 1610 A Paradigm Shift Continued Structured Decision Making for Sustainable Waste Management Part 1 Decision Model Structuring - 16486 Paul Black Neptune Company Inc. Kelly Black Tom Stockton Neptune Company Inc 1635 Strategic Planning and Decisions Tools to Enhance EM Mission Execution - 16552 Jeannette Hyatt Rudy Goetzman Savannah River National Laboratory Session 70 1330 - 1700 Room 106A Integrated Performance and Risk Assessments Decision Analyses and Risk Management Session Co-Chairs Rateb Boby Abu Eid US NRC Ming Zhu US DOE Lead Organizer Ming Zhu US DOE Additional Organizers Kim Auclair KD Auclair Associates Linda Lehman CH2M HILL Inc. Paper Reviewer Kevin Brown Vanderbilt University CRESP 1335 Choosing your Nuclear Fuel Cycle A Life Cycle Assessment Perspective - 16425 Andrea Paulillo Paola Lettieri University College London United Kingdom Steve Palethorpe National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Andrew Miliken Sellafield Ltd. United Kingdom Roland Clift University of Surrey United Kingdom 1400 ZEM Integrated Framework for Real-Time Data and Model Analyses for Robust Environmental Management Decision Making - 16438 Velimir Vesselinov Dan OMalley Danny Katzman Los Alamos National Laboratory 1425 Simulating and Optimizing Complex Groundwater Restoration Problems Using Parallel Numerical Methods Theory and Application - 16578 Tad Fox Larry Deschaine Xinyu Wei HydroGeoLogic Inc. Janos Pinter Pinter Consulting Services Inc. 1450 Building a Credible and Updated WIPP Performance Assessment - New Knowledge Versus Conservative Assumptions A Balancing Act - 16299 Kathleen Economy US EPA 1520 Demonstration of Wide Area Radiological Decontamination and Mitigation Technologies for Building Structures and Vehicles - 16508 Ryan James Battelle Sang Don Lee Matthew Magnuson US EPA 1545 Waste Estimation from a Wide-Area Radiological Incident The Impact of Geography and Urban Footprint - 16256 Timothy Boe US Environmental Protection Agency Colin Hayes Eastern Research Group Inc. Paul Lemieux Daniel Schultheisz Thomas Peake US EPA TUESDAY PM 84 1610 Advances in Thermal-Hydrologic Modeling of Nuclear Waste Disposal in Deep Boreholes - 16303 Teklu Hadgu Geoff Freeze Ernest Hardin Emily Stein Glenn Hammond Robert MacKinnon Sandia National Laboratories Session 71 1330 - 1700 Room 1st Floor Foyer Environmental Remediation Topic A Posters Environmental Remediation Analysis Technology and Treatment Systems Session Co-Chairs Moses Jaraysi CH2M HILL PRC Joy Shoemake Mission Support Alliance Lead Organizer Hope Lee Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Joy Shoemake Mission Support Alliance A1. DOE Climate Change Vulnerability and Adaptation Planning - 16056 Beth Moore Yoel Rotterman US DOE Josh Silverman U.S. DOE Office of Sustainability Support Eric Bradley US DOE Office of Sustainability Support A2. TinIIapatite Synthesis Characterization and Challenge with Pertechnetate - 16194 Heinz Huber Jim Duncan RJ Lee Group Inc. Robert Moore Mark Rigali Sandia National Laboratories Ridha Malbrouki Elvie Brown Washington River Protection Solutions A3. Development of an Integrated Hydrological Model for Simulation of Surface Runoff and Stream Flow in Tims Branch Watershed - 16203 Mehrnoosh Mahmoudi Angelique Lawrence Shimelis Setegn Natalia Duque Applied Research Center - FIU Brian Looney Savannah River National Laboratory A4. High Angle Remediation of Legacy Mercury Contaminated Soil at LANL - 16276 Scott Muggleton Peter Gram Evangelos Gletsos TerranearPMC Todd Haagenstad John Branch Los Alamos National Laboratory A5. Evolving Adjustments to External Gamma Slope Factors for CERCLA Risk and Dose Assessments the MCNP Years - 16307 Stuart Walker US EPA A6. US EPA Superfund Radiation Risk and Dose Assessment Models Update New Revised and Upcoming Tools - 16308 Stuart Walker US EPA A7. Environmental Characterization Scans Using Sodium-Iodide Gamma Spectroscopy to Determine Ra-226 Concentration in Surface Soil - 16326 Ryan Penney Chris Bryson Envirachem Inc. A8. Uranium Extraction by Apricot Shell - 16501 Ilkhom Mirsaidov Nuclear and Radiation Safety Agency Tajikistan A9. Synergetic Interactions between Uranium Humic Acid Silica Colloids and SRS Sediments at Variable pH - 16524 Ravi Krishna Prasanth Gudavalli Christian Pino Yelena Katsenovich Applied Research Center - FIU Miles Denham Savannah River National Laboratory A10. Updates to the Spatial Analysis and Decision Assistance SADA Freeware Tool - 16583 Fred Dolislager University of Tennessee Robert Stewart Oak Ridge National Laboratory A11. Final Surrender of Radioactive Substances Environmental Permits on UK Nuclear Licensed Sites - 16646 Jim Cochrane Scottish Environment Protection Agency United Kingdom Juliet Long Environment Agency United Kingdom A12. Downhole MCA for High-Resolution Spectral Gamma Logging for Characterization of Radiological Contaminants - 16321 James Meisner Rick McCain Arron Pope Kristopher Felt Stoller Newport News Nuclear Topic B Posters Environmental Remediation Field Investigation and Remediation Session Co-Chairs Moses Jaraysi CH2M HILL PRC Joy Shoemake Mission Support Alliance Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Hope Lee Pacific Northwest National Laboratory B1. Remote Geophysical Logging at the Hanford Single Shell Tank Farms Maintaining Efficiency and Reducing Personnel Hazards - 16190 Kristopher Felt Arron Pope Chuck McClellan Bob Spatz James Meisner Stoller Newport News Nuclear B2. Standardization of Geophysical Logging Data at the Hanford Site - 16208 Rick McCain Arron Pope Paul Henwood Stoller Newport News Nuclear B3. Correction for Turbidity and pH Interference for In Situ Hexavalent Chromium Monitoring - 16297 Janine Carter Stephen Hall Freestone Environmental Services Inc. TUESDAY PM 85 B4. Using GIS for Processing Analysis and Visualization of Hydrological Model Data - 16202 Angelique Lawrence Mehrnoosh Mahmoudi Shimelis Setegn Natalia Duque Awmna Rana Applied Research Center - FIU Brian Looney Savannah River National Laboratory B5. Migration and Distribution of Natural Organic Matter Injected into Subsurface Systems - 16523 Ravi Krishna Prasanth Gudavalli Kiara Pazan Applied Research Center - FIU Miles Denham Brian Looney Savannah River National Laboratory B6. Performance of a Surface Barrier for Waste Isolation and Flux Reduction at the Hanford Site- 16099 Zhuanfang Fred Zhang Mark Freshley Dawn Wellman Pacific Northwest National Laboratory John Morse Kevin Leary US DOE B7. Lessons Learned in Implementation of Radiological Investigations of Small-Scale Sites in Port Hope Ontario - 16534 Walter van Veen John Benson Erwin Santiago Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Canada B8. Assessment of a Hydroxyapatite Permeable Reactive Barrier to Remediate Uranium at the Old Rifle Site Colorado - 16193 Robert Moore Mark Rigali Sandia National Laboratories Jon R. Luellen AECOM Jim Szecsody Vince Vermuel Pacific Northwest National Laboratory B9. Application of Field Evaluations of Ecological Resources at Hanford and Other DOE Sites for Consistency of Resource Protection - 16404 Joanna Burger Michael Gochfeld Christian Jeitner Taryn Pittfield Rutgers University Amoret Bunn Janelle Downs Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Jennifer Salisbury Vanderbilt University - CRESP Session 72 1330 - 1700 Room 1st Floor Foyer Topic C Posters Communications Involvement Education and Training Session Co-Chairs Robert Berry Foxfire Scientific Inc United Kingdom Leonel Lagos Applied Research Center - FIU Lead Organizer Mindy Toothman AECOM Additional Organizers Paper Reviewer W.T. Goldston EnergySolutions C1. The Ambivalent Role of Participants in Nuclear Waste Decisions - 16360 Laura Hermann Potomac Communications Group C2. The US Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board Intern Program Developing Next Generation Nuclear Waste Professionals - 16102 Elaina Anderson University of Michigan Bret Leslie US Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board Margaret Butzen University of Wisconsin Madison C3. Distribution of Documents through the Robatel Technologies Client Portal - 16328 Jared Bower Donna Martin Robatel Technologies LLC C4. Quality Emergency Management Takes a Community - 16142 Richard Love Christine Lee Lynette Bennett CH2M HILL BWXT West Valley LLC Christopher Eckert US DOE MARCH 9 WEDNESDAY AM Session 73 0830 - 1200 Room 102BC Panel Cleanup of Fukushima NPP DD and Waste Management - Part 1 of 2 Session Co-Chairs Kurt Gerdes US DOE Mamoru Numata NDF Japan Lead Organizer Panel Reporter Jeannette Hyatt Savannah River National Laboratory Additional Organizers Mamoru Numata NDF Japan Kazuhiro Suzuki NDF Japan Mamoru Kamoshida Hitachi Ltd. Japan This two-part panel focuses on the continuing cleanup efforts at Fukushima. The first part in the morning will address the decommissioning strategy of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station as well as the wide range of support by foreign countries through examples. Panelists Mamoru Numata Special Adviser to Executive Directors NDF Japan Kazuhiro Suzuki Managing Director NDF Japan Paul Dickman Senior Policy Fellow Argonne National Laboratory Colin Austin Sr. Vice President Energy Solutions EnergySolutions John Raymont President and CEO Kurion Inc. Tracy Barker Chief Technical Officer and Principal Engineer AVANTech Inc. TUESDAY PM WEDNESDAY AM 86 Mayur Jagatia Director Business Development Amec Foster Wheeler United Kingdom Session 74 0830 - 1200 Room 105AB Panel Waste Management from Remediation of Legacy Sites or Unplanned Releases Session Co-Chairs Malgorzata Sneve NRPA Norway Ilkhom Mirsaidov Nuclear and Radiation Safety Agency Tajikistan Lead Organizer Malgorzata Sneve NRPA Norway Additional Organizers Ray Clark US EPA Panel Reporter Graham Smith GMS Abingdon Ltd United Kingdom Planning of remediation of legacy sites and contaminated areas arising in unplanned situations needs to take account of the management and regulation of radioactive wastes arising. However these wastes commonly present unusual characteristics which were not accounted for in design and development of national radioactive waste management strategies nor the corresponding regulatory frameworks. All these activities need to be coordinated accounting for exposure conditions at a site and in its continuing management. This panel will consider these issues taking into account developments in guidance on the application of international recommendations to different exposure situations and practical experience at example sites. Panelists Horst Monken Fernandes Environmental Remediation Specialist IAEA Austria Yoshiharu Hashizume General Manager Obayashi Corporation Japan Leo van Velzen Environmental and Nuclear Consultant Netherlands Stuart Walker Office of Superfund Remediation Technology Innovation OSRTI US EPA Ilkhom Mirsaidov National Liaison Assistant Head and INIS Liaison Officer Department of Information and Internation Nuclear and Radiation Safety Agency Tajikistan Session 75 0830 - 1010 Room 103AB Panel Dealing with Problematic US DOE Mixed Waste Streams and Policy Changes Session Co-Chairs Renee Echols Perma-Fix Environmental Services James Joyce US DOE Lead Organizer Panel Reporter Dick Blauvelt Portage Inc. Additional Organizers Renee Echols Perma-Fix Environmental Services Christine Gelles US DOE This panel plans to address the disposition of the more problematic US DOE and commercialnon-US DOE governmental waste streams. The panel will also focus on changes in mixed hazardousradioactive waste requirements based upon revisions to US DOE Order 435.1 changes in US Title 10 Code of Federal Regulations Part 61 10CFR61 along with any new requirements associated with the site-wide disposal contract. Accordingly the panel will address selected institutionalregulatory topics including but not limited to Removal of US EPA conservatively assigned Hazardous Waste Numbers HWNs and Allowances for blendingconsolidating wastes. Impact from the WIPP shutdown and funding issues may also be discussed. Panelists Lee Fox Acting Director Solid Waste Savannah River Nuclear Solutions John Wrapp Waste Disposition Manager URS CH2M Oak Ridge LLC Scott Anderson Vice President CH2M HILL BWXT West Valley. LLC Connie Simiele Vice President Waste and Fuels Management CH2M HILL PRC Randall Erickson Associate Director-Environmental Programs Los Alamos National Laboratory Kenneth Grumski Vice President of Federal Services Waste Control Specialists LLC WEDNESDAY AM 87 Session 76 1015 - 1200 Room 103AB Panel Industry and Public Feedback Site-specific Performance Assessments - US NRC 10CFR61 Rulemaking Session Co-Chairs Larry Camper USNRC Retired Advoco Professional Svcs LLC Tom Magette PricewaterhouseCoopers Lead Organizer Larry Camper USNRC Retired Advoco Professional Svcs LLC Additional Organizers Gregory Suber US NRC Panel Reporter Rateb Boby Abu Eid US NRC This panel focuses on the industry and public stakeholders reactions and input on the USNRC 10CFR61 Site-Specific performance assessment rulemaking as a result of the several NRC conducted public meetings including a Commission briefing to address the proposed rulemaking. The proposed rulemaking is expected to be delivered by the NRC staff to the Commission as a final rule by May of 2016. This panel will focus on the final changes to rulemaking resulting from the various stakeholder input. Panelists Gregory Suber Chief of the Low-Level Waste Branch US NRC Lisa Edwards LLW Radiation Management Sr. Program Manager EPRI John Greeves Senior Regulatory Environmental Consultant Talisman International Scott Kirk Vice President Licensing and Regulatory Affairs Waste Control Specialists LLC Matt Pacenza Executive Director Heal Utah Susan Jenkins Program Manager Infectious and Radioactive Waste SCDHEC Charles Maguire Director Radioactive Materials Division Texas Commission on Environmental Quality Session 77 0830 - 1200 Room 102A Global Use of Cementitious Waste Forms for LLWILW Session Co-Chairs Heinz Kroeger TV NORD EnSys Hannover Germany Christine Langton Savannah River National Laboratory Lead Organizer Paul Macbeth Independent Strategic Management Solutions Inc Additional Organizers Kapila Fernando ANSTO Australia Kip McDowell Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Christine Langton Savannah River National Laboratory 0835 Selection and Validation of Alternate Slag Sources for Saltstone Production - 16145 Steven Simner Victoria Kmiec Savannah River Remediation Ian Pegg Catholic University of America 0900 Cementitious Grouts for ILW Encapsulation Hydration Continuity of Supply within the UK - 16184 Josh Hawthorne Leon Black University of Leeds United Kingdom Gavin Cann National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom 0925 New Formulation of Cast Stone for Tc Immobilization in Sulfate Rich Secondary Waste Stream - 16098 Wooyong Um Benjamin Williams Jeffrey Serne Gary L. Smith Joseph Westsik Pacific Northwest National Laboratory David Swanberg Washington River Protection Solutions 0950 Optimizing Blends of Blast Furnace Slag for the Immobilization of Nuclear Waste - 16245 Rebecca Sanderson The University of Sheffield United Kingdom Gavin Cann National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom John Provis The University of Sellafield United Kingdom 1020 On the Robustness of a Cement-Based Matrix for the Conditioning of Evaporator Concentrates - 16417 Erik Coppens ONDRAFNIRAS Belgium Pascal Antonucci Cline Cau dit Coumes CEA France 1045 Update on SRNL Support of Saltstone Sampling and Analysis - 16325 Marissa Reigel Kimberly Roberts Katie Hill Savannah River National Laboratory Steven Simner Savannah River Remediation WEDNESDAY AM 88 Session 78 1015 - 1200 Exhibit Hall 4 Panel US DOE Procurements and Contractor Delivery Challenges Session Co-Chairs Cathy Hickey CH2M HILL Inc. John Longenecker Longenecker Associates Lead Organizer Cathy Hickey CH2M HILL Inc. Additional Organizers John Longenecker Longenecker Associates Panel Reporter Shannon Farrell CH2M HILL Inc. This panel focuses on future US DOE Environmental Management procurements and process initiatives and contract implementation challenges. DOE procurement officials will provide an update on future procurement opportunities and process improvement initiatives underway. Representatives from the contracting community will discuss contract implementation trends and challenges. All WM Exhibitors can attend this session in the Exhibit Hall without a WM technical registration badge as a conference service. Panelists Jack Surash EM DAS for Acquisition and Project Management US DOE EM Andrew Wirkkala Director Office of Contract Assistance US DOE Ralph Holland Deputy Director Environmental Management Consolidated Business Center US DOE Kenneth Rueter President URS CH2M Oak Ridge LLC Greg Meyer Senior Vice President Environmental Nuclear Fluor Corporation Session 79 0830 - 1010 Room 104AB Panel UK Featured Site - Sellafield Legacy Ponds and Silos Session Co-Chairs Graham Jonsson NDA United Kingdom Fred Sheil Sheil Consulting Ltd United Kingdom Lead Organizer Graham Jonsson NDA United Kingdom Additional Organizers John Mathieson NDA United Kingdom A group of historic facilities at Sellafield known as the Legacy Ponds and Silos pose the greatest challenge that the NDA faces within its UK portfolio from a safety environmental engineering technical and economic perspective. Each of the facilities require immediate remediation due to the hazard potential that they contain and is the main focus for NDA as the clean-up mission is undertaken at Sellafield. The session will bring together key stakeholders from across the NDA estate where the approach to deal with these legacy facilities will be outlined and the progress to date demonstrated. Panelists Victoria Winspear -Roberts Superintending Inspector Office for Nuclear Regulation United Kingdom Ann McCall Director for Waste Management UK NDA United Kingdom Stephen Hardy Nuclear Regulation Manager Environment Agency United Kingdom Tom Foster Chief Decommissioning Officer Sellafield Ltd United Kingdom Session 80 1015 - 1200 Room 104AB Lessons Learned from the Safety Pause of Operations at Savannah River Nuclear Solutions September 2015 Session Co-Chairs Sharon Marra Savannah River National Laboratory Martin Schneider Longenecker Associates Lead Organizer Sharon Marra Savannah River National Laboratory Additional Organizers Judith Connell Fluor Corporation Jeannette Hyatt Savannah River National Laboratory Martin Schneider Longenecker Associates Panel Reporter Rudy Goetzman Savannah River National Laboratory This panel session will provide a brief overview of the event that led to an operational pause for Savannah River Nuclear Solutions SRNS contractor at the US DOE Savannah River Site. The panelists will then provide their thoughts on lessons learned as a result of the event investigation the subsequent discussions with staff and how the workforce is responding to the renewed focus on safety conduct of operations and awareness of performance drift. This event was initiated in September 2015 and the operational pause lasted several months. US and NonUS Government and Contractor Site Managers along with safety professionals will want to attend and gain the experience from the lessons learned. WEDNESDAY AM 89 Panelists Jack Craig SRS Site Manager US DOE Carol Johnson CEO Savannah River Nuclear Solutions Lee Fox Acting Director Solid Waste Savannah River Nuclear Solutions Bill Giddings Engineer EM Operations Savannah River Nuclear Solutions Session 81 0830 - 1200 Room 105C International Experience in Complex Site Characterization and Remediation Technologies Session Co-Chairs Kurt Gerdes US DOE Hope Lee Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Lead Organizer Kurt Gerdes US DOE Additional Organizers John Kristofzski Retired Hope Lee Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Hope Lee Pacific Northwest National Laboratory 0835 Evaluation and Application of Phytoremediation at FUSRAP Projects - 16275 Michelle Barker John Busse William Frederick Neil Miller Karen Keil Matthew R. Masset Jane Staten USACE 0900 The Challenge of Moving Science into Practice Lessons Learned and New Approaches - 16443 Carol Eddy-Dilek Kevin Kostelnik Miles Denham Savannah River National Laboratory 0925 Characterization of UVI-Bearing Precipitates Produced by Ammonia Gas Injection Technology for Unsaturated Sediments - 16600 Robert Lapierre Yelena Katsenovich Leonel Lagos Applied Research Center - FIU 0950 Microbial Influence on Iodine Speciation at the 200 West Hanford Site - 16549 Erin Moser University of Michigan Brady Lee Hope Lee Pacific Northwest National Laboratory 1020 Technical Evaluation of Iodine Remediation for 200-UP-1 - 16379 Hope Lee Brady Lee Michael Truex Mark Triplett Chris Johnson Michael Nimmons Amoret Bunn Bruce Napier Mark Freshley Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Daniel Kaplan Savannah River National Laboratory 1045 200 West Pump and Treat The First Three Years - 16473 Mark Carlson Sally Simmons Bill Barrett Mark Byrnes CH2M HILL PRC John Morse US DOE Emerald Laija US EPA 1110 Port Hope Area Initiative Community- Based Concepts Become Reality - 16538 Craig Hebert G. Glenn Case Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Canada 1135 Remediation of Occupied Commercial Property Subject to Widespread Radium- 226 Contamination - Update from WM2012 Paper - 16652 Philip Sinclair Ben Smee Lewis Miffling Amec Foster Wheeler United Kingdom Session 82 0830 - 1200 Room 106A Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program FUSRAP and US Army Corp of Engineers Projects Session Co-Chairs Margaret MacDonell Argonne National Laboratory Allen Roos USACE Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Allen Roos USACE Additional Organizers Margaret MacDonell Argonne National Laboratory 0835 Niagara Falls Storage Site - Interim Waste Containment Structure - 16199 John Busse William Frederick Michelle Barker Karen Keil Harold Spector Matthew R. Masset Arleen Kreusch Jane Staten Neil Miller USACE 0900 Colonie FUSRAP Site Radioactive Dust Sampling of Residential and Commercial Properties- 16384 Dave Watters James Moore USACE 0925 Transition and Transfer of Remediated FUSRAP Sites from USACE to US DOE for Long-Term Surveillance and Maintenance - 16209 Karen Reed Cliff Carpenter US DOE Michele Miller Navarro Research and Engineering Inc. Nicki Fatherly USACE 0950 High-Resolution Groundwater Investigation at a FUSRAP Site with an Aging Water- Supply Infrastructure - 16146 William Frederick Michael Polek Marc Graham Duane Lenhardt Scott McCabe USACE Jeff DeVaughn HydroGeoLogic Inc. 1020 Measurement Quality Objective Considerations for Residual Alpha Surface Radioactivity Measurements at Remediation Sites - 16522 Scott Hay Mike Winters Cabrera Services WEDNESDAY AM 90 1045 Maintenance of Maywood Laboratory Operations Support during Contractor Transition and Replacement of the Project Databases - 16329 Brian Tucker Mike Winters Greg Axler Doug Black Cabrera Services David Rich Geotech Computer Systems Christopher Kennedy USACE 1110 Instrument Efficiencies and ISO-7503 - 16525 Scott Hay Mike Winters Mike Plonski Cabrera Services Session 83 0830 - 1200 Room 106B Global Experience of Records Knowledge and Memory RKM for Nuclear Waste Geologic Repositories Session Co-Chairs Thomas Klein AECOM - WIPP Russell Patterson US DOE Lead Organizer Russell Patterson US DOE Additional Organizers Thomas Klein AECOM - WIPP Abraham Van Luik US DOE Paper Reviewer Thomas Klein AECOM WIPP 0835 Ethical Considerations for Developing Repository Warning Messages to the Future - 16152 Abraham Van Luik Gregory Sahd US DOE Thomas Klein AECOM - WIPP 0900 Considerations for Geologic Repository Planning Insights from Recent International Experiences - 16607 Jay Jones US DOE Margaret MacDonell Natalia Saraeva William Nutt Argonne National Laboratory Ellen Smith ORNL ESD Joe Rivers Rivers Consulting Diana Hirrlinger Mary Alice Spivey TechSource 0925 Key Information File for Radioactive Waste Repositories Preliminary Tests - 16169 Abraham Van Luik US DOE Jean-Nol Dumont Andra France Pierre-Henri De La Codre Nuclear Energy Agency NEA France Simon Wisbey Radioactive Waste Management Limited United Kingdom Sofie Tunbrant SKB Sweden 0950 There is Nothing Here for You Passive Institutional Controls and Preemptive Resource Exploitation - 16197 Robert Watson AECOM - URS John Callicoat AECOM-URS Corporation Andy Ward US DOE 1020 A Conceptual World Information Library WIL and Land Use Information System LUIS - 16181 Russell Patterson US DOE Mindy Toothman AECOM Thomas Klein AECOM - WIPP John Callicoat AECOM-URS Corporation 1045 Millennial Time Capsules as a Promising Means for Preserving Records for Future Generations - 16542 Claudio Pescatore Private Practice Consultant France Abraham Van Luik US DOE 1110 As Permanent as Practicable The Reality of Permanent Markers - 16191 Thomas Klein AECOM - WIPP Abraham Van Luik Russell Patterson US DOE 1135 Markers and Beyond Categorizing Human Intrusion Situations to be Addressed in Sub-Surface Marking Concepts - 16378 Stephan Hotzel GRS mbH Germany Simon Wisbey Radioactive Waste Management Limited United Kingdom Session 84 0830 - 1200 Room 106C Plans for and Experience in Transitioning to Decommissioning World Examples Session Co-Chairs Maria Lindberg Studsvik Nuclear AB Sweden Julia Tripp Idaho National Laboratory Lead Organizer Al Freitag Consultant Additional Organizers Rateb Boby Abu Eid US NRC Maria Lindberg Studsvik Nuclear AB Sweden Paper Reviewer Julia Tripp Idaho National Laboratory 0835 Transitioning a Nuclear Plant from Operations to Decommissioning - 16049 Joseph Carignan Carignan Associates LLC 0900 The Importance of Experience Based Decommissioning Planning - 16242 Arne Larsson Studsvik Nuclear AB Sweden Per Lidar Studsvik Consulting AB Sweden Gunnar Hedin Niklas Bergh Westinghouse Electric Sweden AB Sweden 0925 Applying Freeze Technology for Characterization of Liquids Sludge and Sediment - 16371 Howard Stevens Adam Foster Studsvik Inc. Jens Eriksson Studsvik Nuclear AB Sweden WEDNESDAY AM 91 0950 A WM Facility for the Processing of Radioactive Materials Arising from the Decommissioning Activities of the Doel Belgian NPP - 16042 Serge Vanderperre Caroline Goessens Candice De Jonghe Denis Maloir Maxime Wadin GdF Suez Tractebel Engineering Belgium 1020 Groundwater Monitoring Guidance for Decommissioning Planning - 16228 Karen Kim Richard McGrath EPRI 1045 The New International Project on Irradiated Graphite Processing Approaches GRAPA - 16559 Hans-Juergen Steinmetz Forschungszentrum Juelich GmbH Germany Gerard Laurent EDF France Michael Ojovan Patrick OSullivan Rebecca Robbins IAEA Austria Anthony Wickham Nuclear Technology Consultancy United Kingdom 1110 Dismantling of the Last Vessel in the Process Building - 16126 Reiner Praetorius Carina Passarge WAK GmbH Germany 1135 Innovative Extension of the EDF Inventory Methodology for Irradiated Graphite Sleeves - 16084 Bernard Poncet EDF France Session 85 0830 - 1200 Room 101C Geologic Disposal of HLW SNFUNF and Long-lived AlphaTRU - Status Plans Session Co-Chairs George Dials Pajarito Scientific Corporation Roger Nelson US DOE Lead Organizer Roger Nelson US DOE Additional Organizers Grald Ouzounian Andra France Chuan-Fu Wu ESH Solutions Ming Zhang Geological Survey of Japan AIST Japan Paper Reviewer Chuan-Fu Wu ESH Solutions 0835 Realization of the National Disposal Facility for Radioactive Waste in Bulgaria - 16611 Enrique Biurrun Thilo Von Berlepsch DBE Technology GmbH Germany Ira Stefanova SERAW Bulgaria Emiliano Gonzalez Herranz Westinghouse Electric Spain Spain 0900 NWMO Canadian Used Nuclear Fuel Repository - 16314 Jennifer Noronha Nuclear Waste Management Organization Canada 0925 Cigeo the French Geological Disposal Facility Project Preliminary Design APS Phase - 16038 Grald Ouzounian Jean-Marie Krieguer Frederic Launeau Thibaud Labalette Pierre- Marie Abadie Andra France 0950 Future German RD on HLW Disposal - 16519 Walter Steininger Karlsruhe Institute of Technology Germany Holger Wirth German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy Germany 1020 Evaluation of Current Knowledge for Building the Dutch Salt Safety Case - 16024 Jaap Hart Thomas J. Schrder Jan Prij Nuclear Research and Consultancy Group Netherlands Dirk-Alexander Becker GRS Braunschweig Germany Jens Wolf Ulrich Noseck Dieter Buhmann GRS mbH Germany Geert-Jan Vis TNO Geological Survey of the Netherlands Netherlands 1045 Update on Implementing Geological Disposal in the UK - 16266 Natalyn Ala Bruce McKirdy Radioactive Waste Management United Kingdom 1110 Rock Salt A 60-Year-Old U.S. Prodigy for Safe Disposal of HLW - 16010 Leif G Eriksson Nuclear Waste Dispositions 1135 From Banned to Allowed Pathway to Sub- seabed HLW Repositories - 16279 Craig Porter Jetseal Engineering and Technical Services LLC Session 86 0830 - 1200 Room 101B Experience in Waste Treatment and Process Updates an International Perspective Session Co-Chairs Christian Ladirat CEA France John Vienna Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Lead Organizer Sharon Marra Savannah River National Laboratory Additional Organizers Christian Ladirat CEA France Michael Ojovan University of Sheffield United Kingdom Mark Shepard Los Alamos National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Mark Shepard Los Alamos National Laboratory 0835 Waste Treatment Immobilization Plant a Leader in the International Glass Community - 16003 Albert Kruger William Hamel US DOE WEDNESDAY AM 92 0900 Transitioning from Construction to Startup at WTP from a Plant Engineering Perspective - 16461 Ryan Covert Jeffrey Markillie URS - AECOM David Green Roger Wahlquist Ronald Nargi Bechtel National Inc. Steven Churchil Gregory Laine URS-AECOM 0925 Progress Update for the Hanford Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plant Project - 16281 William Hamel Joanne Grindstaff US DOE 0950 Progress on Resuming Full Construction on the Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plants High-Level Waste Facility - 16283 William Hamel Langdon Holton Isabelle Wheeler Wahed Abdul US DOE 1020 Progress Update on the Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plant Pulse-Jet Mixed Vessel Testing Program - 16286 Langdon Holton Isabelle Wheeler Bradley Eccleston US DOE 1045 Aging Infrastructure Application of System Health Monitoring at the Defense Waste Processing Facility - 16069 Aaron Staub Savannah River Remediation 1110 UMo Solutions Processing in La Hague Cold Crucible Induction Melter the Feedback from the First Years of Operation - 16376 Rgis Didierlaurent Eric Leveel Catherine Veyer Isabelle Trvisan Stephane Philippe AREVA France Cline Roussel AREVA NC France Jean Francois Hollebecque CEA France Olivier Pinet CEA Marcoule France 1135 Progress on Resolution of Technical Issues at the Hanford Waste Treatment And Immobilization Plant Project - 16285 Langdon Holton Isabelle Wheeler US DOE Session 87 0830 - 1200 Room 1st Floor Foyer Decontamination Decommissioning DD - Topic A Posters DD Technology Session Co-Chairs Michelle Claggett Project Enhancement Corporation Al Freitag Consultant Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Michelle Claggett Project Enhancement Corporation A1. Chemical and Foaming Stability of Foam Decontaminating Agents - 16137 Chong Hun Jung In-Ho Yoon Cho-Rong Kim Han-Beom Yang Wang-Kyu Choi Jei-Kwon Moon Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute South Korea A2. Applicability of Laser Cutting and Decontamination Technologies for Remote Decommissioning Work - 16115 Takashi Mitsui Hiroshi Kinugawa Manabu Kishimoto Katsura Oowaki IHI Corporation Japan A3. Sorption and Transport Behavior of Cs-137 Sr-90 and Tc-99 on Geological Media in Radioactive Waste Repository South Korea - 16112 Won-Seok Kim Jungjin Kim Pohang University of Science and Technology South Korea Wooyong Um Pacific Northwest National Laboratory A4. Nuclear Fuel Traces Definition in Storage Ponds of Research VVR-2 and OR Reactors in NRC Kurchatov Institute - 16022 Alexey Stepanov Iurii Simirskii Ilia Semin Anatoly Volkovich National Research Centre - Kurchatov Institute Russian Federation A5. Wow Technologys Innovative Radioactive Liquid Waste Treatment - 16128 Adriano Marin Wow TEchnology SpA Italy A6. Advances in Decommissioning Using Laser Cutting - 16035 Paul Hilton Ali Khan TWI Ltd United Kingdom Daniel Lloyd Laser Optical Engineering United Kingdom Nick Ellis ULO Optics Ltd United Kingdom A7. Computational and Experimental Examination of Simulated Core Damage and Relocation Dynamics of a BWR Fuel Assembly - 16013 Gary Hanus Phoenix Solutions Co Ikken Sato Japan Atomic Energy Agency Japan Tatsuya Iwama Sojitz Machinery Corporation Japan Topic B Posters Decommissioning Session Co-Chairs Rateb Boby Abu Eid US NRC Michelle Claggett Project Enhancement Corporation Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Rateb Boby Abu Eid US NRC B1. 300-296 Soil Remediation Project - Innovative Solutions to Overcome Design Challenges - 16229 Dan Richey Kathleen Leonard Bryan Flanagan AREVA Federal Services LLC B2. Application of MARSSIM and MARSAME Guidance to Footprint Reduction Projects at a DOE Site - 16216 Jessica Gillis Jeffrey Whicker Los Alamos National Laboratory WEDNESDAY AM 93 B3. Development and Expansion of Research Facilities to Address the Challenges of the Nuclear Industry - 16055 Laura Leay Will Bower Simon Watson Simon Pimblott University of Manchester United Kingdom Logan Barr The University of Manchester United Kingdom B4. Development of the Advanced T-OZONTM for PWR Decommissioning - 16062 Koji Negishi Yumi Yaita Masato Okamura Toshihiro Yoshii Yasushi Yamamoto Taro Kanamaru Satoru Abe Hiromi Aoi Akira Ikeda Toshiba Co. Japan Neil Swift Tippetts Darik Randy Duncan Westinghouse Electric Company Topic C Posters Robotic Technologies Session Co-Chairs Michelle Claggett Project Enhancement Corporation Al Freitag Consultant Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Al Freitag Consultant C1. Robotics Technologies on Knowledge Management Information Tool KM-IT Platform - 16465 Himanshu Upadhyay Leonel Lagos Walter Quintero Peggy Shoffner Applied Research Center - FIU John De Gregory US DOE C2. Remote-Controlled Removal of Bricks from a Reactor Shaft An Unconventional Approach - 16406 Oliver Fath Anja Graf WAK GmbH Germany C3. Observation Technology for Remote Operation in Contaminated Turbid Water - 16113 Takashi Mitsui Manabu Kishimoto IHI Corporation Japan Topic D Posters DD Regulations Session Co-Chairs Michelle Claggett Project Enhancement Corporation Al Freitag Consultant Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Al Freitag Consultant D1. Introduction on Recently Revised Regulatory Framework Related to Decommissioning of Nuclear Facilities in Korea - 16488 JungJoon Lee Sangmyeon Ahn Byung Soo Lee Jae hak Cheong Korea Institute of Nuclear Safety South Korea D2. Model Regulation for the Decommissioning - 16616 John Rowat Vladan Ljubenov IAEA Austria Patrice Francois IRSN France John Greeves Talisman International Topic E Posters DD Monitoring Session Co-Chairs Rateb Boby Abu Eid US NRC Michelle Claggett Project Enhancement Corporation Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Rateb Boby Abu Eid US NRC E1. New High - Throughput Measurement Systems for Radioactive Wastes Segregation and Free Release - 16166 Jiri Suran Jana Smoldasova Jaroslav Solc Petr Kovar Czech Metrology Institute Czech Republic Lukas Skala Envinet Czech Republic Tatjana Bogucarska European Commission DG JRC Italy Pierino De Felice Istituto Nazionale di Metrologia delle Radiazioni Ionizzanti Italy Bent Pedersen JRC Belgium Raf van Ammel Faidra Tzika JRC Italy Simon Jerome National Physical Laboratory United Kingdom Dirk Arnold Physikalisch- Technische Bundesanstalt Germany Topic F Posters Demolition Session Co-Chairs Michelle Claggett Project Enhancement Corporation Robert Vellinger TerranearPMC LLC Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Robert Vellinger TerranearPMC LLC F1. Seismic Qualification of the Sellafield UK Silo Emptying Plant - 16174 Jeremy Bateman-Williams Warren Price Darren Potter National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom F2. Removing of Core Constructions of the MR and RFT Reactors in NRC Kurchatov Institute - 16054 Alexander Chesnokov Oleg Ivanov Vyacheslav Kolyadin Alexey Lemus Vitaly Pavlenko Sergey Semenov Sergey Fadin Iurii Simirskii National Research Centre - Kurchatov Institute Russian Federation Session 88 0830 - 1200 1st Floor Foyer Packaging and Transportation OT - Topic A Posters Casks Packaging Session Co-Chairs Christopher Brandjes Ameriphysics Edward Ketusky Savannah River National Laboratory Lead Organizer Christopher Brandjes Ameriphysics Paper Reviewer Paul Jones Ameriphysics WEDNESDAY AM 94 A1. Developments that are Making the Versa-Pac Indeed More Versatile and More Useful to Industry - 16267 Norman Kent Tanya Sloma Mike Arnold Charlie Murphy DAHER-TLI A2. The Approach of the Environmental Consequences and Impacts during Transport of Radioactive Materials RAMA Safety Case - 16420 Gheorghe Vieru Institute for Nuclear Research Romania A3. The Effectiveness of Gd Contents of Fuel Basket Wall in UNF Shipping Storage Cask - 16598 Mi Jin Kim Dong-Seong Sohn Hee-Jae Lee Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology South Korea A4. Investigation of Inorganic Hydrophobic Filter Material for Nuclear Material Transportation and Storage Containers - 16640 Tristan Karns Paul Smith Kirk Veirs Los Alamos National Laboratory A5. Realization of a High Efficiency Container for Disposal of Type A Fissile Waste for the US Government - 16654 Paul Blanton Kurt Eberl Savannah River National Laboratory Topic B Posters Innovations and Collaborations in Packaging Session Co-Chairs Paul Jones Ameriphysics Mike Nolan Energy NW Columbia Lead Organizer Paul Jones Ameriphysics Paper Reviewer Edward Ketusky Savannah River National Laboratory B1. Life Cycle Costing in Radioactive Waste Packaging Reducing Costs whilst Accelerating Clean-Up - 16131 Mark Johnson Mark Janicki Croft Associates Ltd United Kingdom B2. Dewatering Innovations - 16381 Paul Jones Ameriphysics Bill Boggia ONRL- UCOR Topic C Posters Spent Nuclear Fuel and Interim Storage Session Co-Chairs Kent McDonald Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Chi-Fung Tso Arup United Kingdom Lead Organizer Chi-Fung Tso Arup United Kingdom Paper Reviewer Ashok Kapoor US DOE C1. Impact of Slenderness on Dry Storage Cask Seismic Response - 16225 Ahmed Maree David Sanders Taylor Nielsen University of Nevada Reno Sharad Dangol Joel Parks Luis Ibarra Chris Pantelides University of Utah Session 89A 0830 - 1200 1st Floor Foyer Special Topics and Multi-Track Crosscutting Technology - Topic A Posters Session Co-Chairs Kim Auclair KD Auclair Associates Linda Lehman CH2M HILL Inc. Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Linda Lehman CH2M HILL Inc. A1. Data Analysis for NEPA Supplement Analysis of Chemistry and Metallurgy Research Building Replacement Project at LANL - 16017 Steven Booth Los Alamos National Laboratory A2. Hydraulic Conductivity for Porous Medium with Wavy 3-D Pores - 16244 Cheo Kyung Lee Handong Global University South Korea A3. Flow in and Permeability of Porous Media for Turbulent Flow - 16117 Cheo Kyung Lee Sophy Sok Handong Global University South Korea Sung Paal Yim Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute South Korea A4. An Analysis of Maximum Allowable Radiation Levels in Soil Comparing Risk Models of International and National Agencies - 16306 Allaa Mageid US EPA A5. Development and Maintenance of a Comprehensive Radioactive Waste Management Basis - 16349 Kristen Willis Rob Black Idaho National Laboratory Topic B Posters Deep Borehole Disposal Session Co-Chairs Leif G Eriksson Nuclear Waste Dispositions Stefan Mayer IAEA Austria Lead Organizer Leif G Eriksson Nuclear Waste Dispositions Paper Reviewer Leif G Eriksson Nuclear Waste Dispositions B1. Waste Handling and Emplacement Options for Disposal of Radioactive Waste in Deep Boreholes - 16277 John Cochran Ernest Hardin Sandia National Laboratories WEDNESDAY AM 95 MARCH 9 - WEDNESDAY PM Session 90 1330 - 1700 Room 105AB Panel US DOE Featured Site Sandia National Laboratories Session Co-Chairs Frank Hansen Sandia National Laboratories Paul Shoemaker Sandia National Laboratories Lead Organizer Paul Shoemaker Sandia National Laboratories Additional Organizers Panel Reporter Frank Hansen Sandia National Laboratories This panel focuses on the Sandia National Laboratories A DOENNSA national laboratory. It will showcase Sandias roles and contributions in a wide variety of technical activities related to the back-end of the nuclear fuel cycle across multiple programs and in support of multiple sponsors and customers. Panelists Paul Shoemaker Senior Manager Sandia National Laboratories Evaristo Tito Bonano Senior Manager Sandia National Laboratories Christi Leigh Technical Department Manager Sandia National Laboratories Sylvia Saltzstein Technical Department Manager Sandia National Laboratories Kevin McMahon Technical Department Manager Sandia National Laboratories Evaristo Tito Bonano Senior Manager Sandia National Laboratories Second Presentation Session 91 1330 - 1700 Room 102BC Panel Fukushima Daiichi NPP - Focus on Offsite Cleanup and International Collaboration - Part 2 of 2 Session Co-Chairs Mamoru Numata NDF Japan Rob Seifert US DOE Lead Organizer Jeannette Hyatt Savannah River National Laboratory Additional Organizers Mamoru Numata NDF Japan Mamoru Kamoshida Hitachi Ltd. Japan Panel Reporter Andrew Fellinger Savannah River National Laboratory This two-part panel focuses on the continuing support for Fukushima cleanup efforts. This second part in the afternoon will focus on the Fukushima Daiichi off-site contamination by the accident and the present situation at and around Fukushima. Panelists Mamoru Numata Special Adviser to Executive Directors NDF Japan Hidetoshi Kuramochi Section Head Center for Material Cycles and Waste Management Research National Institute for Environmental Studies Japan Takahiro Nakanishi Assistant Principal Fukushima Environmental Safety Center of JAEA Japan Masamichi Obata Chief Specialist Toshiba Coporation Japan Steve Rima Vice President Radiological Services and Engineering Amec Foster Wheeler Yoshiharu Hashizume General Manager Obayashi Corporation Japan Jeff Griffin Associate Laboratory Director - Environmental Chemical Process Tech. Savannah River National Laboratory Session 92 1330 - 1700 Room 106C ESPRC DISTINCTIVE Research Programme Session Co-Chairs Mike Angus National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Ian Pegg Catholic University of America Lead Organizer Keith Miller National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Additional Organizers Anthony Banford National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Abigail Ward University of Leeds United Kingdom Paper Reviewer James Marra Savannah River National Laboratory 1335 Collaborative Research Programme in Decommissioning Immobilisation and Storage Solutions for Nuclear Waste Inventories DISTINCTIVE - 16466 Michael Fairweather Abigail Ward University of Leeds United Kingdom William Lee Imperial College London United Kingdom Colin Boxall Lancaster University United Kingdom N.D.M Evans Loughborough University United Kingdom J.A Hriljac University of Birmingham United Kingdom Thomas Scott University of Bristol United Kingdom Simon Pimblott Nikolas Kaltsoyannis University of Manchester United Kingdom Simon Biggs University of Queensland Australia Neil Hyatt University of Sheffield United Kingdom Rebecca Lunn University of Strathclyde United Kingdom WEDNESDAY PM 96 1400 Building Effective Collaborations to Bring Innovation into Waste Management and Decommissioning - 16477 Mike Angus Anthony Banford Anthony Collins National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Ian Pegg Catholic University of America 1425 A Novel Approach for the Study of Corrosion and Ageing of Spent Nuclear Fuel Looking Inside the box From a Distance. - 16467 Thomas Scott Leila Costelle James Darnbrough Keith Hallam Camilla Stitt Haris Paraskevoulakos Ross Springell Antonios Banos University of Bristol United Kingdom 1450 Behavior of Alpha Emitters in Cement - 16139 Mike Angus Robin Orr Martin Hayes National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Claire Corkhill University of Sheffield United Kingdom 1520 Water Interactions with Actinide Oxides from First Principles A Computational Study - 16470 Bengt Tegner Nikolas Kaltsoyannis University of Manchester United Kingdom Andrew Kerridge Lancaster University United Kingdom 1545 The Consolidation of Glass-Ceramic Wasteforms by Hot Isostatic Pressing Sample Optimisation - 16581 Stephanie Thornber Martin Stennett Neil Hyatt University of Sheffield United Kingdom Ewan Maddrell National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom 1610 Degradation of Simulated HLW Glass and International Simple Glass Immersed Partially in Water - 16474 R.K Chinnam William Lee Imperial College London United Kingdom 1635 A Novel Technology for Complex Rheological Measurements - 16471 Johannes Andries Botha Timothy Hunter Wei Ding David Harbottle University of Leeds United Kingdom Simon Woodbury NNL Central Laboratory United Kingdom Graham Mackay NNL Workington Laboratory United Kingdom Robin Cowley Sellafield Analytical Services United Kingdom Simon Biggs University of Queensland Australia Session 93 1330 - 1700 Room 104AB Panel ER Projects in Eastern Europe Central Asia Challenges and Opportunities IAEA TC Project RER 9121 Session Co-Chairs Peter Booth Hylton Environmental United Kingdom Horst Monken Fernandes IAEA Austria Lead Organizer Horst Monken Fernandes IAEA Austria Additional Organizers Panel Reporter Peter Booth Hylton Environmental United Kingdom This panel will present relevant achievements in countries that have participated in the IAEA Technical Cooperation Project RER 9121 Supporting Environmental Remediation Projects in Member States discuss their needs and challenges e.g. establishment of policy and strategy infra-structure development technology transfer regulatory developments stakeholder engagement strategies in decision making capacity building training etc. and the role and opportunities for contractors and multilateral organizations in supporting and implementing remediation projects in these regions. Panelists Horst Monken Fernandes Environmental Remediation Specialist IAEA Austria Christian Kunze Partner IAF - Radiokologie GmbH Germany Alice Mariana Dima Agentia Nucleara si Pentru Deseuri Radioactive ANDR Romania Natalia Latynova Senior Lecturer ROSATOM CICET Russian Federation Ilkhom Mirsaidov National Liaison Assistant Head and INIS Liaison Officer Department of Information and Internation Nuclear and Radiation Safety Agency Tajikistan Svitlana Kulchytska Deputy Head of Department of Nuclear Energy and Atomic Industry Complex Ministry of Energy and Coal Industry of Ukraine Ukraine Tailabek Termiraliev Secretary of State Ministry of Emergency Situation of the Kyrgyz Republic WEDNESDAY PM 97 Session 94 1330 - 1510 Room 103AB Panel Challenges in US DOE HLW Tank Management Doing More with What We Have Session Co-Chairs James Folk US DOE Kenneth Picha US DOE Lead Organizer Tom Brouns Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Additional Organizers Kenneth Picha US DOE Craig West US DOE EM Panel Reporter Craig West US DOE EM This panel focuses on the successes and challenges of DOE high-level radioactive tank waste management with an emphasis on doing more with what we have. Field site headquarters and non-US representatives will discuss approaches results and lessons learned in applying LEAN concepts to high-level waste management increasing multi-site integration in areas of tank integrity and plant startup and commissioning and other examples of process improvement to increase efficiency of tank waste storage and treatment operations. Panelists William Condon One System Manager Washington River Protection Solutions Stuart MacVean President and Project Manager Savannah River Remediation Steve Schneider Acting Director Office of Waste Processing US DOE EM Frederic Bailly Country Director - USA - International Projects AREVA Federal Services Session 95 1515 - 1700 Room 102A Novel Inspection Tools and Equipment to Support Tank Storage Session Co-Chairs John Contardi Savannah River Remediation Crystal Girardot Washington River Protection Solutions Lead Organizer Bill Wilmarth Savannah River National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Larry Ling AECOM - Savannah River Remediation 1520 Development of Inspection Tools for the AY-102 Double-shell Tank at the Hanford DOE Site- 16383 Anthony Abrahao Hadi Fekrmandi Ryan Sheffield Dwayne McDaniel Applied Research Center - FIU 1545 Detection and Mitigation of Hanford Site Radioactive Waste Tank Surface Water Intrusion - 16396 Dennis Washenfelder AEM Consulting LLC Jeremy Johnson US DOE Kayle Boomer Dan Baide Jim Castleberry Amie Feero Theodore Venetz John Schofield Washington River Protection Solutions 1610 Inspection Technology Advancements for Hanford Double Shell Tank Integrity Verification - 16150 Samuel Glass Lorenzo Luzi Morris Good Michael Larche Kevin Anderson Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Kayle Boomer Jim Castleberry David Vasquez Washington River Protection Solutions 1635 Utilizing a Novel Acoustic Backscatter Array to Characterize Waste Consolidation and Settling in a Horizontal Flow Clarifier - 16051 Timothy Hunter David Cowell Hugh Rice Steven Freear Iain Smith Jeff Peakall Alastair Tonge Michael Fairweather University of Leeds United Kingdom David Burt Kevin Malone Darrell Egarr Lucy Horton MMI Engineering Ltd United Kingdom Geoff Randall Martyn Barnes Sellafield Ltd United Kingdom Simon Biggs University of Queensland Australia Session 96 1330 - 1700 Room 101C Technical Advancements in HLWSNF Disposal Part 1 of 2 Session Co-Chairs Sal Golub US DOE Chuan-Fu Wu ESH Solutions Lead Organizer Roger Nelson US DOE Additional Organizers Sal Golub US DOE Chuan-Fu Wu ESH Solutions Paper Reviewer Chuan-Fu Wu ESH Solutions 1335 Recovery of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant through the New Mexico Environment Department Administrative Order Process - 16310 William Most Ashley Urquidez Karen Day Rick Chavez AECOM Robert Kehrman RFK Consulting Services 1400 Actinide Containment Safety Case in a TRUHLW Repository in Salt - 16369 Donald Reed Los Alamos National Laboratory Russell Patterson US DOE 1425 Thermo-Hydraulic-Mechanical Modelling of the Full-Scale Emplacement FE Experiment at the Mont Terri Rock Laboratory - 16490 Kate Thatcher Alexander Bond Quintessa Ltd United Kingdom Benoit Garitte Tobias Vogt Herwig Mller NAGRA Switzerland WEDNESDAY PM 98 1450 Reconsolidated Salt as a Geotechnical Barrier - 16535 Casey Gadbury US DOE Frank Hansen Sandia National Laboratories 1520 Technical Approach for Retrieving Heat- Generating Waste from Repositories in Salt Formations - 16240 Philipp Herold Wilhelm Bollingerfehr Wolfgang Filbert Sabine Drr Eric Kuate Simo DBE Technology GmbH Germany 1545 Retrieval of HLW for the Cigo Project - A Practical Retrieval Test Story - 16085 Jean-Michel Bosgiraud Grald Ouzounian Pascal Leverd Yves Lorillon Marc Leguil Jean- Nol Dumont Andra France 1610 Enhanced Performance Assessment Models for Generic Deep Geologic Repositories for High-Level Waste and Spent Nuclear Fuel - 16223 David Sevougian Emily Stein Glenn Hammond Paul Mariner W. Payton Gardner Sandia National Laboratories 1635 Canadas Underground Research Laboratory 1980-2014 - 16274 Paul Thompson Deni Priyanto Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Canada Session 97 1330 - 1510 Room 101B Storage and Retrieval of SpentUsed Nuclear Fuel - Part 2 of 2 Session Co-Chairs John Gregory AREVA Federal Services LLC Tom Michener Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Lead Organizer John Gregory AREVA Federal Services LLC Additional Organizers Tom Brouns Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Keith Miller National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Mark Shepard Los Alamos National Laboratory Paper Reviewer John Gregory AREVA Federal Services LLC 1335 Key Challenges to Consent Based Siting of Disposal and Storage Facilities for Used Fuel and High Level Waste in the U.S. - 16560 Chuck Bernhard Bernhard Consulting LLC 1400 A New Consolidated Storage Facility for Used Nuclear Fuel in Andrews County Texas - 16418 Scott Kirk Waste Control Specialists LLC 1425 An Evaluation of Alternative Waste Management System Architectures - 16338 Casey Trail William Nutt Argonne National Laboratory Christopher Wentland Rice University Elena Kalinina Sandia National Laboratories 1450 Development of an Execution Strategy Analysis ESA Capability and Tool for the Management of Spent Nuclear Fuel SNF - 16575 William Nutt Natalia Saraeva Argonne National Laboratory Alan Keizur Alyssa Neir Golder Associates Inc. Ralph Stoll James Voss Ian Miller Predicus LLC John Greeves Talisman International Session 98 1515 - 1700 Room 101B Advances around the World in the Management of Nuclear Power Plant Dry Waste Session Co-Chairs Andreas Roth AMR German Products Services GmbH Germany Esko Tusa Fortum Power and Heat Oy Finland Lead Organizer Clint Miller Pacific Gas Electric Co Additional Organizers Mark Lewis EnergySolutions Paper Reviewer Mark Lewis EnergySolutions 1520 EPRI Project Update on International Nuclear Power Plant Waste Classification - 16224 Karen Kim Lisa Edwards EPRI 1545 EnergySolutions Waste Management Disposal Projects in the Peoples Republic of China - 16551 David Bergmann EnergySolutions 1610 Developments in Type B Casks Activities within EnergySolutions Cask Division - 16554 Aleksandr Gelfond EnergySolutions WEDNESDAY PM 99 Session 99 1330 - 1700 Room 106B Regulatory and Programmatic Issues and Solutions for LLWILW Session Co-Chairs Gabriele Bandt TV NORD EnSys Hannover Germany David Eaton CH2M-WG Idaho LLC Lead Organizer David Eaton CH2M-WG Idaho LLC Additional Organizers Gabriele Bandt TV NORD EnSys Hannover Germany Paper Reviewer Gabriele Bandt TV NORD EnSys Hannover Germany 1335 Revision of the Branch Technical Position on Concentration Averaging and Encapsulation - 16315 Maurice Heath James Kennedy Christianne Ridge Donald Lowman US NRC John Cochran Sandia National Laboratories 1400 Preferred Concepts for Disposal of the UK Inventory of Depleted Natural and Low Enriched Uranium - 16382 Daniel Galson Fiona Neall Liz Harvey Galson Sciences Ltd United Kingdom Lucy Bailey UK NDA United Kingdom 1425 Downgrading Nuclear Facilities to Radiological Facilities - 16428 Leroy Duran Jeff Jarry Sandia National Laboratories Jay Farr Weston Solutions Inc 1450 Cost Savings Resulting from Classified Component Disposal at the Nevada National Security Site NNSS - 16440 Jeanne Poling Pat Arnold Stefan Duke National Security Technologies Max Saad Sandia National Laboratories Layne Williams Drew Wallace US Air Force Kevin Cabble Janet Appenzeller-Wing US DOE 1520 Innovative Approach for Technetium-99 Disposal Reduces Operational Impacts - 16460 Annette Primrose Jeff Grindstaff Andrew Jacobs J Lane Butler URS CH2M Oak Ridge LLC Brian Henry OREM 1545 Low and Intermediate Active Waste Management in the Federal Republic of Germany - 16567 Barbara Freund Federal Ministry for the Environment Nature Conservation Building and Nuclear Safety Germany Session 100 1330 - 1700 Room 106A Packaging and Transportation of Radioactive and Other Hazardous Materials and Wastes Session Co-Chairs Kent McDonald Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Kip McDowell Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Paul Jones Ameriphysics Additional Organizers Larry Harmon Project Enhancement Corporation Paul Jones Ameriphysics Ashok Kapoor US DOE 1335 EnergySolutions Implementation of HM- 250 - 16641 Mark Ledoux EnergySolutions 1400 Obtaining a Special Administrative License Exemption to Ship the Waste Valley Melter Box - 16327 Edward Ketusky Charles McKeel Jeff England Savannah River National Laboratory Christopher Brandjes Ameriphysics Connor Shull Clemson University Daniel Sullivan US DOE Todd Pieczynski Waste Control Specialists LLC 1425 IP-2 Steam Generator Lower Assembly Packaging Transport and Disposal - 16510 Edward Posivak WMG Inc. 1450 Disposition of Chicago Pile 5 CP-5 Converter Tubes in the 10-160B Cask - 16632 Daniel Pancake ANTECH Argonne National Laboratory Christopher Brandjes Ameriphysics Cynthia Rock Argonne National Laboratory Jeff England Savannah River National Laboratory Dale Dietzel US DOE 1520 Shipping Grossly Dewatered Resins in the RT-100 Type B Transportation Cask - 16068 Jared Bower Robatel Technologies LLC 1545 Working in Partnership with Industry to Package Waste - 16263 Ann McCall UK NDA United Kingdom Martin Cairns Radioactive Waste Management United Kingdom 1610 Validation of the Modeling of Corrosion Driven Expansion in Grouted Wasteforms - 16125 Matthew Spence Darren Potter Geoffrey Patterson Nick Underwood National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom WEDNESDAY PM 100 Session 101 1330 - 1510 Room 105C DD of Nuclear Power Plants - Part 1 of 2 Session Co-Chairs Maria Lindberg Studsvik Nuclear AB Sweden Robert Vellinger TerranearPMC LLC Lead Organizer Al Freitag Consultant Additional Organizers Jas Devgun Consultant Paper Reviewer Andrew Szilagyi US DOE 1335 Global Solutions through Simulation for Better Decommissioning - 16457 Sabrine Idihia Romain Brevot OREKA Solutions France 1400 Development of the Real-Time Simulation System for Exposure Dose Assessment during Decommissioning of Nuclear Facilities - 16444 KwanSeong Jeong Jei-Kwon Moon Jong Won Choi ByungSeong Choi Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute South Korea 1425 Dismantling of Large Components from Phenix Reactor - 16015 Sandra Lengrand Franck Laurent Jean-Paul Grandjean Anne-Marie Roux CEA France 1450 Decommissioning Demonstration San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station South Yard Facility - 16544 Joe Heckman Amanda Moore-Wood EnergySolutions Session 102 1515 - 1700 Room 105C International Experience in Waste OptimizationMinimization and Harmonization during DD Session Co-Chairs Maria Lindberg Studsvik Nuclear AB Sweden Robert Vellinger TerranearPMC LLC Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Maria Lindberg Studsvik Nuclear AB Sweden Additional Organizers Joseph Boucau Westinghouse Electric Company Belgium Michelle Claggett Project Enhancement Corporation Robert Vellinger TerranearPMC LLC 1520 Optimization of Material Recycling during the Decommissioning Process of Nuclear Power Plants - 16123 Jan Philipp Dabruck RWTH Aachen University - NET Germany Arthur Sperling Christian Bttner RWTH Aachen - NET Germany Frank Charlier Rahim Nabbi RWTH Aachen University NET Germany 1545 Characterization and Remediation of Contaminated Concrete - 16020 Michael Snyder EPRI Maureen McQueen C.N. Associates 1610 Conservation and Recycling for Radiological-Contaminated Laundry Applications - 16044 Tim Trapuzzano Mike Sensibaugh Omega Technical Services Brian Quinley Shannon Eaker BES Technologies LLC Mike Eckerman Russ Carvin Smoky Mountain Solutions 1635 EPRI Software for Estimating Decommissioning Waste Volumes - 16046 Richard McGrath Richard Reid Michael Snyder EPRI Session 103 1330 - 1510 Room 102A International Experience in Community Involvement and Education Initiatives Session Co-Chairs Jeannette Hyatt Savannah River National Laboratory Margaret MacDonell Argonne National Laboratory Lead Organizer Heather Klebba NFT Additional Organizers Judith Connell Fluor Corporation Jeannette Hyatt Savannah River National Laboratory Margaret MacDonell Argonne National Laboratory Linda Suttora US DOE Paper Reviewer Margaret MacDonell Argonne National Laboratory 1335 After School Matters Program at the Hanford Site - 16569 Kalli Shupe Connie Simiele CH2M HILL PRC 1400 The INFODEM Information Centre at CEA Marcoule A Unique Information Tool in Europe about Nuclear Decommissioning - 16217 Cedric Garnier CEA Marcoule France 1425 Citizen Science Potential New Opportunity for Consent-Based Siting Processes - 16608 Margaret MacDonell W. Sam Nutt William Nutt Natalia Saraeva Young-Soo Chang Argonne National Laboratory Mary Woollen Elizabeth Helvey North Wind Services LLC Jay Jones US DOE 1450 Individuals Who Build Solutions Across Organizational Boundaries for Environmental Remediation Nuclear Waste Disposal - 16204 Laurel Boucher The Laurel Co WEDNESDAY PM 101 Session 104 1515 - 1700 Room 103AB Panel Approaches to Risk- Informed Regulations for Radwaste Management a Global Perspective Session Co-Chairs Christine Gelles US DOE Linda Suttora US DOE Lead Organizer W.T. Goldston EnergySolutions Additional Organizers Christine Gelles US DOE Jeannette Hyatt Savannah River National Laboratory Linda Suttora US DOE Panel Reporter Howard Pope Aspen Resources Ltd. Inc. This panel focuses on the risk-informed provisions for waste management of US DOE and UK radioactive wastes. The US DOE proposed regulation DOE Order 435.1A was recently released for public comment and panelists will discuss the provisions of this Order that have been revised in the proposal to risk inform the requirements. There will be representation from the order revision lead a large site and a small site discussing implementation on a graded approach. The UK representative will discuss implementation of the Low-Level Waste Disposal Requirements issued by the Office of Nuclear Regulation. Panelists Linda Suttora Senior Staff - Office of Environmental Compliance US DOE Ben Roberts Assistant Manager for Waste Disposition US DOE Dennis Thompson Managing Director Low Level Waste Repository United Kingdom Christine Gelles EM DAS for Waste Management Acting US DOE Session 105 1330 - 1700 Room 1st Floor Foyer Non-Paper Posters Topic for Emerging Issues and Late Abstracts Session Co-Chairs Gary Benda AVANTech Inc. Linda Lehman CH2M HILL Inc. Lead Organizer Gary Benda AVANTech Inc. A1. Desorption of Strontium and Europium from Common Building Materials toward the Development of a Remediation Wash Aid - 16347 Michael Kaminski Nadia Kivenas Argonne National Laboratory A2. System Architecture Interaction Matrix - 16301 Robert Joseph Robert Howard Oak Ridge National Laboratory William Nutt Argonne National Laboratory A3. Development of Cement Solidification Technique for Activated Graphite - 16066 Hirofumi Okabe Masaaki Kaneko Tatsuaki Sato Tetsuo Motohashi Toshiba Co. Japan A4. Characterizing and Controlling Crystallization from Complex Waste Solutions - 16072 Daniel Griffin Martha A. Grover Yoshiaki Kawajiri Ronald W. Rousseau Georgia Institute of Technology A5. Evaluation of Non-Metallic Materials in the Waste Transfer System - 16302 Dwayne McDaniel Amer Awwad Anthony Fernandez John Conley Applied Research Center - FIU A6. Application of Sophisticated Monte-Carlo and Activation Codes for Optimum Decommissioning of Nuclear Reactors - 16334 Jan Philipp Dabruck RWTH Aachen University - NET Germany Arthur Sperling RWTH Aachen - NET Germany Rahim Nabbi Bruno Thomauske Frank Charlier RWTH Aachen University NET Germany A7. Developing Remediation and Infrastructure Reconstruction for Former Uranium Production Facilities in Ukraine - 16692 Svitlana Kulchytska Ministry of Energy and Coal Industry of Ukraine Ukraine A8. Calculation of Neutron Flux for Spent Nuclear Fuel Storage Cask - 16689 Min Jun Kim Kwang Pyo Kim Kyung Hee Universiy South Korea Hee Jun Chung Korea Institute of Nuclear Nonproliferation and Control South Korea Seung Cheol Oh Kyung Hee University South Korea A9. Resource-constrained Decontamination Decommissioning Strategy from Supply Chain Management Perspective - 16681 Jun-Hyung Ryu Dongguk University South Korea A10. Final Environmental Impact Statement for the Disposal of Greater-Than-Class C Low- Level Radioactive Waste GTCC-like Waste - 16653 Theresa Kliczewski David Haught US DOE - EM Mary Picel Bruce Biwer Argonne National Laboratory A11. Solid Waste Management in Ghana A Case Study of Kenyasi NO1 and NO2 in Asutifi District- 16666 Evans Danso Czech University of Life Sciences Czech Republic WEDNESDAY PM 102 A12. Expanding the Horizon of Waste Data Mapping and Collection 16388 - 16659 Macbeda Uche Michael-Agwuoke Auckland University of Technology New Zealand A13. Expanding the Horizon of Waste Data Mapping and Collection - 16388 Philip Sallis Jacqueline Whalley Love Chile Macbeda Uche Michael-Agwuoke Auckland University of Technology New Zealand A14. A Method for the Assessment of Operational Safety of Final Disposal Facilities Using Probabilistics and Scenario Development - 16032 Stephan Uhlmann GRS gGmbH Germany MARCH 10 THURSDAY AM Session 106 0830 - 1010 Room 102BC Panel Transition to GoCo at Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Session Co-Chairs Christine Fahey Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Canada Lead Organizer Christine Fahey Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Canada Additional Organizers Robert Mason Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Canada Panel Reporter Brian Wilcox Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Canada This panel will focus on the completion of the restructuring of AECL and the transition of Canadian Nuclear Laboratories to a three-mission national laboratory that will manage under Government-owned contractor-operated model similarly to that employed at UK and US laboratories. With the recent competition of the procurement process and wind-up of the transition-in phase the panel will offer perspectives on the new business paradigm the vision for the future of the laboratories and the key initiatives that will be launched at CNL in the next 2 years. Panelists Richard Sexton VP Decommissioning WM Oversight AECL Canada Mark Lesinski President CEO Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Canada Kurtis Kehler Vice-President Decommissioning Waste Management Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Canada David Newland Senior Director New Major Facilities Licensing Division CNSC Canada Session 108A 0830 - 1200 Room 103AB Application of Innovative DD Technologies Part 2 of 2 Session Co-Chairs Rick Demmer Idaho National Laboratory Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Rick Demmer Idaho National Laboratory Additional Organizers Rateb Boby Abu Eid US NRC Julia Tripp Idaho National Laboratory 0835 Use of Multiple Remote Systems for Calcine Retrieval Operations at Idaho - 16592 John Ritter Peter Griffiths NuVision Engineering Inc. Troy Burnett Danielle Lower Jeffrey Klinger Kirk Dooley CH2M-WG Idaho LLC Laurie Judd Longenecker Associates Adam Mallion Andrew Graham OC Robotics United Kingdom Andrew Szilagyi Rodrigo Rimando US DOE 0900 Real Time Nanogravimetric Monitoring of Corrosion for Nuclear Decommissioning in Simulated Radioactive Environments - 16170 Ioannis Tzagkaroulakis Colin Boxall Lancaster University United Kingdom Divyesh Trivedi National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom 0925 GrayQb Single-Faced Version 2 Open Environment Test - 16344 Jean Plummer David Immel John Bobbitt Savannah River National Laboratory Mike Negron Savannah River Nuclear Solutions 0950 SeeSnake Radiological Characterisation of Complex Nuclear Spaces - 16162 Adam Mallion Rebecca Hillier Greg Udall Craig Wilson OC Robotics United Kingdom Matt Mellor Createc United Kingdom 1020 Investigating the Depth of Penetration of Radionuclides in Concrete - 16292 William Bostick Blake Dunaway Michele Sanders MCLinc 1045 The Characterisation and Removal of Water Droplets in High Pressure Water Jetting Nuclear Decontamination - 16036 Thomas Sanders Martin Gallagher University of Manchester United Kingdom 1110 Underwater Laser Cutting Technology - 16491 Seiichi Sato Takanori Inaba Koutarou Inose Naoyuki Matsumoto Yuji Sakakibara IHI Corporation Japan WEDNESDAY PM THURSDAY AM 103 1135 Conceptual Study of Fuel Debris Retrieval System for Fukushima Daiichi Reactors - 16111 Takashi Mitsui Manabu Kishimoto Hiromichi Maekawa IHI Corporation Japan Matt Cole Marc Rood Scott Martin Kurion Inc. Session 109 1015 - 1200 Room 102BC Panel US DOE Featured Site Lexington KY Office Portsmouth Paducah Sites Session Co-Chairs William Murphie US DOE Lisa Burns Energy and Waste Management Consultant Lead Organizer Panel Reporter Lisa Burns Energy and Waste Management Consultant Additional Organizers Yvette Cantrell Restoration Services Inc. Brad Mitzelfelt This panel focuses on the DOE-EM PortsmouthPaducah Project Office PPPO which manages the Portsmouth Ohio and Paducah Kentucky former Gaseous Diffusion Plant sites. For the Portsmouth DD Project DOE and regulators recently approved plans for controlled demolition of the massive gaseous diffusion process buildings and related facilities along with construction of an onsite waste disposal facility. For the Paducah Deactivation Project PPPO is continuing its groundwater remediation program while stabilizing and deactivating its process buildings and facilities in preparation for future DD. Demolition of the final inactive from Paducahs pre-shutdown cleanup scope waste completed in June 2015. Panelists Vincent Adams DOE Portsmouth Site Director US DOE Jennifer Woodard DOE Paducah Site Lead US DOE Dennis Carr Site Project Director Fluor Corporation Con Murphy Program Manager CBI John Woolery President BWXT Conversion Services Robert Edwards Acting Manager US DOE Session 110 0830 - 1200 Room 105C Roundtable Waste Management Energy Facilities Contractor Operating Group EFCOG Session Co-Chairs Renee Echols Perma-Fix Environmental Services Christine Gelles US DOE Lead Organizer Renee Echols Perma-Fix Environmental Services Additional Organizers Christine Gelles US DOE W.T. Goldston EnergySolutions Tammy Monday Perma-Fix Environmental Services This roundtable focuses on the WM EFCOG working group and will meet to discuss a variety of issues of importance to US DOE waste management operations. The purpose of the WM EFCOG is to seek out and promote the best management and operating practices cost effective technologies and disposal options for all waste streams generated at US DOE facilities whether destined for US DOE or commercial facilities. Each site representative will provide a radioactive waste management lessons learned briefing. Panelists subject to change. Panelists Dean Lobdell Fluor BWXT Portsmouth LLC Robert Vellinger VP Director of Western Operations TerranearPMC LLC Mark Duff Director Environmental Services Fluor Paducah Deactivation Program John Wrapp Waste Disposition Manager URS CH2M Oak Ridge LLC Connie Simiele Vice President Waste and Fuels Management CH2M HILL PRC Session 111 0830 - 1010 Room 106A Approaches to Fast Track Technology Development and Demonstration Session Co-Chairs Anthony Banford National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Andrew Szilagyi US DOE Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Anthony Banford National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Additional Organizers Rateb Boby Abu Eid US NRC Con Lyras ANSTO Australia Andrew Szilagyi US DOE THURSDAY AM 104 0835 Nuclear Technology Development Alliance Accelerating Technology Demonstration for Sellafield - 16637 Anthony Banford National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom 0900 Remote Retrieval Disruption and Processing of Legacy Nuclear Waste - 16179 Mike Angus NNL Jim Harken National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom John Clifford Sellafield Ltd United Kingdom 0925 LaserSnake2 Remote High Powered Laser Cutting in Confined Hazardous Spaces - 16161 Adam Mallion Craig Wilson Andrew Graham OC Robotics United Kingdom Paul Hilton TWI Ltd United Kingdom 0950 Status Update - Installation and Operation of GeoMelt ICV Process in the NNLs Central Laboratory on the Sellafield Site - 16410 Brett Campbell Keith Witwer Kevin Finucane Phillip Ohl Kurion Inc. Charlie Scales National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Session 112 0830 - 1200 Room 105AB Panel The Richland Operations Office Cleanup Mission at Hanford - Beyond the 2015 Vision Session Co-Chairs Erik Olds Richard Buel US DOE Lead Organizer Erik Olds US DOE Additional Organizers Stacy Charboneau US DOE Linda Suttora US DOE Panel Reporter Karen Lutz US DOE The cleanup mission of the US DOE Richland Operations Office at the Hanford Site in Washington State represents one of the largest and most technically complex environmental remediation projects in the DOE environmental management program. DOE continues to make visible and measurable cleanup progress at Hanford every day reducing the risks the site poses to the health and safety of workers the environment and the people living in the communities surrounding the site. DOE is continuing cleanup activities along the Columbia River and Central Plateau treating contaminated groundwater demolishing buildings remediating waste sites managing security and aging infrastructure and demolishing the most hazardous building at Hanford - the Plutonium Finishing Plant. Additional discussion topics include groundwater and soil remediation sludge retrieval and repackaging and facility DD. Panelists Stacy Charboneau Manager Richland Operations Office US DOE Mark Gilbertson EM DAS for Site Restoration US DOE John Ciucci President CEO CH2M HILL Plateau Remediation Company Robert Wilkinson Chief Operations Manager Mission Support Alliance Dennis Faulk Hanford Program Manager US EPA Session 113 1015 - 1200 Room 104AB Panel Experience of Records Knowledge and Memory RKM for Nuclear Waste Geologic Repositories Session Co-Chairs Thomas Klein AECOM - WIPP Russell Patterson US DOE Lead Organizer Russell Patterson US DOE Additional Organizers Thomas Klein AECOM - WIPP Abraham Van Luik US DOE Panel Reporter Robert Watson AECOM - URS This panel session focuses on the design and content of messages to the future being developed by various repository programs around the world. The focus will be on developing methods to communicate the aspects and effects of nuclear waste repositories to future generations. This panel may describe and debate differences and similarities in messages marker materials and designs and key elements of a records retention program. Special focus will center on the progress being made through the NEA RKM initiative. Panelists Abraham Van Luik International Programs Manager US DOE Stephan Hotzel Technical Expert - Physicist GRS mbH Germany Thomas Peake Director Center for Waste Management and Regulations US EPA THURSDAY AM 105 Session 114 0830 - 1010 Room 106B Investigations of Problematic Wastes and New Candidates for Immobilization Session Co-Chairs Andrew Fellinger Savannah River National Laboratory Leslie Jardine L.J. Jardine Services Lead Organizer Sharon Marra Savannah River National Laboratory Additional Organizers Leslie Jardine L.J. Jardine Services Mark Shepard Los Alamos National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Andrew Fellinger Savannah River National Laboratory 0835 Scientific Investigations on the Chemical Reactivity of Los Alamos Remediated Nitrate Salt Wastes - 16540 David Clark David Funk Bruce Robinson Los Alamos National Laboratory 0900 Synroc Wasteforms for Immobilization of Advanced Reprocessing Wastes - 16167 Yun-Hao Hsieh Denis Horlait Samuel Humphry-Baker William Lee Imperial College London United Kingdom Eric Lou Vance Daniel Gregg ANSTO Australia Lyndon Edwards Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organization Australia David Waite The University of New South Wales Australia 0925 Hydrothermal Synthesis and Analysis of Iodine-Containing Sodalite - 16153 Saehwa Chong Jacob Peterson John McCloy Washington State University Brian Riley Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Session 115 1015 - 1200 Room 106B Issues in Tank Chemistry Are There Worldwide Similarities Session Co-Chairs Steven Thomson National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Bill Wilmarth Savannah River National Laboratory Lead Organizer Bill Wilmarth Savannah River National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Harry Babad Author Consultant 1020 Pursuing Cost Effective Tank Waste Characterization at the Savannah River Site - 16172 Scott Reboul David DiPrete Frank Smith Robin Young John Pareizs Tad Whiteside Donald Pak Savannah River National Laboratory 1045 Crystallization of Sodium Phosphate Dodecahydrate and Re-crystallization to Natrophosphate in Simulated Hanford Nuclear Waste - 16188 Jacob Reynolds Washington River Protection Solutions Daniel Herting Washington River Protection Soltuions 1110 Evaluation and Impacts of Mercury in the SRS Liquid Waste System - 16121 Richard Edwards Vijay Jain Hasmukh Shah John Occhipinti Savannah River Remediation Bill Wilmarth Savannah River National Laboratory Session 116 0830 - 1010 Room 106C Advances in Nuclear Facility Operation and Optimization Session Co-Chairs Robert Jubin Oak Ridge National Laboratory Steven Thomson National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Robert Jubin Oak Ridge National Laboratory Additional Organizers Paul Bredt Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Steven Thomson National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom 0835 Life Extension of Nuclear Plant Facilities through Monitoring and Detailed Analysis - 16175 Nick Underwood Richard Field Darren Potter Keith Miller National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom 0900 A Model from the Mind to the Operating Facility - 16448 Paul Jennings John-Patrick Richardson Tim Tinsley National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom John Rowley Sellafield Ltd United Kingdom 0925 Magnox Reprocessing TDN Reactors Utilising 3D Printing and X-Ray Imaging to Re-Design and Test Fluidising Air Nozzles - 16402 Massimiliano Materazzi Paola Lettieri University College London United Kingdom Reuben Holmes National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Brandon Gallagher Sellafield Ltd United Kingdom Andrew Miliken Sellafield Ltd. United Kingdom 0950 Facility Improvements and Modifications to Extend the Operational Life of the Modular Caustic-Side Solvent Extraction Process - 16082 Carl Scherman Annah Garrison Earl Brass Savannah River Remediation THURSDAY AM 106 Session 117 1015 - 1200 Room 106C Future Alternate Fuel Cycle HLW Management Worldwide Experiences Session Co-Chairs Robert Jubin Oak Ridge National Laboratory Keith Miller National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Keith Miller National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Additional Organizers Robert Jubin Oak Ridge National Laboratory Steven Thomson National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom 1020 Waste Management Approach for a Potential Future U.S. Closed Fuel Cycle - 16233 John Vienna Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Terry Todd Idaho National Laboratory Kimberly Gray US DOE 1045 Hot Isostatic Pressing of Radioactive Nuclear Waste The Calcine at INL - 16348 Anders Eklund Quintus Technologies LLC Regis A. Matzie RAMatzie Nuclear Technology Consulting LLC 1110 Apatite Based Ceramic Waste Forms for Immobilization of Radioactive Iodine An Overview - 16155 Charles Cao Ashutosh Goel Rutgers University 1135 Media Effects on the Recycling of Rhodium from Spent Nuclear Fuel - 16364 Shalina Bottorff Ashton S. Powell Thomas R. Hayes Aurora E. Clark Paul D. Benny Washington State University Stephen Mezyk California State University Long Beach Session 118 0830 - 1200 Room 101B DD of Nuclear Power Plants - Part 2 of 2 Session Co-Chairs Michael Snyder EPRI Hans- Juergen Steinmetz Forschungszentrum Juelich GmbH Germany Lead Organizer Al Freitag Consultant Additional Organizers Bernard Poncet EDF France Michael Snyder EPRI Paper Reviewer Michael Snyder EPRI 0835 Decommissioning of NPP in Europe Strategies Risks and Opportunities - 16124 Frank Charlier Bruno Thomauske RWTH Aachen University NET Germany Barry Moloney NSE - International Germany 0900 Immediate Dismantling of a Large Fleet of LWR NPPs Consequences for Spent Fuel and Waste Management - 16027 Denis Depauw Patrice Francois Marc Pultier Anne-Cecile Jouve IRSN France 0925 Expected Waste Streams Originating from the Decommissioning of NPPs German Situation as Compared to International Standards - 16447 Gerd Bruhn GRS mbH Germany Boris Brendebach GRS gGmbH Germany 0950 Importance of Upfront Preparatory Works for Vessel Internals Segmentation Projects - 16096 Joseph Boucau Per Segerud Westinghouse Electric Company Belgium Jos Miguel Valdivieso Westinghouse Electric Spain Spain 1020 Decommissioning of the Reactor Pressure Vessels by Remote Controlled Thermal Cutting Segmentation Facilities - 16599 Andreas Loeb Siempelkamp NIS GmbH Germany Dirk Bender Siempelkamp NIS Germany Dieter Stanke Siempelkamp NIS Ingenieurgesellschaft John Sauger Dan Pryor Zion Solutions 1045 Remote Dismantling and Packaging of the RPV and Thermal Shield at the Obrigheim NPP - 16073 Ralf Borchardt Karsten Schmidt Ronald Strysewske Energiewerke Nord GmbH Germany 1110 Humboldt Bay Power Plant Decommissioning Progress Update - 16358 Kerry Rod Pacific Gas Electric Co John Gilbert CBI Environmental Infrastructure Alan Brown CBI Federal Services LLC Matt King Whitchurch Engineering Inc. Session 119 0830 - 1200 Room 102A Sustainable Remediation Processes - Global Insights or Applications Session Co-Chairs Nelson Walter Amec Foster Wheeler Susan A. Walter AECOM Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Susan A. Walter AECOM Additional Organizers Lori Fritz Mission Support Alliance Moses Jaraysi CH2M HILL PRC Nelson Walter Amec Foster Wheeler 0835 Brownfields to Brightfields A Sustainability Initiative at DOEs East Tennessee Technology Park Cleanup - 16120 Gil Hough Betsy Child Restoration Services Inc. David Adler US DOE Oak Ridge Office of EM THURSDAY AM 107 0900 SURF Advances in the Incorporation of Sustainability into Remedial Approaches - 16451 Amanda McNally AECOM Melissa Harclerode Michael Miller CDM Smith Paul Favara CH2M HILL PRC Barbara Maco Wactor Wick LLP 0925 Regulatory Compliance of H Retention Basin Using Rhombo Balls - 16151 Mildred Jackson Arthur Wiggins Owen Stevens Savannah River Remediation Stuart Stinson Savannah River Remediation LLC 0950 Sustainable Remediation of Radionuclides by a Common Sense Approach to Enhanced Attenuation - 16441 Miles Denham Carol Eddy-Dilek Savannah River National Laboratory 1020 The Little Engine that Could No Project is Too Small for Sustainable Remediation Moab Uranium Mill Tailings Removal Project - 16427 Donald Metzler US DOE Polly Robinson SK Aerospace LLC 1045 Waste Disposition Methodology at the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant - 16469 Joel Bradburne Don Meltzer Amanda McNally US DOE Robert Holmes RGGH Consulting LLC Gil Hough Lesley Cusick Restoration Services Inc. Miles Denham Savannah River National Laboratory Mildred Jackson Savannah River Remediation 1110 Change vs. Transformation Hard Edges to Soft The Role of Land Use Planning in the Adaptive Reuse of Contaminated Sites - 16431 Lesley Cusick Restoration Services Inc. 1135 Demonstration of SuperLig 605 and SuperLig 644 in a Regeneration Flow Sheet to Remove Radioactive Strontium and Cesium from Seawater - 16236 Robert Holmes RGGH Consulting LLC Ronald Bruening KRZYSZTOF KRAKOWIAK Steven Izatt REED IZATT Neil Izatt IBC Advanced Technologies Inc. Session 120 0830 - 1010 Room 104AB Panel Interagency Community of Practice in Risk and Performance Assessment. Session Co-Chairs Rateb Boby Abu Eid US NRC Ming Zhu US DOE Lead Organizer Ming Zhu US DOE Additional Organizers Linda Lehman CH2M HILL Inc. Christepher McKenney US NRC Panel Reporter Linda Lehman CH2M HILL Inc. This panel focuses on the status of the Inter-Agency Performance Risk Assessment Community of Practice PRA COP. Representatives from the PRA COP and subject matter experts will discuss lessons learned and provide feedback on building the PRA COP to support risk-informed environmental decision making. Panelists Horst Monken Fernandes Environmental Remediation Specialist IAEA Austria David Esh Senior System Perf. Analyst US NRC Stuart Walker Office of Superfund Remediation Technology Innovation OSRTI US EPA Kevin Brown Research Associate Professor Vanderbilt University CRESP Paul Black CEO Neptune Company Inc. Session 121 1015 - 1200 Room 106A Global Insights into Disposal Site Selection Session Co-Chairs Carl Reinhold Brakenhielm Swedish National Council for Nuclear WasteUppsala University Sweden Leif G Eriksson Nuclear Waste Dispositions Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Leif G Eriksson Nuclear Waste Dispositions Additional Organizers John Mathieson NDA United Kingdom Irena Mele IAEA Austria 1020 Siting Radioactive Waste Management Facilities Successes and Failures - 16392 James Voss Predicus LLC John Greeves Talisman International 1045 A Literature Review and Compilation of Nuclear WM System Attributes for Use in Multi-Objective System Evaluations - 16618 Elena Kalinina Sandia National Laboratories Michael Samsa Argonne National Laboratory 1110 Uncertainty Control in Relation to Decision Making in Disposal Project - 16507 Erkki Palonen Posiva Oy Finland 1135 Stakeholder Involvement - a Dead End or Still a Serious Matter - 16268 Kjell Andersson Karita Research Sweden Phil Richardson Galson Sciences Ltd United Kingdom THURSDAY AM 108 Session 122 0830 - 1200 Room 101C International Experience with Waste Certification Acceptance and Disposal for LLWILW Session Co-Chairs Heinz Kroeger TV NORD EnSys Hannover Germany Billie Mauss Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Heinz Kroeger TV NORD EnSys Hannover Germany Additional Organizers Gabriele Bandt TV NORD EnSys Hannover Germany 0835 Managing Low Level Waste at Dounreay - 16269 Bruce Covert AECOM - Dounreay United Kingdom Marie Mackay Dounreay United Kingdom 0900 Documentation of Radioactive Waste Packages for Disposal in the Konrad Repository - 16253 Stefan Steyer Markus Schmidt Marcus Wilke Federal Office for Radiation Protection Germany 0925 Best Practice on Facility Characterisation from a Material and Waste End-State Perspective - 16041 Arne Larsson Studsvik Nuclear AB Sweden Inge Weber Nuclear Energy Agency NEA 0950 Sampling Low Level Waste - Building a Program - 16101 Thomas Kalinowski David James William Doolittle DW James Consulting LLC 1020 Optimized Qualification of Legacy Waste for the Repository Konrad - 16629 Felix Himmerkus WAK GmbH Germany 1045 Innovations in Packaging and Treatment for LLW USUK - 16065 Mike Sanchez Bill Smart PacTec Inc Mike Nichols PacTec EPS Ltd United Kingdom MARCH 10 THURSDAY PM Session 123 1330 - 1700 Room 102BC Thursday Topical Session - International Nuclear Power Plant Decommissioning Time for Awareness and Planning Session Co-Chairs Larry Camper USNRC Retired Advoco Professional Svcs LLC Lawrence E. Larry Boing Argonne National Laboratory Lead Organizer Larry Camper USNRC Retired Advoco Professional Svcs LLC Additional Organizers John Mathieson NDA United Kingdom Fred Sheil Sheil Consulting Ltd United Kingdom Panel Reporter Rateb Boby Abu Eid US NRC This panel focuses on the approximately 200 nuclear power plants around the world that are slated to be decommissioned over the next twenty years. It is important that regulators utilities and companies involved in decommissioning commence planning for this significant development. This panel will provide international views addressing regulatory issues decommissioning cost estimation remediation experience and expectations decommissioning challenges waste management issues and identification of sites planning decommissioning globally. The panel will consist of US and international experts. Panelists Scott Moore Acting Director Office of Nuclear Materials Safety Safeguards US NRC Jeff Hays Vice President Commercial Decommissioning AREVA Horst Monken Fernandes Environmental Remediation Specialist IAEA Austria Thomas LaGuardia Managing Member LaGuardia Associates LLC Tom Palmisano Vice President Decommissioning Chief Nuclear Officer San Onofre Nuclear Generation Station Terry Pickens Director Nuclear Regulatory Policy Xcel Energy THURSDAY AM THURSDAY PM 109 Session 124 1330 - 1700 Room 105AB Integration of Human Development with Modeling to Inform Disposal or Remediation Decisions Session Co-Chairs Jeannette Hyatt Savannah River National Laboratory Rob Seifert US DOE Lead Organizer Jeannette Hyatt Savannah River National Laboratory Additional Organizers Kurt Gerdes US DOE Linda Suttora US DOE Panel Reporter Rudy Goetzman Savannah River National Laboratory This panel focuses on a sustainable approach to holistic integrated approach to structure nuclear waste management disposal and remediation decisions. This panel will have participation from internal and external stakeholders and demonstrate use of tools and techniques to effectively communicate factors that inform decisions. The desired outcome is to effectively communicate how risk is evaluated at complex sites highlight holistic site level approaches that are protective of human health the environment and incorporate policy technical concerns related to achieving alternative end points. This discussion will include existing decision-making tools in conjunction with case studies. Panelists Christine Gelles EM DAS for Waste Management Acting US DOE Rob Seifert DOE-EM HQ US DOE Michael Mikolanis Assistant Manager for Infrastructure and Environmental Stewardship US DOE Moses Jaraysi Vice President Environmental Program Strategic Planning CH2M HILL PRC Hai Shen General Engineer Los Alamos Field Office US DOE Paul Black CEO Neptune Company Inc. Session 125 1330 - 1700 Room 103AB Panel Lessons Learned from Yucca Mountain License Application Development Process Session Co-Chairs Paul Dickman Argonne National Laboratory Michael Voegele Consultant Lead Organizer Panel Reporter Eric Knox AECOM Additional Organizers Paul Dickman Argonne National Laboratory Robert Edmonds AREVA Federal Services Michael Voegele Consultant This panel focuses on value added lessons learned on specific topical areas of the Yucca Mountain License Application development process transferable knowledge gained throughout the history of the Yucca Mountain project and how what was learned over the past three decades can be applied to benefit the process of implementing a solution going forward. Panelists Bob Halstead Executive Director State of Nevada Daniel Bullen Former Member Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board DNFSB Donald Vieth Former Program Director Waste Management Project Office Kenneth Skipper Supervisory Geologist US Geological Survey James Rubenstone Deputy Director Yucca Mountain Directorate US NRC Andy Zach Professional Staff US House Energy and Commerce Committee Session 126 1330 - 1510 Room 102A Global Experience with Closure and Monitoring of HLW SNFUNF and Long-lived AlphaTRU Facilities Session Co-Chairs Sharon Marra Savannah River National Laboratory Jason Vitali Savannah River Remediation Lead Organizer Jonathan Bricker Savannah River Remediation Additional Organizers Tom Brouns Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Steven Thomson National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Bill Wilmarth Savannah River National Laboratory Paper Reviewer Bill Wilmarth Savannah River National Laboratory THURSDAY PM 110 1335 The Enhanced Sealing Project Monitoring a Full-Scale Shaft Seal at Canadas Underground Research Laboratory 2009- 2015 - 16070 Deni Priyanto Paul Thompson Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Canada Radwan Farhoud Andra France David Dixon Golder Associates Inc. Canada Petri Korkeakoski Posiva Oy Finland 1400 Progress in Defining the UK Highly Active Storage Tanks Post Operational Clean Out Strategy - 16134 Steven Thomson National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom Tom Page Sellafield Ltd United Kingdom 1425 Protecting the Columbia River through Removal and Packaging of Radioactive Sludge in Hanfords K Area - 16572 Raymond Geimer CH2M HILL PRC 1450 Application of Modular Design in Abatement of Fuel Element Debris FED Liquid Waste Stream - 16635 Tim Milner Paul Sylvester EnergySolutions Session 127 1515 - 1700 Room 102A Technical Advancements in HLWSNF Disposal Part 2 of 2 Session Co-Chairs Sal Golub US DOE Chuan-Fu Wu ESH Solutions Lead Organizer Roger Nelson US DOE Additional Organizers Sal Golub US DOE Chuan-Fu Wu ESH Solutions Paper Reviewer Sal Golub US DOE 1520 Logistics Modeling of Emplacement Rate and Duration of Operations for Generic Geologic Repository Concepts - 16529 Elena Kalinina Ernest Hardin Sandia National Laboratories 1545 Whats in WIPP - Packaging TRU Waste to Enhance WIPPs Capacity - 16515 Roger Nelson US DOE 1610 Applicability of Wireless Power Transfer for Monitoring Technology of Radioactive Waste Geological Disposal - 16156 Chiaki Nagai Tatsuya Tanaka Kenichi Ando Obayashi Corporation Japan Masato Kobayashi Jiro Eto Radioactive Waste Management Funding and Research Center Japan Takehiro Imura Yoichi Hori The University of Tokyo Japan Session 128 1330 - 1700 Room 101C Radioactive Material Packaging and Transportation Regulatory Issues Session Co-Chairs Paul Jones Ameriphysics Karlan Richards Bechtel Lead Organizer Olaf Oldiges DAHER Nuclear Technologies GmbH Germany Additional Organizers Ashok Kapoor US DOE Kent McDonald Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Mike Nolan Energy NW Columbia Paper Reviewer Edward Ketusky Savannah River National Laboratory 1335 Coupling the Modeled Structural Transmissibility of a Used Nuclear Fuel Conveyance to Over the Road Data - 16215 Philip Jensen Nicholas Klymyshyn Steven Ross Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Bill Shust Objective Engineers Inc. Paul McConnell Sandia National Laboratories 1400 Examining Supply Chain Resilience for the Intermodal Shipment of Spent Nuclear Fuel and High Level Radioactive Materials - 16309 Steven Peterson Oak Ridge National Laboratory Marc Fialkoff Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 1425 Development of a U.S. Rail Transport Capability for Spent Nuclear Fuel and High- Level Waste - 16623 Patrick Schwab US DOE Matt Feldman William Reich Oak Ridge National Laboratory Steven Maheras Pacific Northwest National Laboratory A. Scott Dam TechSource 1450 Spent Nuclear Fuel Vibration Integrity Study - 16332 Jy-An Wang Hong Wang Hao Jiang Yong Yan Bruce Bevard Oak Ridge National Laboratory 1520 A Parametric Analysis on Factors Affecting Calculations of Estimated Dose Rates from Spent Nuclear Fuel Shipments - 16458 Georgeta Radulescu Kevin Connolly Oak Ridge National Laboratory 1545 Alternative Canister Processing Operations at an Interim Storage Facility - 16617 Donald Lewis WECTEC LLC Michael Reim CB I Federal Services Jack Clemmens CBI Federal Services LLC James George US DOE THURSDAY PM 111 1610 Preliminary Evaluation of Removing Used Nuclear Fuel from Shutdown Sites An Update - 16057 Steven Maheras Steven Ross Philip Jensen Pacific Northwest National Laboratory L. Mel Massaro Federal Railroad Administration - US DOT Ralph Best Independent Consultant Jeff England Savannah River National Laboratory 1635 Innovative Solutions for Loading Smaller Standardized Dry Storage Canister Systems for Used Nuclear Fuel - 16232 Chris Phillips Ivan Thomas EnergySolutions Session 129 Merged with Session 108A Session 130 1330 - 1700 Room 106A Innovative Field Monitoring for Environmental Remediation Session Co-Chairs David Eaton CH2M-WG Idaho LLC Mary McDermott HII - Newport News Shipbuilding Lead Organizer David Eaton CH2M-WG Idaho LLC Additional Organizers Ella Feist CH2M HILL Inc. United Kingdom Charles Waggoner Mississippi State University Paper Reviewer Mary McDermott HII - Newport News Shipbuilding 1335 Real-Time Three-Dimensional Electrical Geophysical Monitoring of Processes Associated with Subsurface Remediation - 16052 Tim Johnson Jon Thomle Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Patrick Baynes Randy Hermann CH2M Hill Plateau Remediation Company 1400 Effective Long-term Monitoring Strategies by Integrating Reactive Transport Models and In situ Geochemical Measurements - 16212 Haruko Wainwright Boris Faybishenko Sergi Molins James Davis Bhavna Arora George Pau Jeffrey N. Johnson Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory David Moulton Konstantin Lipnikov Carl Gable Terry Miller Los Alamos National Laboratory Mark Freshley Erin Barker Vicky Freedman Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Greg Flach Miles Denham Carol Eddy-Dilek Savannah River National Laboratory 1425 Challenges Conducting a Radiological Site Assessment at a Remote Uranium Mine - 16259 Heath Downey Amec Foster Wheeler 1450 Refining Groundwater Monitoring Approaches through an Objectives-Driven Process - 16333 Michael Truex Robert Mackley Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Joseph Axtell US DOE 1520 Low-Altitude Unmanned Aerial Vehicles as a Tool for the Remediation of Radiologically Contaminated Environments - 16257 Peter Martin Thomas Scott Oliver Payton David Richards John Fardoulis University of Bristol United Kingdom Yosuke Yamashiki University of Kyoto Japan 1545 Monitoring Hexavalent Chromium in the Columbia River Hyporheic Zone - 16405 Mary Hartman Mark Byrnes CH2M HILL PRC Gregory Sinton US DOE 1610 Design and Development of an Automated Instrument for Measuring Radioactivity in an Excavator Bucket - 16246 Robin Strange Chris Hannon Nick Chambers Lynn Cooper Studsvik United Kingdom John Mason Lawrence Odell Tom Jennings David Maina Michael West Marc Looman Antoine Libens ANTECH Corporation United Kingdom Session 131 1330 - 1700 Room 106B Environmental Remediation Progress toward Closure of Contaminated Sites Session Co-Chairs Mark Frei Bechtel National Inc. Kurt Gerdes US DOE Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Kurt Gerdes US DOE Additional Organizers Mark Frei Bechtel National Inc. Robert Vellinger TerranearPMC LLC David Wallace Lockheed Martin Corporation 1335 Completing the Cleanup of the DOE East Tennessee Technology Park Four Years Early - 16067 Allen Schubert Kenneth Rueter URS CH2M Oak Ridge LLC Kelly Rhodes CH2M HILL 1400 DOE Oak Ridge Cleanup History Setting the Stage for Future Success - 16273 Dirk Van Hoesen Strata-G 1425 The Success of the River Corridor Closure Project - A Look at the Last 10 Years of Success - 16105 Megan Proctor Theresa Howell Washington Closure Hanford THURSDAY PM 112 1450 Evaluating Contaminant Transport in the Vadose Zone to Support Remedy Decisions at Aqueous-Waste Disposal Sites - 16195 Michael Truex Mart Oostrom Pacific Northwest National Laboratory 1520 Endpoint Evaluation for 200-PW-1 Operable Unit Soil Vapor Extraction Hanford Site Washington - 16478 Mark Byrnes Virginia Rohay Sally Simmons CH2M HILL PRC Michael Truex Chris Johnson Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Julie Reddick US DOE Emerald Laija US EPA 1545 Joint Regulatory Expectations for Land Quality Management at UK Nuclear Sites - 16596 Juliet Long David Bennett Stephen Hardy Environment Agency United Kingdom Joyce Rutherford Simon Morgan Office for Nuclear Regulation United Kingdom Jim Cochrane Scottish Environment Protection Agency United Kingdom Session 132 1330 - 1510 Room 106C Global Management of SpentUsed Radioactive Sealed Sources HEU and Orphan Materials and Controls Session Co-Chairs Kim Auclair KD Auclair Associates Alexander Brandl Colorado State University Lead Organizer Paper Reviewer Alexander Brandl Colorado State University Additional Organizers Kim Auclair KD Auclair Associates 1335 Opportunities to Reuse and Recycle Redundant Radioisotopes - 16023 Tim Tinsley Keith Miller National Nuclear Laboratory United Kingdom 1400 Sealed Source Security Challenges and Solutions The Impact of Increased Commercial Disposal Access - 16557 David Martin Energetics Incorporated Temeka Taplin US DOE 1425 Recovering New Type of Sources by Off-Site Source Recovery Project for WIPP Disposal - 16604 Ioana Witkowski Anthony Nettleton Alex Feldman Los Alamos National Laboratory 1450 Management of Radioactive Wastes and Disused Sealed Radioactive Sources in Bangladesh Recent Activities and Challenges Ahead - 16039 MD. Idris Ali MD. Abu Haydar Bangladesh Atomic Energy Commission BAEC Bangladesh Debasish Paul Bangladesh Atomic Energy Commission Bangladesh Juan Carlos Benitez-Navarro IAEA Austria Ali Maleki Farsani Iran Nuclear Waste Management Company Atomic Energy Organization of Iran Iran Session 133 1515 - 1700 Room 106C Social Sciences as a Resource for Improving Public Involvement in HLW Siting Decisions WITHDRAWN Session 134 1330 - 1700 Room 101B Emerging Treatment Technologies for LLWILW Session Co-Chairs Kapila Fernando ANSTO Australia Felix Himmerkus WAK GmbH Germany Lead Organizer Paul Macbeth Independent Strategic Management Solutions Inc Additional Organizers Felix Himmerkus WAK GmbH Germany Patricia Suggs US DOE Paper Reviewer Felix Himmerkus WAK GmbH Germany 1335 Arvia Organics Destruction An Innovative Treatment Approach for Dioxins Furans Other Problematic Orphan Organic Wastes - 16262 Michael Conti-Ramsden Mikael Khan Nigel Brown Arvia Technology United Kingdom Laurie Judd Longenecker Associates John Ritter NuVision Engineering Inc. 1400 The Elipse Process An Underwater Plasma Technology for Liquid Treatment - 16026 Florent Lemont Michael Marchand Majdi Mabrouk Doriana Milelli CEA France 1425 Initial Testing of Off-Gas Recycle Condensate Liquid from the WTP Low Activity Waste Vitrification Process - 16432 Kathryn Taylor-Pashow Daniel McCabe Charles Nash Savannah River National Laboratory THURSDAY PM 113 1450 Molten Salt Oxidation of Ion Exchange and Oils in Carbonate Salts and Evaporator Residue - 16531 Andrew Akin Jana Dymakov Petr Prak CVR Research centre e Petr Kovak Eduard Sulejmanov Czech Technical University in Prague Czech Republic Radek Trtilek Nuclear Research Institute Rez plc. Czech Republic 1520 A Study on Vitrification for LLW Radioactive Wastes - 16235 Young Hwan Hwang Hyun-jun Jo Cheon-woo Kim Korea Hydro Nuclear Power South Korea Toyonobu Nabemoto Takahiro Tachibana IHI Corporation Japan Toshiro Oniki Yoshihiro Endo Yokohama Engineering Center IHI Japan 1545 Low Melting Temperature Glass for Immobilisation of Contaminated Zeolitic Ion Exchangers from Fukushima - 16494 Dimitri Pletser R.K Chinnam William Lee Imperial College London United Kingdom Mamoru Kamoshida Hitachi Ltd. Japan Session 135 Panel Russian Technologies Update - WITHDRAWN DOWNLOAD OUR FREE MOBILE APP NOTES __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ __________________________ THURSDAY PM 114 Abadie Pierre-Marie - 85-16038 Abbasi Baharanchi Ahmadreza - 30C-16260 Abdul Wahed - 86-16283 Abe Hiroko - 51-16081 Abe Satoru - 87B-16062 Abitz Richard - 68-16520 Abkowitz Mark - 9-16516 Abrahao Anthony - 95-16383 Adkins Jr Harold - 59-16108 Adler David - 119-16120 Agnew Mark - 67-16454 Agnew Stephen - 30C-16481 Ahn Sangmyeon - 87D-16488 Akin Andrew - 34-16531 Ala Natalyn - 85-16266 Ali MD. Idris - 132-16039 Aly Alaa - 48-16546 Amcoff Bjrn - 66-16258 Anagnostopoulos Vasileios 10-16429 Anderson Elaina - 72-16102 Anderson Kevin - 95-16150 Anderson Scott - 67-16454 Andersson Eva - 44-16287 Andersson Kjell - 121-16268 Ando Kenichi - 127-16156 Angus Mike - 92-16139 16477 111-16179 Anton Fabienne - 66-16493 Antonucci Pascal - 77-16417 Aoi Hiromi - 87B-16062 Appenzeller-Wing Janet - 99-16440 Arakali Aruna - 60-16421 Archuleta Felicia - 18-16419 Ard Kevin - 61-16589 Arm Stuart - 60-16421 Arnold Dirk - 87E-16166 Arnold Mike - 88A-16267 Arnold Pat - 99-16440 Arola Craig - 11-16485 Arora Bhavna - 130-16212 Arvin Farshad - 46-16028 Arvizu Jacob - 26-16148 Asano Hidekazu - 30G-16110 Asano Takashi - 51-16655 Askew Kevin - 66-16060 Aucott Timothy - 67-16293 Austin Jonathan - 31-16464 Awwad Amer - 31-16670 105-16302 Axler Greg - 82-16329 Axtell Joseph - 130-16333 Ayame Yasuo - 26-16107 30F-16118 Ayoola Olusola - 46-16028 Bacon Diana - 47-16341 61-16480 Bader Sven - 64-16362 Badke Catherine - 57-16456 Bahrke Cheri - 27-16614 Baide Dan - 6-16395 95-16396 Bailey Bill - 46-16487 Bailey Lucy - 44-16287 99-16382 Bailey Stuart - 11-16602 Baker Joseph - 67-16280 Banford Anthony - 50A-16080 92-16477 111-16637 Bannochie Christopher - 23-16178 Banos Antonios - 92-16467 Barker Erin - 130-16212 Barker Michelle - 11-16201 82-16199 Barnes Martyn - 95-16051 Barr Logan - 87B-16055 Barrett Bill - 81-16473 Bates Melissa - 40-16622 Baynes Patrick - 130-16052 Beam Tom - 36-16642 Beamish Kathryn - 25-16130 Beaumier Glenn - 60-16221 Becker Dave - 48-16380 Becker Dirk-Alexander - 85-16024 Belcher Wayne - 10-16104 Bender Dirk - 118-16599 Benitez-Navarro Juan Carlos - 132-16039 Bennett David - 44-16597 131-16596 Bennett Lynette - 72-16142 Benny Paul D. - 117-16364 Benson Craig - 44-16087 Benson John - 71B-16534 Benson Peter - 60-16421 Bentley Jeffrey - 23-16173 Bergh Niklas - 84-16242 Bergmann David - 98-16551 Bernhard Chuck - 97-16560 Berry Richard - 40-16622 Best Ralph - 128-16057 Bettermann Linus - 64-16043 Beuth Thomas - 44-16287 Bevard Bruce - 128-16332 Bickford Erica - 9-16516 16612 Biggs Simon - 30B-16449 92-16466 16471 95-16051 Bird Benjamin - 46-16028 Birgersson Lars - 29-16657 Birks David - 25-16437 Bisuri Indranil - 31-16593 Biurrun Enrique - 44-16077 50C-16159 57-16610 85-16611 Biwer Bruce - 105-16653 Black Doug - 82-16329 Black Kelly - 69-16486 Black Leon - 77-16184 Black Paul - 69-16486 Black Rob - 5-16322 89A-16349 Blackburn Jon - 25-16192 Blanton Paul - 88A-16654 Blunt Brent - 68-16355 Bobbitt John - 108A-16344 Boe Timothy - 70-16256 Bogenberger Vicki - 28-16563 Boggia Bill - 88B-16381 Bogucarska Tatjana - 87E-16166 Bollingerfehr Wilhelm - 96-16240 Bond Alexander - 96-16490 Bondre Jayant - 40-16472 Bonham Charles - 26-16226 16231 Bonnet Florent - 50A-16316 Boomer Kayle - 6-16390 16395 95-16150 16396 Booth Peter - 28-16004 68-16012 Booth Scott - 60-16221 Booth Steven - 89A-16017 Borak David - 12-16532 Borchardt Ralf - 118-16073 Bosgiraud Jean-Michel - 96-16085 Bostick William - 108A-16292 Botha Johannes Andries - 92-16471 Bottorff Shalina - 117-16364 Boucau Joseph - 118-16096 Boucher Laurel - 103-16204 Bourva Ludovic - 18-16311 Bower Jared - 72-16328 100-16068 Bower Will - 87B-16055 Boxall Colin - 92-16466 108A-16170 Bradburne Joel - 119-16469 Bradley Eric - 71A-16056 Brady Patrick - 29-16294 Branch John - 71A-16276 Brand Alexander - 67-16293 Brandjes Christopher - 100-16327 16632 Brasch-Serres Aurelie - 64-16517 Brass Earl - 116-16082 Brendebach Boris - 118-16447 Brevot Romain - 101-16457 Broadbent Craig - 66-16258 Broberg Ken - 27-16176 16177 Bronson Frazier - 18-16311 16361 Broughton Ronnie - 66-16295 Brown Alan - 118-16358 61-16480 Brown Elvie - 71A-16194 Brown Liam - 46-16028 Brown Nigel - 134-16262 Bruening Ronald - 119-16236 Bruffey Stephanie - 26-16319 Bruggeman Jeffrey - 60-16219 Bruhn Gerd - 118-16447 Brunsell Dennis - 45-16416 115 Bryan Sam - 44-16399 Bryce David - 31-16271 Bryson Chris - 71A-16326 Buechi Stephen - 11-16201 Buhmann Dieter - 85-16024 Bunn Amoret - 71B-16404 81-16379 Burandt Mary - 36-16642 Burger Joanna - 71B-16404 Burke Ian T. - 31-16533 Burnett Troy - 108A-16592 Burt David - 95-16051 Busse John - 11-16201 81-16275 82-16199 Butler J Lane - 99-16460 Bttner Christian - 102-16123 Butzen Margaret - 29-16133 72-16102 Byrnes Mark - 11-16485 81-16473 130-16405 131-16478 Cabble Kevin - 99-16440 Cairns Martin - 100-16263 Callahan Shannon - 25-16437 Callicoat John - 83-16181 16197 Calvo Wilson Aparecido Parejo - 31-16400 Campbell Brett - 111-16410 Campbell Seth - 59-16198 Cann Gavin - 77-16184 16245 Cao Charles - 117-16155 Carignan Joseph - 84-16049 Carlson Clark - 61-16589 Carlson Mark - 81-16473 Carpenter Cliff - 27-16200 82-16209 Carrasco Joaquin - 46-16028 Carter Jane - 49-16030 Carter Janine - 71B-16297 Carvalho Alexandre - 50B-16300 Carvin Russ - 102-16044 Case G. Glenn - 81-16538 Castillo Brian - 31-16671 Castillo Darina - 27-16200 66-16064 Castleberry Jim - 6-16395 95-16150 16396 Cato Rebecca - 48-16270 Cau dit Coumes Cline - 77-16417 Cavanah Paul - 5-16436 Centofanti Lou - 17-16694 Cha Jeonghun - 51-16446 Chadwick Chris - 66-16594 Chambers Nick - 130-16246 Chang Young-Soo - 103-16608 Charboneau Briant - 36-16579 Chard Patrick - 18-16311 50A-16316 Charlier Frank - 57-16122 102-16123 105-16334 118-16124 Chase Scott - 67-16454 Chatterjee Syandev - 44-16399 Chatzidakis Stylianos - 31-16685 Chavez Rick - 96-16310 Chazot Mathias - 64-16517 Cheah Wei - 46-16028 Cheong Jae hak - 87D-16488 Chesnokov Alexander - 87F-16054 Chida Taiji - 8-16116 30G-16033 16160 16239 Child Betsy - 119-16120 Chile Love - 105-16388 Chinnam R.K - 92-16474 134-16494 Chiou Jyh-Dong - 68-16520 Cho Chun-Hyung - 30B-16278 Choi ByungSeong - 101-16444 Choi Chan - 31-16685 Choi Heui-Joo - 50C-16014 Choi Jong Won - 101-16444 Choi Wang-Kyu - 87A-16137 Chong Saehwa - 114-16153 Chou Yeong-Shyung - 26-16231 Christensen Wynn - 18-16419 Christodoulou Apostolos - 50A-16648 Chung Hee Jun - 105-16689 Chung Heejun - 50B-16484 Churchil Steven - 86-16461 Clapham Martin - 49-16264 Clark Alex - 66-16506 Clark Andrew - 29-16346 Clark Aurora E. - 117-16364 Clark David - 114-16540 Clark Gary - 40-16591 Clement Gilles - 64-16627 Clemmens Jack - 40-16622 128-16617 Cleveland Mark - 50D-16129 Clifford John - 50A-16080 111-16179 Clift Roland - 70-16425 Cluever Joseph - 6-16141 Cochran John - 29-16346 89B-16277 99-16315 Cochrane Jim - 37-16595 71A-16646 131-16596 Cole Matt - 108A-16111 Collins Anthony - 92-16477 Condon William - 36-16579 Conley John - 31-16664 16670 105-16302 Connolly Kevin - 128-16458 Conti-Ramsden Michael - 134-16262 Cooke Gary A. - 6-16395 Cooley Scott - 26-16231 Cooper Lynn - 130-16246 Coppens Erik - 77-16417 Corkhill Claire - 92-16139 Costella Mark - 67-16353 Costelle Leila - 92-16467 Couture Alexander - 49-264 67-16293 Covert Bruce - 122-16269 Covert Ryan - 86-16461 Cowell David - 95-16051 Cowley Robin - 92-16471 Cozzi Alex - 61-16479 Crawford Charles - 23-16178 Creed Richard - 67-16280 Cruickshank Herbert - 25-16192 Cruickshank James - 25-16437 Crum Jarrod - 44-16399 Cumberland Riley - 40-16317 Curry Gerald - 49-16439 Cusick Lesley - 119-16431 16469 Cziep Kristie - 028-16196 Dabruck Jan Philipp 102-16123 105-16334 Dam A. Scott - 128-16623 Dander David - 27-16097 Dangol Sharad - 45-16318 88C-16225 Daniel Joe - 10-16342 Danso Evans - 105-16666 Darik Tippetts - 87B-16062 Darnbrough James - 92-16467 Davis James - 130-16212 Davis Renee - 60-16421 Day Karen - 96-16310 Day Mark - 47-16088 Dayton Cynthia - 67-16454 De Felice Pierino - 87E-16166 De Gregory John - 87C-16465 De Jonghe Candice - 84-16042 De La Codre Pierre-Henri - 83-16169 Denham Miles - 71A-16524 71B-16523 81-16443 119-16441 119-16469 130-16212 Dennis Brian - 59-16330 Depauw Denis - 118-16027 Deschaine Larry - 70-16578 Deshkar Ambar - 31-16271 Deshon Jorge - 31-16677 DeVaughn Jeff - 82-16146 Deyglun Clment - 50A-16144 Di Pietro Silvina - 31-16661 Diaz Peter - 28-16563 Didierlaurent Rgis - 86-16376 Diediker Janet - 5-16436 Dietzel Dale - 100-16632 Dima Alice Mariana - 57-16391 Ding Wei - 31-16533 92-16471 Dinneen Doug - 18-16241 DiPrete David - 67-16293 115-16172 Dixon David - 126-16070 116 Dixon Derek - 26-16226 30F-16336 Dixon Paul - 69-16335 Dogal Thomas - 67-16454 Dolislager Fred - 71A-16583 Donnelly Jack - 36-16638 16642 Donnelly Mark - 25-16437 Dooley Kirk - 108A-16592 Doolittle William - 122-16101 Drr Sabine - 96-16240 Downey Heath - 130-16259 Downs Janelle - 71B-16404 Drucker Nick - 40-16053 Duke Stefan - 99-16440 Dumitrescu Dorin - 45-16453 Dumont Bruno - 64-16627 Dumont Jean-Nol - 83-16169 96-16085 Dunaway Blake - 108A-16292 Duncan Garth - 60-16421 Duncan Jim - 71A-16194 Duncan Randy - 87B-16062 Duque Natalia - 31-16680 71A-16203 71B-16202 Duran Leroy - 99-16428 Dymakov Jana - 134-16531 Eaker Shannon - 102-16044 Eberl Kurt - 88A-16654 Eccleston Bradley - 86-16286 Eckerman Mike - 102-16044 Eckert Christopher - 72-16142 Economy Kathleen - 70-16299 Eddy-Dilek Carol - 81-16443 119-16441 130-16212 Edrei Maximiliano - 30C-16260 31-16665 Edwards Lisa - 98-16224 Edwards Lyndon - 114-16167 Edwards Richard - 115-16121 Egarr Darrell - 95-16051 Eklund Anders - 117-16348 Ellis Nick - 87A-16035 Elmetti Rosa - 57-16647 Enderlin Carl - 59-16108 Endo Yoshihiro - 134-16235 Engeman Jason - 6-16395 59-16108 England Jeff - 100-16327 100-16632 128-16057 Eriksson Jens - 84-16371 Eriksson Leif G - 5-16019 85-16010 Espinosa Jose - 46-16028 Eto Jiro - 127-16156 Evans N.D.M - 92-16466 Fadin Sergey - 87F-16054 Fairweather Michael - 30B-16449 92-16466 95-16051 Fardoulis John - 130-16257 Farhoud Radwan - 126-16070 Farr Jay - 99-16428 Farsani Ali Maleki - 132-16039 Fath Oliver - 87C-16406 Fatherly Nicki - 82-16209 Faught Bill - 11-16485 Faunt Claudia - 10-16104 Favara Paul - 119-16451 Faybishenko Boris - 130-16212 Feero Amie - 95-16396 Fekrmandi Hadi - 30C-16386 31-16679 95-16383 Feldman Alex - 132-16604 Feldman Matt - 128-16623 Felt Kristopher - 71A-16321 71B-16190 Fernandez Anthony - 31-16670 105-16302 Ferreira Eduardo - 50B-16300 Ferreira Robson de Jesus - 31-16324 Fialkoff Marc - 128-16309 Field Richard - 116-16175 Filbert Wolfgang - 96-16240 Finger John - 29-16346 Finucane Kevin - 111-16410 Fisher Daniel - 66-16594 Flach Greg - 69-16335 130-16212 Flanagan Bryan - 87B-16229 Fletcher Thomas - 69-16157 Ford Laurie - 28-16103 Fortner Jeffrey - 40-16317 Foster Adam - 84-16371 Fox Tad - 70-16578 Foye Kevin - 44-16365 Franco Margareth - 50B-16300 Francois Patrice - 87D-16616 118-16027 Frederick William - 11-16201 81-16275 82-16146 16199 Freear Steven - 95-16051 Freedman Vicky - 47-16341 61-16480 69-16335 130-16212 Freeze Geoff - 29-16294 70-16303 Freshley Mark - 69-16335 71B-16099 81-16379 130-16212 Freund Barbara - 99-16567 Fujita Hiten - 30G-16160 Fujiwara Hiroshi - 50D-16626 Funk David - 41-16541 114-16540 Gable Carl - 130-16212 Gabriela Teodorov - 45-16453 Gadbury Casey - 96-16535 Gainer Keith - 18-16241 Gallagher Brandon - 116-16402 Gallagher Martin - 108A-16036 Gallegos Adam - 50A-16450 Gallegos Lucas - 18-16419 Galson Daniel - 99-16382 Garcia Sammy - 67-16280 Garcia-Strickland Patrick - 23-16178 Gardner W. Payton - 96-16223 Garitte Benoit - 96-16490 Garnier Cedric - 103-16217 Garrett Richard - 36-16638 60-16221 Garrison Annah - 116-16082 Gastl Christoph - 40-16504 Geimer Raymond - 67-16573 126-16572 Gelfond Aleksandr - 98-16554 George James - 128-16617 George Mathews - 57-16645 Geraldo Bianca - 31-16324 Geringer Robert - 29-16291 Gervasio Vivianaluxa - 26-16231 Gibb Fergus - 29-16249 16250 Giddings Bill - 49-16030 Gil April - 27-16614 Gilbert John - 118-16358 Gilles Michael - 67-16293 Gillespie Bruce - 18-16132 50A-16450 Gillis Jessica - 87B-16216 Girardot Crystal - 6-16390 16395 Glass Samuel - 95-16150 Glassmeyer Cathy - 27-16176 16177 Gletsos Evangelos - 71A-16276 Glibert Rob - 60-16221 Glindkamp Anne - 66-16493 Glodeanu Florian - 57-16391 Gochfeld Michael - 71B-16404 Godot Alain - 50A-16144 Goel Ashutosh - 31-16271 16323 117-16155 Goessens Caroline - 84-16042 Goetz Stacy - 67-16368 Goetzman Rudy - 28-16363 69-16552 Gokaltun Seckin - 30C-16260 Gokce Erim - 31-16672 Golian Steven - 48-16545 Golshan Mina - 37-16576 Gomberg Steven - 29-16482 Gonzalez Janesler - 31-16667 Gonzalez Herranz Emiliano - 44-16077 50C-16159 85-16611 Gonzalez Raymat Hansell - 31-16660 Good Morris - 95-16150 Gorton Alicia - 69-16157 Gosselin Steve - 6-16141 Graf Anja - 87C-16406 Graham Andrew - 108A-16592 111-16161 117 Graham Marc - 82-16146 Gram Peter - 71A-16276 Grandjean Jean-Paul - 101-16015 Grant Ian - 46-16180 Gray Kimberly - 117-16233 Green Bryan - 41-16071 Green David - 86-16461 Green Peter - 46-16028 Greeves John - 87D-16616 097-16575 121-16392 Gregg Daniel - 114-16167 Griffin Daniel - 105-16072 Griffiths Arron - 46-16028 Griffiths Peter - 108A-16592 Grindstaff Jeff - 50D-16129 99-16460 Grindstaff Joanne - 86-16281 Grover Martha A. - 105-16072 Gruetzmacher Kathleen - 18-16419 Grundfelt Bertil - 29-16657 Gudavalli Ravi Krishna Prasanth- 28-16513 71A-16524 71B-16523 Gull Mike - 46-16180 Gunter Jason - 6-16395 Gupta RK - 59-16330 Guzman-Leong Consuelo - 6-16141 Haagenstad Todd - 71A-16276 Hadgu Teklu - 29-16294 70-16303 Hafen Hubert - 25-16434 Hagenow Matt - 50D-16129 Hall Stephen - 71B-16297 Hallam Keith - 92-16467 Hallington Phil - 37-16387 Halliwell Steve - 50A-16648 Hamel William - 86-16003 16281 16283 Hammond Glenn - 70-16303 96-16223 Han Ana - 57-16647 Han Sangsoo - 31-16114 Han Soonkyoo - 51-16446 Hannon Chris - 130-16246 Hansen Frank - 96-16535 Hansen James - 48-16545 16546 Hanson Bruce - 31-16533 Hanus Gary - 87A-16013 Harbottle David - 30B-16449 92-16471 Harclerode Melissa - 119-16451 Hardin Ernest - 29-16294 16346 70-16303 89B-16277 127-16529 Hardy Stephen - 44-16597 131-16596 Harjula Risto - 30E-16497 Harken Jim - 111-16179 Harmon Janice - 36-16638 Harris Alton - 66-16064 Hart Jaap - 85-16024 Hartman Mary - 130-16405 Harvey Liz - 99-16382 Harvill Joe - 50A-16450 Hase Kazunori - 30G-16078 Hastings Jeremy - 50A-16080 Haught David - 105-16653 Haverkamp Bernt - 44-16077 57-16610 Hawthorne Josh - 77-16184 Hay Scott - 82-16522 16525 Haydar MD. Abu - 132-16039 Hayes Colin - 70-16256 Hayes Martin - 92-16139 Hayes Peter - 37-16576 Hayes Thomas R. - 117-16364 Heath Maurice - 99-16315 Hebert Craig - 81-16538 Heckman Joe - 101-16544 Hedin Gunnar - 84-16242 Heilman-Moore Jayven - 26-16226 30F-16336 Heller Richard - 67-16368 Helvey Elizabeth - 9-16612 103-16608 Hemelright David - 12-16459 Henckel Robert - 60-16219 Hennig Wofgang - 18-16419 Henry Brian - 50D-16129 99-16460 Henwood Paul - 71B-16208 Herman Connie - 28-16363 61-16435 Hermann Laura - 72-16360 Hermann Randy - 130-16052 Hernandez Alejandro - 31-16662 Herold Philipp - 96-16240 Herrera Sandra - 10-16429 Herrick Courtney - 30G-16135 Hertel William - 27-16165 16176 16177 Herting Daniel - 115-16188 Hess Toby - 59-16198 Hill Katie - 77-16325 Hilliard Zachary - 26-16226 30F-16154 Hillier Rebecca - 108A-16162 Hilton Paul - 87A-16035 111-16161 Himmerkus Felix - 122-16629 Hirata Kensuke - 46-16489 Hirrlinger Diana - 83-16607 Hollebecque Jean Francois - 86-16376 Holmes Reuben - 116-16402 Holmes Robert - 119-16236 16469 Holton Langdon - 86-16283 16285 16286 Hombach William - 67-16368 Homer John - 27-16165 Hommel Steven - 8-16143 Hooten Gwen - 27-16165 16176 16177 48-16270 Hori Yoichi - 127-16156 Horlait Denis - 114-16167 Horton Lucy - 95-16051 Hotzel Stephan - 83-16378 Hough Gil - 119-16120 16469 Houghton David - 60-16568 Howard Robert - 105-16301 Howell Theresa - 131-16105 Hriljac J.A - 92-16466 Hrma Pavel - 26-16226 30F-16154 16336 Hruska Donna - 12-16532 Hsieh Yun-Hao - 114-16167 Hsien-Ming Hsiao - 26-16415 Hu Chang-Liang - 26-16415 Huang Eric - 66-16064 Hubbard Tim - 47-16088 Huber Heinz - 71A-16194 Huffman Lori - 36-16642 Hughes Katie - 28-16196 Hughes Michael - 36-16579 Humphrey Betty - 41-16071 Humphry-Baker Samuel - 114-16167 Hunter Timothy - 30B-16449 92-16471 95-16051 Hutton Chris - 25-16207 Hutton Rick - 27-16147 Hwang Il-Soon - 50D-16238 Hwang Young Hwan - 134-16235 Hyatt Jeannette - 28-16363 69-16552 Hyatt Neil - 92-16466 16581 Ibarra Luis - 45-16318 88C-16225 Idihia Sabrine - 101-16457 Ikeda Akira - 51-16081 87B-16062 Ilett Doug - 44-16597 Ilie Gabriela - 18-16311 Immel David - 108A-16344 Imura Takehiro - 127-16156 Inaba Takanori - 108A-16491 Inose Koutarou - 108A-16491 Irwin Kim - 60-16219 Ishikawa Keiji - 51-16081 Ivanov Oleg - 87F-16054 Iwama Tatsuya - 87A-16013 Izatt Conrad - 66-16594 Izatt Neil - 119-16236 Izatt Reed - 119-16236 Izatt Steven - 119-16236 Jackson Dennis - 47-16613 Jackson Mildred - 119-16151 16469 118 Jackson Ronald - 10-16352 Jacobs Andrew - 50D-16129 99-16460 Jacobs John - 37-16576 Jderstrm Henrik - 18-16311 Jain Vijay - 115-16121 James David - 122-16101 James Ryan - 70-16508 Janicki Mark - 88B-16131 Janski Sylvain - 18-16016 Jarrell Josh - 40-16317 Jarry Jeff - 99-16428 Jeitner Christian - 71B-16404 Jellett Tim - 10-16352 Jenkins Alex - 25-16207 Jenks Jeromy - 59-16108 Jenni Karen - 29-16346 Jennings Paul - 116-16448 Jennings Tom - 130-16246 Jensen Philip - 128-16057 16215 Jeong KwanSeong - 101-16444 Jerome Simon - 87E-16166 Jiang Hao - 128-16332 Jiselmark Jonatan - 25-16412 Jo Hyun-jun - 134-16235 Johnson Chris - 47-16613 48-16380 81-16379 131-16478 Johnson Jeffrey N. - 130-16212 Johnson Jeremy - 6-16390 6-16395 69-16157 95-16396 Johnson Mark - 88B-16131 Johnson Michael - 30B-16449 Johnson Tim - 130-16052 Jones Adam - 66-16295 Jones Jay - 83-16607 103-16608 Jones Paul - 88B-16381 Jones Robert - 31-16686 Jonsson Graham - 23-16050 37-16387 Jordanov Marin - 44-16077 50C-16159 Joseph Robert - 40-16317 105-16301 Jossens Guillaume - 50A-16144 Jouve Anne-Cecile - 118-16027 Jova Luis - 87D-16616 Joyce James - 66-16064 Jubin Robert - 26-16031 16319 Judd Laurie - 108A-16592 134-16262 Jung Chong Hun - 87A-16137 Jung Hoan Sung - 50B-16076 Kabel Joey - 31-16323 Kahl Torsten - 64-16043 Kalinina Elena - 40-16317 97-16338 121-16618 127-16529 Kalinowski Thomas - 17-16021 122-16101 Kaltsoyannis Nikolas - 31-16464 40-16503 92-16466 16470 Kaminski Michael - 105-16347 Kamoshida Mamoru - 51-16655 134-16494 Kanamaru Taro - 87B-16062 Kaneko Masaaki - 50B-16061 51-16083 105-16066 Kang Gyeong-Uk - 30B-16278 Kani Yuko - 51-16655 Kaplan Daniel - 81-16379 Karns Tristan - 88A-16640 Kato Osamu - 50D-16047 Katsenovich Yelena - 10-16429 31-16660 71A-16524 81-16600 Katzman Danny - 70-16438 Kautsky Mark - 27-16097 -16147 Kawajiri Yoshiaki - 105-16072 Kawamoto Katsuya - 50D-16626 Keefer Mark - 23-16173 Kehrman Robert - 96-16310 Keil Karen - 11-16201 81-16275 82-16199 Keizur Alan - 97-16575 Kelley Dennis - 45-16453 Kelokaski Pasi - 30E-16497 Kennedy Christopher - 82-16329 Kennedy James - 99-16315 Kent Norman - 66-16506 88A-16267 Kerridge Andrew - 31-16464 40-16503 92-16470 Ketusky Edward - 100-16327 Khan Ali - 25-16192 87A-16035 Khan Mikael - 134-16262 Kicker Dwayne - 30G-16135 Kiho Kenzo - 30G-16078 16079 Kilochytska Tetiana - 87D-16616 Kim Cheon-woo - 134-16235 Kim Cho-Rong - 87A-16137 Kim Hyungjin - 30B-16278 Kim Jungjin - 87A-16112 Kim Karen - 84-16228 98-16224 Kim Ki Hyun - 50B-16076 Kim Kwang Pyo - 105-16689 Kim Mi Jin - 88A-16598 Kim Min Jun - 105-16689 Kim Sungil - 30B-16074 51-16237 Kim Won-Seok - 31-16114 87A-16112 Kim Yongkwon - 50B-16484 King Matt - 118-16358 King William Bill - 6-16109 Kinugasa Junichiro - 50D-16047 Kinugawa Hiroshi - 87A-16115 Kirk Scott - 17-16408 97-16418 Kirk Thomas - 18-16311 50A-16316 Kishimoto Manabu - 87A-16115 87C-16113 108A-16111 Kitamoto Yusuke - 51-16655 Kitamura Masafumi - 46-16489 Kivenas Nadia - 105-16347 Klein Slade - 64-16362 Klein Thomas - 83-16152 83-16181 83-16191 Kliczewski Theresa - 105-16653 Klinger Jeffrey - 108A-16592 Klymyshyn Nicholas - 128-16215 Kmiec Victoria - 77-16145 Kobayashi Masato - 127-16156 Kobayashi Ryosuke - 47-16613 Kobera Libor - 31-16271 Kohlgarth Elke.-D. - 66-16493 Koivula Risto - 30E-16497 Kolyadin Vyacheslav - 87F-16054 Korkeakoski Petri - 126-16070 Kostelnik Kevin - 81-16443 Kovar Petr - 87E-16166 Kovak Petr - 134-16531 Krakowiak KRZYSZTOF - 119-16236 Krause Gregor - 66-16258 Kremer John - 49-16264 Kreusch Arleen - 11-16201 82-16199 Krieguer Jean-Marie - 85-16038 Kriikku Eric - 49-16030 Krivanek Kenneth - 26-16148 Kruger Albert - 26-16226 16231 16409 31-16100 86-16003 Kruzic Michael - 46-16487 Kuate Simo Eric - 96-16240 Kulchytska Svitlana - 105-16692 Kumano Yumiko - 44-16287 Kumar Rajan - 8-16499 59-16330 Kuramochi Hidetoshi - 50D-16626 Kusumi Tomoo - 46-16489 Kwak Sung-Woo - 50B-16484 Labador Evangeline - 67-16368 Labalette Thibaud - 85-16038 Lacey Thomas - 25-16437 Lagos Leonel - 25-16393 28-16513 31-16660 50A-16463 81-16600 87C-16465 LaGuardia Thomas - 24-16527 Laha Shonali - 10-16429 Laija Emerald - 81-16473 131-16478 Laine Gregory - 86-16461 LaMarche Whitney - 45-16370 Lamouroux Christine - 64-16627 Landon Matt - 61-16589 Landon Roger - 36-16642 Lang Jesse - 26-16231 Langett John - 10-16352 119 Lapierre Robert - 31-16676 81-16600 Larche Michael - 95-16150 Larson Joel - 6-16395 Larsson Arne - 66-16258 84-16242 122-16041 Laszlo Toro - 45-16453 Launeau Frederic - 85-16038 Laurent Franck - 101-16015 Laurent Gerard - 84-16559 Lawrence Angelique - 31-16663 16668 16680 71A-16203 71B-16202 Leary Kevin - 71B-16099 Leay Laura - 87B-16055 Ledoux Mark - 100-16641 Lee Art - 11-16485 Lee Brady - 10-16429 81-16379 16549 Lee Byung Soo - 51-16237 87D-16488 Lee Byungsoo - 30B-16074 Lee Cheo Kyung - 50B-16076 89A-16117 16244 Lee Choong Sung - 50B-16076 Lee Christine - 72-16142 Lee Dongmyung - 30B-16423 Lee Hee-Jae - 88A-16598 Lee Ho Jin - 30B-16423 30B-16074 Lee Hope - 10-16429 48-16380 81-16379 16549 Lee Jeongken - 51-16237 Lee JungJoon - 51-16237 87D-16488 Lee Kearn - 47-16341 Lee Sang Don - 70-16508 Lee SeungMin -26-16226 30F-16336 Lee William - 92-16466 92-16474 114-16167 134-16494 Lee Youn-Myoung - 50C-16014 Lefkowitz Sheldon - 67-16280 Lefort-Mary Florence - 64-16627 Leguil Marc - 96-16085 Lemieux Paul - 70-16256 Lemont Florent - 134-16026 Lemus Alexey - 87F-16054 Lengrand Sandra - 101-16015 Lenhardt Duane - 82-16146 Lennox Barry - 46-16028 Leon Vargas Rocio - 31-16086 Leonard Kathleen - 87B-16229 Leslie Bret - 29-16133 72-16102 Lettieri Paola - 70-16425 116-16402 Leveel Eric - 86-16376 Leverd Pascal - 96-16085 Levitskaia Tatiana - 44-16399 Lewis Donald - 128-16617 Li Ming-Hsu - 30B-16171 Libens Antoine - 130-16246 Lidar Per - 84-16242 Lim In-Cheol - 50B-16076 Lin Wen-Sheng - 30B-16171 Lind Susan - 67-16353 Lipnikov Konstantin - 130-16212 Little Paul - 50A-16080 Liu Chen-Wuing - 30B-16171 Liu Yung - 9-16149 Lively Jeffrey - 11-16602 16606 Ljubenov Vladan - 87D-16616 Lloyd Daniel - 87A-16035 Loeb Andreas - 118-16599 Lomas Paul - 46-16512 Long Juliet - 37-16595 44-16597 71A-16646 131-16596 Looman Marc - 18-16261 130-16246 Looney Brian - 47-16613 48-16270 71A-16203 71B-16202 16523 Lorillon Yves - 96-16085 Love Gavin - 46-16487 Love Richard - 72-16142 Lower Danielle - 108A-16592 Lowman Donald - 99-16315 Lu Changsheng - 68-16520 Lucero Randy - 18-16419 Luellen Jon R. - 71B-16193 Luey Ja-kael - 45-16370 Lunn Rebecca - 92-16466 Luzi Lorenzo - 95-16150 Mabrouk Majdi - 134-16026 MacDonell Margaret - 83-16607 103-16608 Maciel Marcos Goes - 31-16324 Mackay Graham - 92-16471 Mackay Marie - 122-16269 MacKinnon Robert - 29-16294 70-16303 Mackley Robert - 130-16333 Maco Barbara - 119-16451 Maddrell Ewan - 92-16581 Madl Larry - 68-16355 Mduar Marcelo Francis - 31-16324 Maekawa Hiromichi - 26-16107 30F-16118 108A-16111 Maeseto Tomoharu - 50D-16626 Mageid Allaa - 89A-16306 Magnuson Matthew - 70-16508 Maheras Steven - 128-16057 16623 Mahmoudi Mehrnoosh - 31-16663 16668 16680 71A-16203 71B-16202 Maina David - 130-16246 Mki Jussi-Matti - 45-16025 Makkos Eszter - 31-16464 Malbrouki Ridha - 71A-16194 Malinen Leena - 45-16025 Mallion Adam - 108A-16162 16592 111-16161 Maloir Denis - 84-16042 Malone Kevin - 95-16051 Manning Robin - 50D-16129 Marchand Michael - 134-16026 Marcial Jose - 31-16271 16323 Maree Ahmed - 31-16690 45-16318 88C-16225 Marin Adriano - 87A-16128 Mariner Paul - 30G-16547 96-16223 Markillie Jeffrey - 86-16461 Markley Chris - 44-16287 Martin David - 132-16557 Martin Donna - 72-16328 Martin Peter - 130-16257 Martin Scott - 108A-16111 Martinez Luis Gallego - 50B-16300 Marumo Jlio Takehiro - 31-16324 50B-16300 Mason John - 18-16261 67-16280 130-16246 Massaro L. Mel - 128-16057 Masset Matthew R. - 81-16275 82-16199 Materazzi Massimiliano - 116-16402 Mathonat Christophe - 50A-16144 Matsumoto Naoyuki - 108A-16491 Matsuyama Kanae - 50B-16061 Matushek Martin - 50D-16222 Matzie Regis A. - 117-16348 Mayer Jodi - 26-16231 McCabe Daniel - 134-16432 McCabe Scott - 11-16606 82-16146 McCain Rick - 71A-16321 71B-16208 McCall Ann - 100-16263 McCarthy Benjamin - 26-16231 McCauley Dave - 57-16456 McClellan Chuck - 71B-16190 McCloy John - 31-16100 16271 16323 114-16153 McConnell Paul - 128-16215 McCrary Jay - 23-16173 McDaniel Dwayne - 30C-16260 31- 16679 31-16670 95-16383 105- 16302 McElroy Robert - 50A-16450 McGee Don - 40-16591 McGetrick Lee - 26-16031 McGrath Richard - 84-16228 102-16046 McKeel Charles - 100-16327 McKinney James - 37-16595 McKirdy Bruce - 85-16266 120 McLeod Richard - 44-16597 McLeod Rick - 12-16433 McNally Amanda - 119-16451 16469 McNamara Bruce - 41-16075 McQueen Maureen - 102-16020 McTaggart Rene - 37-16574 Meisner James - 71A-16321 71B-16190 Mellor Matt - 108A-16162 Meltzer Don - 119-16469 Mertz Joshua - 45-16370 Metcalfe Doug - 57-16456 Metzler Donald - 119-16427 Mezyk Stephen - 117-16364 Michael-Agwuoke Macbeda Uche - 105-16388 16659 Middleton Rob - 37-16574 Miffling Lewis - 81-16652 Milelli Doriana - 134-16026 Miliken Andrew - 70-16425 116-16402 Miller Bill - 57-16391 Miller David - 27-16097 Miller Ian - 97-16575 Miller Judy - 27-16147 Miller Keith - 116-16175 132-16023 Miller Michael - 119-16451 Miller Michele - 27-16200 82-16209 Miller Neil - 11-16201 81-16275 82-16199 Miller Terry - 130-16212 Mills Robert - 50A-16080 Milner Tim - 45-16634 126-16635 Minette Michael - 41-16075 Mirsaidov Ilkhom - 71A-16501 Mitsui Takashi - 87A-16115 87C-16113 108A-16111 Miyakawa Kimio - 30G-16078 Miyamoto Shinya - 51-16083 Molins Sergi - 130-16212 Moloney Barry - 118-16124 Moon Jei-Kwon - 87A-16137 101-16444 Moore Beth - 71A-16056 Moore James - 82-16384 Moore Robert - 71A-16194 71B-16193 Moore-Wood Amanda - 101-16544 Moraleda Gamero Fernando - 44-16077 Moren Rick - 27-16403 Morgan Simon - 131-16596 Morris Randall - 41-16218 Morse John - 69-16335 71B-16099 81-16473 Morton Mark - 46-16487 Moser Erin - 81-16549 Most William - 68-16355 96-16310 Motohashi Tetsuo -50B-16061 105-16066 Moulton David - 69-16335 130-16212 Mueller Wilhelm - 18-16311 Muggleton Scott - 71A-16276 Muiter Bill - 66-16506 Mller Herwig - 96-16490 Murata Manabu - 30G-16079 Murata Takaaki - 51-16083 Murayama Seiichi - 51-16083 Murphy Charlie - 88A-16267 Musall John - 67-16293 Musat Aurelia - 45-16453 Nabbi Rahim - 102-16123 105-16334 Nabemoto Toyonobu - 134-16235 Nagai Chiaki - 127-16156 Nagai Takayuki - 26-16107 30F-16118 Nagtzaam Gerald - 30A-16521 Nakamura Noriyoshi - 47-16613 Nakano Kunihiko - 26-16107 30F-16118 Nakashima Hitoshi - 30G-16110 Napier Bruce - 81-16379 Nargi Ronald - 86-16461 Nascimento Fernando Codelo do- 31-16400 Nash Charles - 134-16432 Navarro Mariano - 44-16077 50C-16159 Neall Fiona - 99-16382 Negishi Koji - 87B-16062 Negron Mike - 108A-16344 Neir Alyssa - 97-16575 Nelson Jerel - 46-16487 Nelson Roger - 127-16515 Nettleton Anthony - 132-16604 Neuville John -23-16173 Newman Andrew - 30A-16521 Nichols Mike - 122-16065 Nichols Ralph - 31-16511 Nieder-Westermann Gerald - 44-16077 50C-16159 Nielsen Taylor - 45-16318 88C-16225 Niibori Yuichi - 8-16116 30G-16033 16160 16239 Nimmons Michael - 81-16379 Nishi Takashi -51-16655 Noe Ron - 66-16506 Nofchissey Joni - 27-16097 Nolan Mike 45 -16605 16615 Nomura Kazutaka - 50D-16626 Noronha Jennifer - 85-16314 Noseck Ulrich - 85-16024 Noshita Kenji - 51-16655 Nottestad Stacy - 5-16322 Nutbeam-Tuffs Sin - 50A-16316 Nutt W. Sam - 103-16608 Nutt William - 29-16291 83-16607 97-16338 16575 103-16608 105-16301 OMalley Dan - 70-16438 OSullivan Patrick - 84-16559 Occhipinti John - 115-16121 Odell Lawrence - 18-16261 130-16246 Oh Seung Cheol - 105-16689 Ohl Phillip - 111-16410 Ohlhof Ralf - 66-16493 Ojovan Michael - 57-16304 84-16559 Okabe Hirofumi - 50B-16061 51-16083 105-16066 Okamura Masato - 87B-16062 Oniki Toshiro - 134-16235 Oomura Hisao - 51-16081 Oostrom Mart - 131-16195 Oowaki Katsura - 87A-16115 Orr Robin - 92-16139 Osako Masahiro - 50D-16626 Ouzounian Grald - 85-16038 96-16085 Ozutsumi Takenori - 8-16116 Page Jason - 6-16395 Page Tom - 126-16134 Pak Donald - 67-16293 115-16172 Palethorpe Steve - 70-16425 Palmes Julia - 40-16504 Palonen Erkki - 121-16507 Pancake Daniel - 100-16632 Pantelides Chris - 45-16318 88C-16225 Paraskevoulakos Haris - 92-16467 Pareizs John - 115-16172 Park Jaeyeong - 50D-16238 Park Uk Ryang - 50B-16484 Parks Joel - 88C-16225 Passarge Carina - 84-16126 Paterson Hannah - 31-16695 Patil Amol - 18-16361 Patil Sandeep - 59-16330 Patrascoiu Sorin - 57-16391 Patterson Geoffrey - 100-16125 Patterson John - 68-16520 Patterson Russell - 83-16181 16191 96-16369 Patton Bradley - 26-16031 Pau George - 130-16212 Paul Debasish - 132-16039 Paulillo Andrea - 70-16425 Pavlenko Vitaly - 87F-16054 Payne Liam - 25-16207 31-16683 Payton Oliver - 130-16257 121 Pazan Kiara - 71B-16523 Peakall Jeff - 30B-16449 95-16051 Peake Thomas - 70-16256 Pedersen Bent - 87E-16166 Peeler David - 30F-16154 31-16100 Pegg Ian - 77-16145 92-16477 Pelton Mitch - 69-16157 Penney Ryan - 71A-16326 Pescatore Claudio - 83-16542 Peters Thomas P - 23-16178 Petersen Gordon - 31-16684 40-16317 Peterson Dave M. - 27-16097 Peterson Jacob - 114-16153 Peterson Reid - 44-16399 Peterson Steven - 128-16309 Philippe Stephane - 86-16376 Phillips Chris - 128-16232 Phillips Felicia - 28-16196 Phillips Lisa - 57-16645 Picel Mary - 105-16653 Pieczynski Todd - 100-16327 Pimblott Simon - 87B-16055 92-16466 Pinet Olivier - 86-16376 Pino Christian - 71A-16524 Pinter Janos - 70-16578 Piotrowski Matt - 18-16261 Pittfield Taryn - 71B-16404 Planas Meilyn - 31-16675 Pletser Dimitri - 134-16494 Plonski Mike - 82-16525 Plummer Jean - 108A-16344 Plummer Scott - 59-16198 Pokhitonov Yury - 30E-16498 Polek Michael - 82-16146 Poling Jeanne - 68-16213 99-16440 Poncet Bernard - 84-16084 Pope Arron - 71A-16321 71B-16190 16208 Pope Ronald - 9-16149 Poppiti James - 30C-16481 Porter Craig - 85-16279 Posivak Edward - 100-16510 Potter Darren - 100-16125 116-16175 Powell Ashton S. - 117-16364 Powell Brian - 31-16688 Praetorius Reiner - 84-16126 Prak Petr - 134-16531 Price Belinda - 12-16459 Price Laura - 29-16482 Prij Jan - 85-16024 Primrose Annette - 50D-16129 99-16460 Priyanto Deni - 96-16274 126-16070 Proctor Megan - 131-16105 Provis John - 77-16245 Pryor Dan - 118-16599 Pultier Marc - 118-16027 Punshon Chris - 25-16130 30G-16136 Pyles Gary - 61-16479 Quinley Brian - 102-16044 Quintero Walter - 50A-16463 87C-16465 Radulescu Georgeta - 128-16458 Rajkumari Archita - 31-16696 Ramsey Amy - 30A-16462 Rana Awmna - 31-16663 71B-16202 Randall Geoff - 95-16051 Ray Jay - 49-16030 Raymond David - 11-16602 Reboul Scott - 115-16172 Reddick Julie - 131-16478 Reed Donald - 96-16369 Reed Karen - 82-16209 Reich Claudia - 25-16434 Reich William - 128-16623 Reid Richard - 102-16046 Reigel Marissa - 23-16178 77-16325 Reim Michael - 128-16617 Reynolds Jacob - 23-16394 115-16188 Rhia Brian - 48-16270 Rhodes Kelly - 131-16067 Ribeiro Tracy - 27-16614 Rice Hugh - 95-16051 Rich David - 82-16329 Richards David - 130-16257 Richardson Ian - 46-16180 Richardson John-Patrick - 116-16448 Richardson Phil - 121-16268 Richey Dan - 87B-16229 Ridge Christianne - 99-16315 Rigali Mark - 71A-16194 71B-16193 Riley Brian - 44-16399 114-16153 Rimando Rodrigo - 26-16409 108A-16592 Ritter John - 108A-16592 134-1626 Rivera Benjamin - 57-16647 Rivers Joe - 83-16607 Roach Jay - 57-16647 Robbins Rebecca - 57-16304 84-16559 Roberts Ben - 66-16064 Roberts Kimberly - 77-16325 Robinson Bruce - 41-16541 114-16540 Robinson Polly - 119-16427 Robinson Sharon - 26-16031 Rock Cynthia - 100-16632 Rockhold Mark - 47-16341 69-16335 Rod Kerry - 118-16358 Roelant David - 30C-16386 31-16511 50A-16463 Rohay Virginia - 131-16478 Rood Marc - 108A-16111 Ross Steven - 128-16057 16215 Rothan Dominique - 50A-16316 Rothwell Peter - 37-16576 Rotterman Yoel - 31-16511 71A-16056 Rousseau Ronald W. - 105-16072 Roussel Cline - 86-16376 Roux Anne-Marie - 101-16015 Rowat John - 87D-16616 Rowley John - 116-16448 Royer Patrick - 69-16157 Rubio Gustavo - 8-16499 Rueter Kenneth - 131-16067 Runyon Tim - 9-16612 Rushby Martin - 50A-16316 Rutherford Joyce - 131-16596 Ryan Joseph - 61-16480 Ryu Jun-Hyung - 105-16681 Saad Max - 68-16213 99-16440 Sahd Gregory - 83-16152 Saito Yuta - 30G-16239 Sakakibara Yuji - 108A-16491 Sakuragi Tomofumi - 50D-16047 Saleh Muad - 31-16323 Salisbury Jennifer - 71B-16404 Sallis Philip - 105-16388 Salo Benjamin - 30E-16497 Samadi Azadeh Azi - 23-16173 Sams Terry - 31-16675 Samsa Michael - 121-16618 Sanchez Mike - 122-16065 Sanders David - 45-16318 88C-16225 Sanders Michele - 108A-16292 Sanders Thomas - 108A-16036 Sanderson Rebecca - 77-16245 Sandru Adina - 45-16453 Sanford Peter - 67-16368 Santiago Erwin - 11-16602 71B-16534 Saraeva Natalia - 83-16607 97-16575 103-16608 Sasagawa Tsuyoshi - 30G-16033 Saso Michitaka - 51-16081 Sato Ikken - 87A-16013 Sato Seiichi - 108A-16491 122 Sato Tatsuaki - 50B-16061 105-16066 Sato Yohei - 50B-16061 Sauger John - 118-16599 Scales Charlie - 111-16410 Schapell Bruce - 60-16219 Schaper Daniel - 66-16493 Scheele Randall - 41-16075 Scherman Carl - 116-16082 Schmidt Karsten - 118-16073 Schmidt Markus - 122-16253 Schofield John - 95-16396 Schrder Thomas J. - 85-16024 Schubert Allen - 131-16067 Schultheisz Daniel - 57-16645 70-16256 Schwab Patrick - 128-16623 Schwantes Jon - 41-16075 Schweiger Michael - 26-16226 16231 30F-16154 16336 31-16100 Scott Paul - 66-16295 Scott Thomas - 25-16207 92-16466 16467 130-16257 Scully Pam - 47-16088 Seamans Jim - 18-16241 Segerud Per - 118-16096 Seitz Roger - 44-16287 Semenov Sergey - 87F-16054 Semin Ilia - 87A-16022 Sensibaugh Mike - 102-16044 Serne Jeffrey - 44-16399 61-16479 77-16098 Setegn Shimelis - 31-16663 31-16668 16680 71A-16203 71B-16202 Setzman Erik - 29-16657 Severns Stuart - 67-16298 Severynse Thomas - 40-16317 Sevougian David - 29-16294 29-16346 96-16223 Shafer David - 27-16614 Shah Hasmukh - 23-16178 115-16121 Shahrayar Yaqoot - 31-16323 Sheffield Ryan - 31-16679 95-16383 Shenk Julia - 66-16064 Sheridan Alisa - 60-16221 Shidai Akira - 30G-16079 Shin Hyeong Ki - 50D-16238 Shin Jung-Ki - 50B-16484 Shoffner Peggy - 25-16393 50A-16463 87C-16465 Shuler James - 9-16149 Shull Connor - 100-16327 Shupe Kalli - 103-16569 Shust Bill - 128-16215 Siddoway Dave - 41-16071 Silverman Josh - 71A-16056 Simiele Connie - 28-16570 103-16569 Simirskii Iurii - 87A-16022 87F-16054 Simmons Sally - 81-16473 131-16478 Simner Steven - 77-16145 16325 Simpson Alan - 18-16241 49-16264 Simpson Brett - 45-16370 Sims Lee - 49-16030 Sinclair Philip - 81-16652 Singh Anil kumar - 59-16330 Sinicrope Joseph - 25-16393 Sinton Gregory - 130-16405 Sjblom Rolf - 31-16100 Skala Lukas - 87E-16166 Sloma Tanya - 88A-16267 Slovak Jiri - 57-16255 Smart Bill - 122-16065 Smee Ben - 81-16652 Smee Jonathan - 46-16180 Smiesko Ivan - 45-16416 Smith Ellen - 83-16607 Smith Frank - 115-16172 Smith Gary L. - 77-16098 Smith Iain - 95-16051 Smith Kevin - 11-16485 Smith Paul - 88A-16640 Smith Sahid - 61-16589 Smoldasova Jana - 87E-16166 Snyder Michael - 17-16021 102-16020 16046 Sofronieva Penka - 50C-16159 Sohn Dong-Seong - 88A-16598 Sohn Sungjune -50D-16238 Sok Sophy - 89A-16117 Solc Jaroslav - 87E-16166 Soong Te-Yang - 44-16365 47-16088 Southern Scott - 31-16271 Southworth Timothy - 18-16132 Spatz Bob - 71B-16190 Spector Harold - 82-16199 Spence Matthew - 100-16125 Sperling Arthur - 102-16123 105-16334 Spielmann Uwe - 64-16043 Spinelli Nina - 12-16343 Spivey Mary Alice - 83-16607 Spoerner Michael - 41-16071 Springell Ross - 92-16467 Stahlmann Joachim - 31-16086 Stanfield Sean - 50A-16450 Stanke Dieter - 118-16599 Staten Jane - 11-16201 081-16275 82-16199 Staub Aaron - 86-16069 Stefanova Ira - 44-16077 050C-16159 85-16611 Stein Emily - 29-16294 70-16303 96-16223 Steininger Walter - 85-16519 Steinmetz Hans-Juergen - 84-16559 Stennett Martin - 92-16581 Stepanov Alexey - 87A-16022 Stevens Howard - 84-16371 Stevens Owen - 119-16151 Stevens Patrice - 41-16541 Stewart Robert - 71A-16583 Steyer Stefan - 122-16253 Stinson Stuart - 119-16151 Stirler Jacob - 18-16241 Stitt Camilla - 92-16467 Stockham Dwight - 68-16213 Stockton Tom - 69-16486 Stoll Ralph - 97-16575 Strand Christopher - 31-16668 Strange Robin - 130-16246 Strysewske Ronald - 118-16073 Su Jiann - 29-16346 Subramanian Karthik - 5-16436 61- 16435 Sugimori Toshiaki - 51-16081 16083 Sulejmanov Eduard - 134-16531 Sullivan Daniel - 100-16327 Sumiya Takako 51-16655 Sunaga Takayuki - 30G-16078 Suran Jiri - 87E-16166 Surovchak Scott - 10-16342 Susa Shunsuke - 51-16081 Suzuki Atsuo - 18-16361 Swanberg David - 61-16479 16480 77-16098 Swartz Mike - 67-16566 Sweetkind Donald - 10-16104 Swift Neil - 87B-16062 Sylvester Paul - 126-16635 Szecsody Jim - 71B-16193 Szilagyi Andrew - 108A-16592 Tabor Charles - 10-16342 Tachibana Takahiro - 134-16235 Tajima Naoki - 51-16081 Takahashi Fumio - 51-16655 Takeuchi Yukio - 50D-16626 Tanaka Tatsuya - 127-16156 Tansey William - 18-16261 Taplin Temeka - 132-16557 Tardiff Benjamin - 23-16394 Tashiro Ryo - 30G-16160 Tatar Florin - 57-16391 Tateishi Tsuyoshi - 50D-16047 Taylor Paul - 26-16031 Taylor-Pashow Kathryn - 134-16432 Tegner Bengt - 92-16470 Temus Charles - 64-16362 123 Thatcher Kate - 96-16490 Thien Mike - 30A-16462 60-16421 61-16435 Thomas Ivan - 128-16232 Thomas Jay - 64-16627 Thomauske Bruno - 57-16122 105-16334 118-16124 Thomle Jon - 130-16052 Thompson Dennis - 44-16691 Thompson Paul - 96-16274 126-16070 Thomson Chris - 25-16649 Thomson Steven - 126-16134 Thornber Stephanie - 92-16581 Thornton Nigel - 8-16499 Tian Kuo - 44-16087 Tinjum James - 44-16087 Tinsley Tim - 116-16448 132-16023 Todd Terry - 117-16233 Tonge Alastair - 95-16051 Toothman Mindy - 68-16355 83-16181 Torneby Michael - 41-16071 Toupiol Sandrine - 64-16627 Towner Antony - 18-16261 Toyohara Masumitsu - 50B-16061 Trail Casey - 29-16291 97-16338 Trapuzzano Tim - 102-16044 Travis Karl - 29-16249 Trvisan Isabelle - 86-16376 Triplett Mark - 69-16157 81-16379 Trivedi Divyesh - 108A-16170 Trtilek Radek - 134-16531 Truex Michael - 47-16613 48-16380 81-16379 130-16333 131-16195 16478 Tsoukalas Lefteri - 31-16685 Tucker Brian - 82-16329 Tucker Graham - 8-16499 Tunbrant Sofie - 83-16169 Turner Steve - 18-16241 Turner William - 37-16595 44-16597 Turrillas Xabier - 50B-16300 Tusa Esko - 30E-16497 Tzagkaroulakis Ioannis - 108A-16170 Tzika Faidra - 87E-16166 Udall Greg - 108A-16162 Ueno Shunichiro - 26-16107 30F-16118 Uhlmann Stephan - 105-16032 Um Wooyong - 31-16114 61-16479 77-16098 87A-16112 Underwood Nick - 100-16125 116-16175 Upadhyay Himanshu - 31-16677 50A-16463 87C-16465 Urquidez Ashley - 96-16310 Valdivieso Jos Miguel - 118-16096 Vlimaa Ilkka - 30E-16497 Van Ammel Raf - 87E-16166 Van Camp Scott - 66-16064 Van den Dungen Kurt - 46-16168 Van Hoesen Dirk - 131-16273 Van Luik Abraham - 83-16152 16169 16191 16542 Van Veen Walter - 71B-16534 Vance Eric Lou - 114-16167 Vanderperre Serge - 84-16042 VanderVeer Bradley - 30F-16154 Vanek Tim - 27-16614 Vannah Benjamin - 11-16485 Vasilev Nikolay - 50A-16316 Vasquez David - 95-16150 Veirs Kirk - 88A-16640 Venetz Theodore - 6-16390 95-16396 Vermuel Vince - 71B-16193 Vero Thomas - 67-16454 Vesselinov Velimir - 70-16438 Veyer Catherine - 86-16376 Vicente Roberto - 31-16324 50B-16300 Vicuna Mark - 18-16361 Vieira Imario - 31-16400 Vienna John - 26-16231 117-16233 Viera Jesse - 31-16678 Vieru Gheorghe - 88A-16420 Villani Marcel - 50A-16450 Vis Geert-Jan - 85-16024 Vogel Kyle - 40-16622 Vogt Tobias - 96-16490 Volkovich Anatoly - 87A-16022 Von Berlepsch Thilo - 57-16610 85-16611 Voss James - 30A-16521 97-16575 121-16392 Vreede Patrick - 25-16412 Wachter Joseph - 50A-16450 Wadin Maxime - 84-16042 Wagner Jean-Michel - 25-16434 Wahlquist Roger - 86-16461 Wainwright Haruko - 69-16335 130-16212 Waite David - 114-16167 Walkden Peter - 46-16603 Walker Stuart - 71A-16307 71A-16308 Wall Nathalie - 31-16100 Wallace Drew - 99-16440 Walraven Douglas - 67-16280 Walter Nelson - 11-16606 Walton Zane - 45-16370 Wang Hong - 128-16332 Wang Jy-An - 128-16332 Wang Peng - 46-16489 Ward Abigail - 92-16466 Ward Andy - 83-16197 Washenfelder Dennis - 6-16390 16395 95-16396 Watson David J. - 69-16157 Watson Natalie - 11-16606 Watson Robert - 83-16197 Watson Simon - 46-16028 87B-16055 Watters Dave - 82-16384 Weaver Jamie - 31-16100 Weber Inge - 122-16041 Wei Xinyu - 70-16578 Wei Zhang - 18-16261 Weintrager Udo - 46-16180 Weisenberg Kerry - 46-16183 Wellington Joseph - 40-16503 Wellman Dawn - 61-16435 71B-16099 Wells Beric - 59-16108 Wels Tobias - 66-16493 Wentland Christopher - 97-16338 Werner Stefani - 40-16053 West Michael - 130-16246 Westsik Joseph - 61-16479 77-16098 Whalley Jacqueline - 105-16388 Wheeler Isabelle - 86-16283 16285 16286 Wheeler Martin - 36-16476 60-16221 Whicker Jeffrey - 87B-16216 Whiteside Tad - 115-16172 Whittall Steven - 46-16487 Wickham Anthony - 84-16559 Wiersma Bruce - 6-16109 Wiggins Arthur - 119-16151 Wilburn Scott - 47-16088 Wilke Marcus - 122-16253 Wilkinson Richard - 46-16487 Williams Benjamin - 77-16098 Williams Edward - 49-16264 Williams Layne - 99-16440 Williams Richard - 40-16622 Willis Kristen - 89A-16349 Wilmarth Bill - 23-16178 115-16121 Wilson Craig - 108A-16162 111-16161 Wilson Dave - 46-16180 Wilson Eric - 6-16395 Winkler Cliff - 23-16394 60-16568 Winspear -Roberts Victoria 37-16387 Wintczak Tom - 36-16476 Winters Mike - 82-16329 16522 16525 124 Wipfli Christine - 31-16674 Wirth Holger - 85-16519 Wisbey Simon - 83-16169 16378 Wise Michelle - 50A-16080 Witkowski Ioana - 132-16604 Witwer Keith - 111-16410 Wolf Jens - 85-16024 Woller Frantisek - 57-16255 Woodbury Simon - 92-16471 Woodcock Terry - 25-16192 Wooley Theodore Ted - 30A-16462 Woollen Mary - 103-16608 Wright Thomas - 46-16028 Wrzesinski Wendell - 36-16476 16579 16638 Wyness Kate - 31-16296 Wyrwas Richard - 6-16109 Xie Yu - 31-16688 Yaita Yumi - 51-16083 87B-16062 Yamamoto Seiji - 51-16081 Yamamoto Tomoko - 46-16489 Yamamoto Yasushi - 87B-16062 Yamasaki Akito - 46-16489 Yamashiki Yosuke - 130-16257 Yamashita Yu - 51-16083 Yan Yong - 128-16332 Yang Han-Beom - 87A-16137 Yang Youming - 44-16087 Yim Sung Paal - 50B-16076 89A-16117 Yllanes Gene - 30C-16386 31-16673 Yokaichiya Fabiano - 50B-16300 Yook Daesik - 30B-16423 51-16446 Yoon In-Ho - 87A-16137 Yoshida Satoshi - 50D-16047 Yoshii Toshihiro - 87B-16062 Young Brian - 18-16361 Young Jason - 60-16219 Young Robin - 115-16172 Zeitler Todd - 30G-16135 Zhang Zhuanfang Fred - 71B-16099 Zimmerman Colin - 50A-16080 NOTES ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ ___________________________________ 125 POSTER SESSIONS Be sure to turn in your vote by session one hour before the session ends. Each track selects the best posterpaper which are then displayed and re-judged on Wednesday afternoon for the Best of the Conference. The Best of the Conference Poster for the 2016 conference will be presented at WM2017. The WM2015 Best of the Conference awards will be presented at the Honors Awards Luncheon on Tuesday March 8 2016. Poster Session Schedule and Author Attendance at Poster First Floor Foyer Session Poster Period Authors present -First Period- Authors present -Second Period- Poster Set-up Poster Removal MONDAY MARCH 7 2016 Afternoon HLW 30 13301700 13301430 16001700 1300-1330 17001730 TUESDAY MARCH 8 2016 Morning LLWNPP 5051 08301200 08300900 1100-1200 08000830 12001230 Afternoon ERCET 7172 13301700 13301430 16001700 1300-1330 17001730 WEDNESDAY MARCH 9 2016 Morning DDPTST 878889 08301200 08300900 1100-1200 08000830 12001230 Afternoon Non-Paper 105 13301700 13301430 16001700 1300-1330 17001730 STUDENT POSTER COMPETITION SESSION 31 Be sure to visit the Student Posters session on Monday March 7th in the Exhibit Hall and vote for the Best Student Poster. Students will display their posters on Monday March 7th from 1330 1700 pm. Judging will conclude at 1700 and the winner will be announced at the Tuesday March 8th Honors Awards Luncheon. The winner will receive 500 CASH. All student posters will remain on display in the Exhibit Hall through Wednesday March 10 at 1330. Be sure to visit the technical posters located on the first floor near the technical sessions. In this informal atmosphere Poster Presenters become discussion leaders sharing their ideas and visions. In order to honor high quality presentations the American Nuclear Society ANS presents an award for the Best PosterPaper and the American Society of Mechanical Engineers ASME also provides an award. Judges select the winners based on technical quality and preparation of the work as well as attendee votes. 126 Sponsored by Decommissioning and Environmental Sciences Division Robotics and Remote Systems Division Co-sponsored by Sponsored by Decommissioning and Environmental SciencesDivision RoboticsandRemote Systems Division Co-sponsoredby ConferencePurpose In 2016 the DES and RRS divisions will host a Decommissioning and Remote Systems DRS Joint Topical Meeting. The DRS 2016 topical meeting is anticipated to draw over 300 professionals from the decommissioning environmental and remote systems industries. The ANS Topical DRS Meeting is a forum for the discussion of the social regulatory scientific and technical aspects of decontamination decommissioning and reutilization and waste management. Program The 2016 program will include commercial government and international project updates and technology developments in the areas of decommissioning waste management and site closure and legacy management. The meeting will also feature a Professional Development Workshop on EPAs Radiation Risk Assessment Training and an exciting technical tours program. BusinessOpportunities The broad spectrum of companies and government organizations participating in the DRS topical meeting makes it an excellent setting to conduct business and teaming discussions. SocialEvents Meet up with your colleagues at the Sunday cocktail reception Mondays Gateway Clipper Dinner Cruise a Pittsburgh Brewpub or possibly a Pittsburgh Pirates baseball game at PNC Park. Moreinformation For more information please visit drs.ans.org or contact James Byrne at jbyrne4424comcast.net or 717-676-6600. MeetingOfficials General Chair Mark Marano Westinghouse Electric Company Technical Program Coordinator James Byrne Principal Byrne Assoc. LLC DES Technical Program Chair Sue Aggarwal President New Millennium Nuclear Technologies Int. RRS Technical Program Chair and Division Chair Mark Nokes Oak Ridge National Laboratories DES Division Chair Jay Peters Haley Aldrich Inc. InternationalParticipation International attendance at DRS meetings and ANS meetings in general has always been signicant as participation by various government and commercial organizations from other countries is highly encouraged. TechnologyTransfer Knowledge of experience gained in other countries on similar decommissioning projects is conveyed during sessions on topics such as waste management stewardship and decommissioning. TechnologyExpo A technical exhibit will be held in conjunction with the meeting bringing together exhibitors from a wide range of companies in the DD and Robotics industries. These exhibits will allow meeting participants to learn about cutting-edge products and technologies that are directly applicable to their current projects. 127 AECOM Booth 1100 Contact Keith Wood Diamond Sponsor Aiken SC USA P 803-502-5710 E keith.woodaecom.com Website www.aecom.com AECOM is built to deliver a better world. A Fortune 500 firm we design build finance and operate infrastructure assets for governments businesses and organizations in more than 150 countries. As a fully integrated firm we connect knowledge and experience across our global network of experts to help clients solve their most complex challenges. From infrastructure to resilient communities and environments to stable and secure nations our work is transformative differentiated and vital. See how we deliver at aecom.com. AECOM Booth 839 Contact Robert Bonner UK Pavilion Warrington United Kingdom P 4401925-854472 Erobert.bonneraecom.com Website www.aecom.com AECOM is a world leader in nuclear decommissioning with the capability to support every stage of the project life cycle from inception and design through construction start- up and operation to decommissioning and closure. We have been managing the operations and clean- up of high hazard complex nuclear sites for over 30 years. With over 150 site-years experience we are responsible for managing annual expenditures of over 3.4billion on nuclear projects in the UK and US. AGI Engineering Inc. Table Top L Contact Alex Innes Small Business Pavilion Stockton CA USA P 209-939-9900 E jayagieng.com Website www.agieng.com Design manufacture of specialized extended reach tank cleaning systems. Alliant Corporation Booth 628 Contact Kirsten Perry Knoxville TN USA E kperryalliantcorp.com Amec Foster Wheeler Booth 417 836 Contact Michael Jacobvitz Platinum Sponsor Petaluma CA USA UK Pavilion P 707-793-3800 E michael.jacobvitzamecfw.com Website www.amecfw.com From landmark remediation programs to local waste management projects Amec Foster Wheelers inter-disciplinary team develops and implements integrated solutions that incorporate innovative technologies to address complex radiological hazardous and multimedia contamination challenges. Amec Foster Wheeler helps clients move projects through cleanup and regulatory compliance to environmental excellence adding a sustainability focus to our services to maximize benefits for mankind and the localregional ecology. As one of the largest engineering project management and consultancy firms in the world Amec Foster Wheeler operates in nearly 55 countries 40000 employees from the Australian outback to the Arctic. American Crane Equipment Corporation Booth 601 Contact Lisa Walleigh Douglassville PA USA P 610-385-6061 x224 Elwalleighamericancrane.com Website www.americancrane.com American Crane Equipment Corporation is a leading provider of cranes hoists manipulators and specialized lift systems. Customers include commercial nuclear plants DOE facilities DOE laboratories and defense facilities. American Cranes recent focus has been supplying cranes and replacement trolleyshoists for dry spent fuel storage and radioactive waste remediation. Critical lift cranes having enhanced crane control features are also being supplied for material handling of critical equipment. American Crane has an ASME NQA-1 and 10CFR50 Appendix B QA Program and maintains a full-time service department with capabilities to perform crane mechanical and controls upgrades. American Crane has the in- house capabilities to provide all the cranes needed for new nuclear power plant construction. 128 ANTECH Corporation Booth 712 Contact Robin McKay Westminster CO USA P 303-430-8184 E mckay.robinantechcorp.com Website www.antech-inc.com ANTECH designs and supplies assay equipment for measuring LLW and TRU waste and for safeguards measurements. ANTECH also provides on-site measurement services for LLW and TRU waste drums and boxes and for decontaminating and decommissioning TRU gloveboxes so that they can then be measured and disposed of as LLW. Applied Research Center - FIU Booth 409 Contact Walter Quintero Miami FL USA P 305-348-5012 E quinterwfiu.edu Website www.fiu.edu Florida International Universitys Applied Research Center is a university based research center located in Miami Florida. Since 1995 ARC has supported DOEs environmental restoration mission by conducting applied research in key DOE-EMs technical areas such as Decontamination Decommissioning Waste Processing and Soil Groundwater. In 2007 DOE and FIU established the DOE-FIU Science Technology Workforce Development Program this unique program is designed to develop a pipeline of minority scientists and engineers students called DOE Fellows specifically trained and mentored to join federal or private sector workforce. Aquila Nuclear Engineering Ltd Booth 740 Contact Drew Corbertt UK Pavilion Hampshire England United Kingdom P 4401962-718390 E DCorbettaquilaeurope.eu Website www.aquilaeurope.eu Aquila is wholly focused on the nuclear industry providing engineered solutions for decommissioning RD life extension defense and new build markets. Core categories include glovebox technology shielded facilities remote handling and transport packages. Aquila is part of the Calder Group a 300m pan- European engineering and manufacturing company with ten operating subsidiaries in five countries. Operating in nuclear nuclear medicines defense aerospace and construction markets Calder are Europes largest vertically integrated lead processing and engineering company. Arcadis Booth 528 Contact Cheryl Hurns Highlands Ranch CO USA E cheryl.hurnsarcadis.com Arcadis is one of the worlds largest organizations providing comprehensive engineering environmental and architectural services to federal clients worldwide. For over 75 years weve delivered performance-based environmental solutions premiere water management energy and architectural expertise to fully meet federal demands. Our strong international presence includes 28000 staff in 70 countries providing services worldwide. Our innovative sustainable solutions provide value to support our clients success in critical missions around the world. AREVA Federal Services Booth 401 Contact Jan Phillips Gold Sponsor Charlotte NC USA P 704-805-2405 E janice.phillipsareva.com Website www.us.areva.com AREVA in North America combines US and Canadian leadership to supply high added-value products and services to support the operation of the nuclear fleet. Globally AREVA is present throughout the entire nuclear cycle from uranium mining to used fuel recycling including nuclear reactor design and operating services. AREVA is recognized by utilities around the world for its expertise its skills in cutting-edge technologies and its dedication to the highest level of safety. Through partnerships the company is active in the renewable energy sector. AREVA Inc.s 4300 employees are helping build tomorrows energy model supplying ever safer cleaner and more economical energy to the greatest number of people. Follow us on Twitter AREVAus. Arizona Energy Education Fund Coalition Contact John Van De Beuken Table Top C Tucson AZ USA Small Business Pavilion E john_van_de_beukenmsn.com Website www.azedcoalition.org The Arizona Energy-Education Fund Coalition is an assembly of stakeholders from the private sector government education and energy industries interested in supporting K-12 and universities through an enhanced program of recycling spent nuclear fuel and Monitored Retrieval Storage systems in Arizona. 129 ARS Aleut Analytical LLC Booth 718 Contact Virgene Ideker-Mulligan Port Allen LA USA P 225-381-2991 E vmulliganamrad.com website www.aleutcorp.com ARS Aleut Analytical LLC AAA provides Government and Commercial clients with full service laboratory capabilities to include radiochemistry standard chemistry Industrial Hygiene and other specialty services. AAA operates laboratories located in Louisiana Colorado and Alaska. ARS International LLC Booth 715 Contact Kimberly Jack Port Allen LA USA P 225-381-2991 E kjackamrad.com Website www.amrad.com ARS International is an Alaskan Native Corporation Small Disadvantaged Business with multiple 8a subsidiaries. Our umbrella of companies offers the following services environmental remediation services analytical services mobile laboratory services demolitiondeactivation decontamination services health physicist services hazardous waste management services field sampling services as well as additional environmental services. ARUP Booth 748 Contact Chi-Fung Tso UK Pavilion London United Kingdom P 44-20-7636-1531 E chi-fung.tsoarup.com Website www.arup.com Atkins Booth 744 Contact Nigel Thornton UK Pavilion London United Kingdom E nigel.thorntonatkinsglobal.com Website www.atkinsglobal.com Atkins energy business is an international provider of high-end design and engineering for the nuclear oil and gas renewables and power sectors. We deliver innovative technical solutions for some of the industrys greatest challenges and have provided business-critical engineering solutions in the North American energy sector since the 1980s. Attention IT Inc. Booth 710 Contact Jeanice Pratt Knoxville TN USA P 865-769-8888 x400 E jeaniceattentionit.com Website www.attentionit.com The eMWaste Primary Suite is the only web- based COTS software that tracks hazardous radioactive and mixed waste. eMWaste provides electronic cradle to grave tracking of profiles container certification characterization inventory processing treatment overpack shipping and disposal operations. All this while keeping a full historical record of container movements processes parentdaughter processes and shipping disposition of the container. eMWaste is composed of nine suites and offers LIMS Processor Disposition Document Control Dispatch Project Management and Contract Management to our customers. Attention IT LTD Booth 846 Contact Dan Smith UK Pavilion Warrington United Kingdom P 4401925-320070 E dsmithattentionit.com The eMWaste G2 Primary Suite is the only web- based COTS software that tracks hazardous radioactive and mixed waste. eMWaste G2 provides electronic cradle to grave tracking of profiles container certification characterization inventory processing treatment overpack shipping and disposal operations. eMWaste G2 keeps a full historical record of container movements processes parentdaughter processes and shipping disposition of the container. eMWaste G2 is composed of nine suites and offers LIMS Processor Disposition Document Control Dispatch Project Management and Contract Management to our customers. Augean PLC Booth 844 Contact Carol Earp UK Pavilion Wetherby United Kingdom P 4401937-844980 E CarolEarpaugeanplc.com Website www.augeanplc.com Augean Radioactive Waste Services RWS is a leader in providing waste disposal services for Low Level Radioactive and Naturally Occurring Radioactive Material in the UK. Providing a range of treatment and landfill processes to Site Licence electricity generation facilities North Sea oil and gas operators medical facilities and certain industrial producers. 130 AVANTech DTS Booth 517 Contact Gary A. Benda Bronze Sponsor Columbia SC USA P 803-407-7171 E GBendaAVANTechInc.com Website www.avantechinc.com AVANTech Inc. provides turn-key water processing services and systems and also can manage and process low-level radioactive and hazardous wastes. Technologies include demineralization polymer solidification filtration ultrafiltration reverse osmosis dewatering and drying. These are applied on a stand-alone basis or combined to effect waste stream or pool cleanup sludge collection silica removal boric acid recovery and zero environmental release. AVANTech with its DTS Division in Knoxville also provides underwater systems and select ion specific media. Bluegrass Concrete Cutting Inc Booth 702 Contact Robert Hulick Greenville AL USA P 334-382-0200 E bhulickconcretecutters.com Website www.concretecutters.com The industry leader in cutting concrete and metal structures Bluegrass has participated as a subcontractor in every significant commercial decommissioning project in the US and numerous DOE jobs. Using diamond wire technology on hundreds of projects we have successfully cut and segmented reactor nozzles reactor heads large components and bio-shield and containment walls. We also specialize in shaving contaminated concrete to required depths leaving the surface smooth enough for direct frisk. Brokk Inc. Booth 115 Contact Tony Marlow Monroe WA USA P 505-699-8923 E tmarlowbrokkinc.com Website www.brokk.com Brokk heavy duty remotely operated machines are used worldwide in many challenging applications These include dismantling decontamination demolition excavation size reduction radiation surveys process operations sorting and handling of radioactive waste. Operators can remotely complete multiple tasks at safe distances away from high radiation areas or other hazardous environments. Brokk machines can deploy many different types of remotely interchangeable attachments and can be customized to meet specific project requirements. Over 6000 Brokk machines have been deployed and they have earned an excellent record of performance ruggedness and reliability. BWX Technologies Inc Booth 1125 Contact Stephanie Decker Lynchburg VA USA P 434-522-6963 E sadeckerbwxt.com Website www.babcock.com Headquartered in Lynchburg Va. BWX Technologies Inc. BWXT is a leading supplier of nuclear components and fuel to the US government provides technical management and site services to support governments in the operation of complex facilities and environmental remediation activities and supplies precision manufactured components and services for the commercial nuclear power industry. BWXT has more than 5200 employees and significant operations in Lynchburg VA ErwinTN Mount VernonIN Euclid OH Barberton OH and Cambridge Ontario as well as more than a dozen US Department of Energy sites around the country. Cabrera Services Inc. Booth 612 Contact Shannan Ryll East Hartford CT USA P 860-569-0095 E sryllcabreraservices.com Website www.cabreraservices.com Cabrera is a turnkey remediation and site closure company. Whether we provide health physics expertise perform remediation or integrate both to conduct turnkey remediation on a project our understanding of the all elements of remediation particularly for radiological cleanup ensures technically sound solutions that expedite site closure for our clients. Camfil Booth 732 Contact Arthur Soma Pickerington OH USA P 740-963-8623 E art.somacamfil.com Website www.camfil.com As the world leader in air filtration technology Camfil offers state-of-the-art filtration solutions for industrial nuclear cleanrooms and high containment spaces. Camfil manufactures HEPA and ULPA filters with flows as high as 600 fpm and adsorbers for removing gaseous contaminants. Camfils highly-engineered filter housings and systems have reset the industry standard for high quality containment air filtration systems. 131 Canal Barge Company Booth 810 Contact Mike Little New Orleans LA USA P 713-560-5618 E mlittlecanalbarge.com Website www.canalbarge.com Founded in 1933 Canal Barge Company Inc. is a privately owned independent marine transportation company headquartered in New Orleans Louisiana. Its fleet of 36 inland towboats and over 800 barges operate throughout the Inland Waterways System of the United States. In addition their oceangoing deck barge fleet operates in all offshore waters of the Gulf of Mexico on the Eastern Seaboard and West Coast and internationally in Mexico the Caribbean Sea Central and South America Europe and West Africa. The company is one of the most diverse marine transportation companies in the country. CBC moves products such as lube oils black oils edible oils and petrochemicals in addition to coal petroleum coke and crushed stone. It also transports refinery and power plant components oil and gas exploration structures military cargos and new or used nuclear components. The Canal Terminal Company division operates a state-of- the-art multi-modal liquid storage terminal in the Chicago area handling of asphalt black oils and high-end chemicals. Its subsidiary Illinois Marine Towing is the largest independent towing and fleeting service on the Illinois River. Using our logistical experience we develop customized shipping plans to meet our customers specific needs. Canberra Industries Booth 301 Contact Tammy Pattison Gold Sponsor Meriden CT USA P 800-243-3955 E tammy.pattisoncanberra.com Website www.canberra.com Canberra is the leading supplier of innovation and cost-effective nuclear measurement solutions and services used to maintain safety of personnel assess the health of nuclear facilities and safeguard the public and the environment. Applications for Canberra offerings include health physics nuclear power operations Radiation Monitoring Systems RMS nuclear safeguards nuclear waste management environmental radiochemistry and other areas. CAST Transportation Booth 700 Semi B Contact Blake Burns Henderson CO USA P 303-534-6376 E bburnscasttrans.com Website www.casttrans.com CAST Transportation is a motor carrier handling Heavy Haul Hazmat LL Waste Flatbed Lowboy Chemical Tanker movements. CAST operates a Rail Transload Center from its tracks on the BNSF at Irondale Station Denver CO. Participant in the WIPP Program and has been a privately held company since 1948. CBI Booth 916 Contact Jack Clemmens Gold Sponsor The Woodlands TX USA P 803-641-1180 E jack.clemmenscbifederalservices.com Website www.cbi.com CBI is the most complete energy infrastructure focused company in the world. With 125 years of experience and the expertise of approximately 53000 employees CBI provides reliable solutions while maintaining a relentless focus on safety and an uncompromising standard of quality. As one of the most complete providers of a wide range of services including design engineering construction fabrication maintenance and environmental services no project is too big for CBI. Our timely and cost-effective solutions not only satisfy our customers needs but also improve the quality of life for people around the world. CH2M Booth 823 Contact Katie Warner Platinum Sponsor Englewood CO USA P 720-286-5632 E katelyn.warnerch2m.com Website www.ch2m.com CH2M specializes in the operations and management of complex nuclear programs and projects around the globe. CH2M provides innovative clean up environmental remediation and closure solutions for commercial and government nuclear facilities and sites in the US UK and Canada while safely delivering projects ahead of schedule and under budget. 132 Columbiana Hi Tech Booth 407 Contact Laura Alamillo Kernersville NC USA P 336-497-3600 E lalamillochtnuclear.com Website www.chtnuclear.com Columbiana Hi Tech CHT is a leading manufacturer and designer of nuclear fuel cycle packaging. CHT is the worlds largest manufacturer of front-end radioactive packaging and a major fabricator of containers and related products to transport and store spent nuclear fuel. Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance Contact Larry Stern Booth 319 Greenbelt MD USA P 703-786-8422 E lstern2013gmail.com Website www.cvsa.org Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance CVSA mission is to promote international commercial motor vehicle safety and security by providing leadership to enforcement industry and policy makers. CVSAs North American Level VI training and inspection program is for transuranic waste and highway route controlled quantities of radioactive material. Container Products Corporation Booth 605 Contact Dwight Campbell Wilmington NC USA P 910-392-6100 E DwightC-P-C.com Website www.c-p-c.net Container Products Corporation has been providing containers compactors and decontamination equipment to the nuclear industry since February 1981. CPC is the largest and most experienced producer of LLW containers in the US and its compactors and decontamination equipment are located throughout the world. Container Technologies Industries LLC Contact Steve Fielden Booth 925 Helenwood TN USA P 423-569-2800 x24 E sfieldenctifab.com Website www.containertechnologies.com Container Technologies CTI is a certified HubZone Small Business. Audited NQA-1 metal fabricator serving DOE DOD Power Generators and commercial customers in the US Canada and other countries. CTI has been in business for 17 years and offers design testing certification and fabrication of containers and structural components. CTI offers both physical and FEA testing using LS DYNA software. CTI has been nominated by CNS Y-12 for a national small business award and has numerous commendations from our customers in the past several years. Croft Associates Booth 738 Contact Mark Janicki UK Pavilion Abingdon Oxon United Kingdom P 4401865-407740 E mark.janickicroftltd.com Website www.croftltd.com Cutting Edge Services Corporation Contact Lisa Craig Booth 531 Batavia OH USA P 513-388-0199 E lisacuttingedgeservices.com Website www.cuttingedgeservices.com Cutting Edge Services provides engineered solutions for the cutting or drilling of concrete and metal structures. We design and fabricate special tools to augment our nuclear field services including diamond wire cutting of SG sections and solid turbine shafts diamond drilling of bioshield walls and water powered pole saw cutting of steel in pools. Dade Moeller Booth 910 Contact Krista Alley Richland WA USA P 509-942-3638 E krista.alleymoellerinc.com Website www.moellerinc.com Dade Moeller provides a full range of professional and technical services to Federal state and commercial clients in support of nuclear radiological and environmental operations. With 11 locations nationwide our staff is recognized for expertise and proven performance in radiationnuclear services occupational safety environmental protection and safety training. Take advantage of the new amenities on the WM2016 show floor Charging Tables located throughout the show floor to make working more convenient. Panel Zone take advantage of the sessions available to all attendees. Demo Zone learn about industry products as you view live demonstrations. Concession Stand grab a bite to eat before visiting with the exhibitors. Concierge Information Booth better your conference experience and explore Phoenix. 133 DAHER-TLI Booth 506 Contact Lauren Haas Fulton MD USA P 301-421-4324 E lhaastliusa.com Website www.tliusa.com DAHER-TLI the North American Nuclear subsidiary of DAHER provides turnkey solutions to the front and back-end sectors of the nuclear fuel cycle. DAHER designs and provides products and services based on its comprehensive portfolio of expertise engineering packaging transport and logistics waste treatment characterization volume eeduction etc. DAHER is a tier-1 equipment supplier to the high- technology industries. Created in 1863 DAHER is an international group present in 12 countries across the worldand generates over 1 Billion dollars in turnover annually. Dedicated Nuclear Solutions Booth 717 Contact Gregory Jones Aiken SC USA P 803-502-9977 E greg.jonesurs.com Dedicated Nuclear Solutions is an alliance of leading industry firms providing safety related material and services including commercial grade dedication equipment qualification e.g. seismic thermal aging reverse engineering and custom fabrication. DNS can provide electrical and electronic fabrication and qualification and specializes in digital controls. DNS also provides dedicated construction commodity items including plate steel shapes piping pipe fittings valves and virtually any needed item for safety application. DE-STA-CO CRL Booth 223 Contact Kristen Fairbrother Auburn Hills MI USA P 248-836-6674 E kfairbrotherdestaco.com Website www.destaco.com Diversified Metal Products Inc Booth 728 Contact Nathan McMasters Idaho Falls ID USA P 208-529-9655 E NathanMdiversifiedmetal.com Website www.diversifiedmetal.com Diversified Metal Products provides fabricating services to the nuclear industry. Our 60000 sq. ft. manufacturing facility and highly trained staff have the ability to handle any project. Our attention to quality and NQA-1 adherence has been verified by the industry leading DOE Prime Contractors. Dufrane Nuclear Shielding Inc. Table Top G Contact Tim Tarbox Small Business Pavilion Winsted CT USA P 860-379-2318 E tarboxdufrane.com Website www.dufrane.com Dufrane Nuclear is a pioneer in the industry of radiation shielding and radioactive handling and NQA-1 compliant. Eastern Technologies Inc. Booth 324 Contact Benjamin McWaters Ashford AL USA P 334-899-4351 E bmcwatersorex.com Website www.orex.com Eastern Technologies Incorporated ETI is uniquely positioned to provide solutions to all your protective clothing needs. With the continued advancement of our OREX line of protective clothing and related products ETI also has the ability to provide state of the art single use garments the far exceed industry standard. The revolutionary OREX Ultra coveralls have made possible historically low personnel contaminations at several nuclear power plants over the past 12 months. ETI also operates the most technologically advanced radiological laundry in the world. ECC Booth 705 Contact Roland Moreau Burlingame CA USA P 650-347-1555 E RMoreauecc.net Website www.ecc.net An employee-owned business founded in 1985 ECC delivers high quality comprehensive and competitive design-build construction environmental energy closure munitions response and international development solutions to the challenges facing our government clients. ECC has demonstrated the technical and managerial breadth and expertise to complete a variety of large-scale concurrent projects across the globe. EKSORB LTD Booth 806 Contact Igor Voinov Ekaterinburg Sverdlovsk Russian Federation P 007-343-371-25-30 E voinovrenecol.com Website www.eksorb.com EKSORB develops and manufactures highly selective sorbents for liquid radioactive wastes. We have created products and technologies that lower the cost of waste treatment and disposal. Our effective sorbents for selection of Cs Sr Co Mn radionuclides are used by leading waste134 management companies in the world. We have developed COREBRICK technology for conditioning of liquid radioactive wastes and their safe storage. Eksorb also specializes in polymer solidification of spent ion exchange resins. Enercon Services Inc. Booth 624 Contact Wendy Lambert Oak Ridge TN USA P 865-220-7901 x102 E wlambertenercon.com Website www.enercon.com ENERCON is a leading engineering licensing and environmental consistently ranking high in several Engineering News-Record lists. An employee- owned company our culture drives us to provide superior customer service as individual owners. ENERCON along with its wholly owned subsidiaries Talisman Tri-County Engineering and Enercon Federal Services Inc. has an outstanding reputation with providing a wide variety of services including multi-discipline engineering decommissioning environmental remediation and consulting radiologic safety and industrial health licensing and permitting and facility siting and construction. Energy Technology and Environmental Business Association Booth 321 Contact Linda Short Oak Ridge TN USA P 865-591-8776 E lindaeteba.org Website www.eteba.org The Energy Technology and Environmental Business Association ETEBA is a non-profit trade association representing more than 250 small large and mid-sized companies that provide environmental technology energy engineering construction and related services to government and commercial clients. Our mission is to promote the success of our members by fostering market understanding identifying business opportunities and advocating for our common interests. EnergySolutions Booth 801 Contact Mark Walker Platinum Sponsor Salt Lake City UT USA P 801-649-2194 E mwalkerenergysolutions.com Website www.energysolutions.com EnergySolutions is a leading provider of specialized technology based nuclear services to government and commercial customers. We are committed to environmental protection energy independence and the nuclear industry. Our services include engineering in-plant operations outsourced specialty services spent nuclear fuel management decontamination and decommissioning logistics transportation processing and disposal. Energysteel Table Top B Small Business Pavilion Contact David Jaumotte Lapeer MI USA P 810-538-4975 E djaumotteenergysteel.com Website www.energysteel.com Envirocon Inc. Booth 608 Contact Lori Mathews Missoula MT USA P 406-523-1150 E lmathewsenvirocon.com Website www.envirocon.com Envirocon is a market leader providing full-service environmental remediation for public and private sector clients across North America. Backed by our dedicated employees financial strength and owned equipment fleet we focus on delivering safe high quality and cost-effective solutions to our clients complex environmental challenges. Whether the challenge is demolition of a former industrial building excavation of radiologically impacted soil or removal of contaminated sediment from a river we have the specialized expertise to partner with our clients and implement a solution. As a self-performing remediation contractor we employ our multidisciplinary construction expertise and bring a technical team safety and management professionals engineers and scientists to effectively and efficiently complete our clients projects. Connect with us WMS2016 135 Exchange Monitor Publication Forums Contact Elana Lilienfeld Booth 613 Rockville MD USA Bronze Sponsor P 301-354-1715 E elilienfeldaccessintel.com Website www.exchangemonitor.com ExchangeMonitor Publications Forums founded by the late Edward Helminski was acquired by Access Intelligence LLC in March 2015. ExchangeMonitor publishes professional newsletters and creates manages and sponsors forums colloquiums and workshops to facilitate an exchange of views and information among government officials private industry executives non-governmental organizations and other entities on critical national and international programs and policies. Federal Engineers and Constructors Contact Richard French Booth 107 Richland WA USA P 509-375-1608 E rfrenchjrfeandc.com Website www.feandc.com FEC is a full-service construction and environmental remediation small business which has made a conscious decision to specialize in work that is highly technical and highly hazardous. With one of the best safety records in the industry and a fully approved and implemented NQA-1 program FEC offers services to both government and commercial clients. Our work is focused on four key serviceshazardous and nuclear remediation deactivation decontamination decommissioning and demolition D4 or DD government and industrial construction and engineering and technical services. Fluor Booth 1019 Contact Katy Alley Diamond Sponsor Greenville SC USA P 864-281-6026 E katy.alleyfluor.com Website www.fluor.com Fluor is a global leader in engineering procurement construction maintenance and project management. Active across six continents we work with governments and multinational companies to design build and maintain the worlds most complex projects. Fluors government service business dates back to the Manhattan Project. It continues today with some of the most challenging missions in the world. We provide nuclear operations waste management site management and operations environmental remediation and laboratory management to the US Department of Energy as well as the UKs Nuclear Decommissioning Authority and the Canadian government. Among our active projects we are managing the decommissioning of the worlds largest gaseous diffusion plant and also the most significant national laboratory for cleanup and DD technology development within the DOE complex. Fluors experience flexibility responsiveness and commitment to integrity performance and safety result in unparalleled service delivery. We are a proud partner in our customers mission success. GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy Hitachi-GE Nuclear Energy Booth 521 Contact Gregg Schneider Wilmington NC USA P 770-906-7376 E gregg.schneiderge.com GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy GEH and Hitachi GE Nuclear Energy HGNE are world-leading providers of advanced reactor technology nuclear fuel and services. Created by GE and Hitachi to serve the global nuclear industry the global nuclear alliance executes a single strategic vision to create a broader portfolio of solutions expanding its capabilities for new reactor and service opportunities. The alliance offers customers around the world the technological leadership required to effectively enhance reactor performance power output and safety. GEL Laboratories LLC Booth 804 Contact Bob Seyer Knoxville TN USA P 865-599-1175 E bobseyermindspring.com Website www.gel.com Founded in 1981 our client base includes some of the largest industrial manufacturers in the Southeast 72 US commercial nuclear sites fifteen Department of Energy sites thirteen Army Corps of Engineer USACE Districts the US Navy and Air Force. GEL provides these clients with customized analytical chemistry services including environmental monitoring RIFS RCRA investigation NPDES analysis hazardous and mixed waste characterization bioassay decommissioning and remediation closure analysis. Additionally we perform full Part 61 and Energy Solutions Clive characterization services on samples with contact doses rates up to 600 mRhr. 136 Geotech Computer Systems Table Top F Contact Toni Rich Small Business Pavilion Centennial CO USA P 303-740-1999 E trichgeotech.com Geotech is a leader in database management software for environmental mining petroleum agriculture and many other industries. Geotech was established in 1986 by Dr. David Rich. We are a privately held woman-owned small business. We sell commercial software for managing environmental quality data such as lab and field data especially chemical biologic and radiologic data. Our clients praise our excellent software service and technical support. General Plastics Manufacturing Co Contact Kris Hsin Booth 632 Tacoma WA USA P 253-473-5000 E kris_hsingeneralplastics.com Website www.generalplastics.com General Plastics Manufacturing Companys FR- 3700 crash and fire protection foams are recognized by specifying agencies as being one of the best solutions for the protection of hazardous payloads. The FR-3700 formulation is designed to allow predictable impact-absorption performance under dynamic loading while providing an intumescent char layer that insulates and protects hazardous materials even when exposed to pool- fire conditions. Global Emergency Resources Booth 527 Contact Stan Kuzia Jr. Augusta GA USA E stan.kuziager911.com Website www.ger911.com Global Emergency Resources specializes in software development and systems integration to create a Common Operating Picture and Situational Awareness through threat and predictive modeling tools and individual and asset tracking during emergency and daily operations. Since 2003 GER has successfully integrated systems for a wide variety of industries at the local state regional and national levels. From the initial planning stages through development installation training exercises and drills GER provides true systems integration and implementation. GoldSim Technology Group LLC Booth 818 Contact Rick Kossik Issaquah WA USA P 425-295-6985 E OAdministratorgoldsim.com Website www.goldsim.com GoldSim is the premier tool for carrying out probabilistic performance assessments of proposed and existing radioactive waste management sites and is used by over 600 organizations worldwide. GoldSim supports decision and risk analysis by simulating future performance while quantitatively representing the uncertainty and risks inherent in all complex systems. Hot Cell Services Booth 535 Contact Zbigniew Tomalik Kent WA USA P 253-854-4945 E weingibzhotcell.com Website www.hotcell.com Hot Cell Services is the worldwide leader in safe viewing solutions for the Nuclear and Medical Industries. We manufacture Radiation Shielding Windows Glove Box Windows Lead Glass Slabs and Bricks Radiation Gaskets and supplies. We offer lifetime support of our products with engineering consulting extractioninstallation maintenance refurbishment inspection and diagnosis services. I.C.E. Service Group Inc. Booth 1119 Contact Dennis Morgan II Ambridge PA USA P 724-266-7580 E dmorganiceservicegroup.com Website www.iceservicegroup.com ICE provides packaging transportation logistical support and waste management services for both commercial and government clients. ICE utilizes a multi-modal transportation approach including rail truck and marine conveyances. ICE specializes in handling low level radioactive waste RCRA hazardous waste TSCAPCB waste non- hazardous waste hazardous materials and equipment and machinery. Our Site Services Group provides on-site services including completion of waste profiles design and fabrication of custom transload facilities and custom soft sided and steel transportation packages and staff augmentation. Our Equipment and Machinery Group handles the loading blocking bracing and transportation of heavy and over- dimensional equipment and machinery. All work is performed economically in a safe manner and under our NQA-1 Program. 137 In-Place Machining Company Booth 526 Contact Jonathan Eder Milwaukee WI USA P 414-562-2000 E JEderinplace.com Website www.inplace.com In-Place Machining Company designs and develops specialized machining systems and fixtures for the nuclear industry especially those used for on-site machining and DD applications. We also have a 160000 gallon underwater testing facility with more than 42 of overhead crane lift height. Our expertise includes mechanical electrical and software engineering as well as a dedicated 100000 sq. ft. manufacturing facility with complete in-house machining assembly and testing capabilities. With almost 100 employees in three locations IPM is ready to help with your next on-site machining or DD project. International Nuclear Services Booth 848 Contact John Mulkern UK Pavilion Warrington Cheshire United Kingdom P 4401925-835000 Ejohn.mulkerninnuserv.com Website www.internationalnuclearservices.com iRobot Corporation Booth 513 Contact Kim Monti Bedford MA USA P 505-590-0300 E kmontiirobot.com Website www.irobot.com iRobot Defense Security for standard operations hazardous material handling and operations conducted in confined spaces the iRobot family unmanned ground vehicles offer cost-savings capabilities that protect your work force and increase efficiency. The robots are equipped with numerous cameras for thermal imaging or low-light and dark environments strong arms and manipulators and combined with better-than-human auditory capabilities these robots perform in-depth inspections investigations or material handling operations. With more than 20 years of leadership in the robot industry and more than 10 million robots in use worldwide iRobot remains committed to building robots that improve the quality of life and safety standards worldwide. ISO-Pacific Nuclear Assay Systems Contact Sheri Michaelis Booth 814 Richland WA USA P 509-375-0100 E adminisopacific.net Website www.isopacific.net ISO-PACIFIC is a green environmental remediation firm specializing in the physical separation of radiologically contaminated soil fractions from otherwise clean soil. Known as soil sorting our volume reduction service can result in huge savings in the deposition and disposal of radioactive soil waste stocks. James Fisher Technologies Booth 631 Contact Scott Adams Longmont CO USA P 720-408-0100 E scott.adamsjftechgroup.com Website www.jftechgroup.com James Fisher Technologies JFT is a reputable provider of remote solutions specialty engineering and technical services for applications within hazardous environments or with high integrity requirements. As the US subsidiary of James Fisher Nuclear and part of James Fisher and Sons plc JFT has a heritage that dates back over 165 years with a vision to grow by providing our customers with valuable solutions that ensure the safety of their workforce and enable the successful completion of the task at hand. As a ground- breaking and rapidly expanding company our highly trained staff and enduring heritage enable us to provide solutions to the most demanding operational and technical challenges faced by our customers. Joseph Oat Corporation Booth 711 Contact Crystal Harrington Camden NJ USA P 856-541-2900 x216 E charringtonjosephoat.com Website www.josephoat.com Joseph Oat Corporation is a world renowned designer and fabricator of pressure vessels waste canisters reactors heat exchangers and other specialty items for the nuclear power radwaste chempetrochemical and other industries. Family owned and operated since 1788 the company has gained its reputation by providing high quality equipment in a great variety of alloys for some of the most demanding and critical applications including safety related and N stamped equipment. 138 Kurion Inc. Booth 811 Contact Tracy Johnson Diamond Sponsor Richland WA USA Post Foundation Sponsor P 509-737-1377 E tjohnsonkurion.com Website www.kurion.com Kurion is a clean energy company that creates technological solutions that minimize and stabilize nuclear and hazardous waste for safe secure and permanent disposal. Leidos Booth 121 Contact Charlotte ONeil Oak Ridge TN USA P 865-481-4724 E oneilcleidos.com Website www.leidos.com Leidos is a FORTUNE 500 scientific engineering and technology applications company that uses its deep domain knowledge to solve problems of vital importance to the nation and the world in national security energy and environment health and critical infrastructure. For more information visit leidos.com. Leidos From Science to Solutions Longenecker Associates Inc. Booth 808 Post Foundation Sponsor Contact John Longenecker Las Vegas NV USA P 702-493-5363 E jrllongenecker-associates.com Website www.longenecker-associates.com Longenecker Associates Inc. LA specializes in addressing management engineering energy environmental and regulatory issues. LA has a proven record of helping clients find and resolve problems before they become significant and costly. LAs expertise includes project management performance improvement regulatory compliance independent assessments quality assurance support business development and strategic planning. Major Tool Machine Inc. Booth 615 Contact Joel Manship Indianapolis IN USA P 317-917-2626 E jmanshipmajortool.com Website www.majortool.com Major Tool and Machine provides the nuclear marketplace with best value turnkey engineering fabrication machining assembly and testing services. Our extraordinary capability capacity and experience are driven by our commitment to quality assurance. This is evidenced through our ASME N NPT N3 NS U and U2 certifications. In addition our Nuclear Quality Assurance Program is audited to NQA-1 10CFR21 10CFR50 part B 10CFR71 subpart H 10 CFR72 subpart G and 10CFR830 compliance. Our combined strengths of outstanding program management unparalleled capability and uncompromising quality assurance provide our customers with the major difference. Marshallton Research Laboratories Inc Contact Arthur M. Foster Booth 1024 King NC USA P 336-983-2131 E marshalltonwindstream.net Website www.marshalltonlabs.com Marshallton manufactures specialty chemicals for remediation and recycling in the nuclear energy industry. These include MAXCalix Cs-7SB solvent modifier and guanidine suppressors key components for cesium removal. Also available extractants and solvents used in nuclear fuel cycle RD. Custom synthesiscustom formulation grams to 100s of kilograms. Concept through commercialization. Mega-Tech Services LLC Booth 1113 Contact Deanna Bowen Mechanicsville VA USA P 804-789-1577 E dbowenmega- techservices.biz Website www.mega-techservices.biz Mega-Tech Services LLC provides a complete line of high pressure hydraulic tools including guillotine cutters scissor cutters crushers crimpers pipe punches sampling spreaders and grapplers. We offer extensive expertise in specialty or custom tooling applications for nuclear maintenance and decommissioning projects. Mega-Tech Services LLC is a woman-owned small business providing services to the nuclear industry in both domestic and international markets for over 20 years. Metal Solutions Design Fabrication LLC Contact Kathy Pugh Booth 411 Dayton KY USA P 859-282-5000 E kathypmsdf1.com Website www.msdf1.com Metal Solutions is a full service fabrication company specializing in the design testing and manufacturing of IP-1 IP-2 IP-3 and 7A type A containers. Our staff is familiar with the specific needs of 49 CFR and NNSS WAC. We operate under a NQA-1 QA program and certify our welders to AWS D1.1 D1.3 139 Mobile Characterization Services LLC Contact Eric Pennala Booth 1138 Albuquerque NM USA P 505-433-3790 E epennalacanberra.com MCS is a joint venture partnership of Canberra Industries Pajarito Scientific Corporation and V. J. Technologies specializing in mobile characterization of TRU and LL Waste using real- time radiography and non-destructive assay technologies. MCS is currently certified at multiple sites throughout the complex and has characterized over 218000 containers for shipment to WIPP and other repositories. NAC International Booth 509 Contact Ellen OShea Norcross GA USA P 678-328-1221 E eosheanacintl.com Website www.nacintl.com NAC International NAC is an industry-leading provider of engineering and nuclear fuel management solutions for nuclear facility operators fuel cycle companies and government agencies. The company offers a proven process for the design licensing and deployment of innovative technologies to store transport and manage nuclear materials including high level waste and spent fuel. Our professional staff possesses unsurpassed industry knowledge and experience necessary for todays demanding requirements for nuclear fuel cycle projects and performance. NAC serves more than 200 customers and supports a host of diverse projects. National Nuclear Laboratory Booth 940 Contact Keith Miller UK Pavilion Birchwood Park United Kingdom P 4401925-289-960 E keith.x.millernnl.co.uk Website www.nnl.co.uk The UKs National Nuclear Laboratory NNL offers a breadth of technical products and services covering the complete nuclear fuel cycle from fuel manufacture and power generation to reprocessing waste treatment and disposal. We operate from six sites in Cumbria Lancashire Cheshire Gloucestershire and Oxfordshire although most of our work is focused around our sites in the North West of England and we are the second biggest industrial employer in West Cumbria. With over 10000 man years of nuclear experience across the fuel cycle coupled with world-leading nuclear RD facilities we deliver the experts and technologies that ensure the UK nuclear industry operates safely efficiently and cost effectively. Navarro Research and Engineering Inc. Contact Sandra Todoro Booth 431 Oak Ridge TN USA Bronze Sponsor P 865-220-9650 E todoronavarro-inc.com Website www.navarro-inc.com Navarro is a premier contractor for the Department of Energy the National Nuclear Security Administration the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the Department of Defense providing environmental renewable energy and energy efficiency nuclear information technology and quality and safety services. Navarro a woman-owned small disadvantaged business has over 400 employees working in fourteen offices and twenty-three project locations nationwide. New York Blower CompanySSM Industries Contact Margaret Wood Booth 602 Willowbrook IL USA P 630-794-5725 E mwoodnyb.com Website www.nyb.com New York Blower is a world leader in the industrial and OEM marketplace. Together with SSM Industries they can provide customized fans to these markets specializing in engineered and high temperature applications. NFT Booth 511 Contact Patrick Sandlin Golden CO USA P 303-384-9785 x232 E psandlinnftinc.com Website www.nftinc.com Industry leader dedicated to providing superior packaging shielding and characterization technologies for ventilation storage transportation and disposal of radioactive and mixed waste. NitroCision LLC. Booth 709 Contact Rosey Villagomez San Antonio TX USA P 210-256-4108 E roseyihiswt.com Website www.ihiswt.com Nitrocision provides nuclear decontamination precision cutting and industrial cleaning solutions and services to the power petroleum chemical and wind industries around the world. Nitrocisions staff consists of qualified experienced engineering and personnel. All of Nitrocisions engineers are 140 trained qualified and certified in the appropriate methods and on the applicable equipment in accordance with Nitrocisions procedures and client specific guidelines. NSSI Source and Services Inc. Booth 630 Contact John Cruz Houston TX USA P 713-641-0391 E jcruznssihouston.com NSSI Source and Services Inc. is based on a 5- acre facility in Southeast Houston. NSSI offers services and products including chemical and radioactive decontamination leak testing radiation instrument calibration radiation safety training and waste disposal. Waste disposal activities encompass the treatment storage and disposal of radioactive hazardous and non- hazardous and mixed radioactivehazardous wastes. NSSI has been licensed to possess and use radioactive materials and process radioactive waste since 1971. NSSI obtained its final part B permit for hazardous non-hazardous and mixed wastes on October 4 1990. North Wind Group Booth 434 Contact Rebecca Clark Idaho Falls ID USA P 208-528-8718 E rclarknorthwindgrp.com Website www.northwindgrp.com North Wind is a leading small business with core services in waste management remediation engineering construction and DD. Our diverse capabilities allow us to self-perform nearly all aspects of any given work scope providing customers with significant cost savings. North Wind supports a broad customer base with 20 offices nationwide. Nuclear Decommissioning Authority Contact John Mathieson Booth 835 Moor Row United Kingdom UK Pavilion P 4401925-80-2001 E john.mathiesonnda.gov.uk Website www.nda.gov.uk NDA is responsible for managing the effective and efficient clean-up of the UKs nuclear legacy. This includes the first generation of Magnox power stations various research and fuel facilities and our largest most complex site Sellafield. We are the body tasked with implementing government policy on higher activity radioactive waste and the low-level waste strategy. NDA also provides advice on the decommissioning plans for current and planned nuclear power stations. Nuclear News Booth 817 Contact Jeff Mosses LaGrange Park IL USA P 708-579-8226 E jmossesans.org Website www.ans.org Published since 1959 Nuclear News is the monthly membership magazine of the American Nuclear Society and is recognized worldwide as the flagship publication for the nuclear power industry. News reports cover plant operations maintenance security international developments waste management fuel and industry. Annually hundreds of organizations rely on NN to advertise their products and services or meetings and events. Dont miss our March 20 deadline to submit or renew a FREE company listing in our 46th Annual Mid-April Buyers Guide visit our booth for details Nuclear Plant Journal Booth 604 Contact Anu Agnihotri Downers Grove IL USA P 630-352-3686 E anugoinfo.com Website www.nuclearplantjournal.com Now in its 32nd year Nuclear Plant Journal a US publication provides technical information exchange among managers and engineers in the industry worldwide. Circulation 12000 44 countries BPA Audited. Published six-times per year. Annual Products Services Directory published in December. The Journals entire editorial archive is online at nuclearplantjournal.com and is full-text searchable. Digital editions of the Journal are also available. US readers may subscribe cost-free for a print or PDF version overseas readers may subscribe cost-free to the digital version of the Journal. Post your best WM2016 photos on social media using WMS2016 141 Nuclear Safety Technology Services Contact Brian Matthews Booth 603 Las Vegas NV USA P 702-942-3260 E brian.matthewsns-ts.com Website www.ns-ts.com NSTS is a next generation nuclear services company founded to support the existing nuclear infrastructure as well as supporting the development and deployment of new nuclear technologies that are essential to meeting our future energy needs in a safe environmentally responsible and sustainable manner. Equally important to this charter are the solutions and innovations that are needed to address the challenges presented from decommissioning legacy nuclear facilities effectively efficiently and in a safe and socially responsible framework. With significant experience and track record in each of these areas NSTS is committed to providing exceptional service and quality to clients engaged in these important areas. Nuclear Waste Partnership Booth 1134 Contact Rose Scott Carlsbad NM USA P 575-234-7512 E Rose.Scottwipp.ws Website www.wipp.ws The US DOE Waste Isolation Pilot Plant WIPP became the nations first operating underground repository for radioactive defense wastes in 1999. The WIPP facility located in southeastern New Mexico was designed for permanent disposal of radioactive transuranic waste the byproduct of nuclear weapons research and production. Project facilities include disposal rooms excavated 2150 feet underground in an ancient stable salt formation. NUCON International Inc. Booth 812 Contact Robert Sommer Columbus OH USA P 614-846-5710 x125 E Bob.Sommernucon-int.com Website www.nucon-int.com NUCON specializes in high efficiency filtration process equipment. Activated carbon and specialty adsorbents for the control of radioiodine mercury sulfur noble and acid gases. Testing of HVAC and filtration systems. Manufacture instruments for testing HVAC systems. Engineering design fabrication and testing of systems using adsorption technology including gaseous radwaste control. NukeWorker.com Booth 611 Contact Michael Rennhack Coloma MI USA P 269-369-8833 E RennhackNukeWorker.com Website www.NukeWorker.com NukeWorker delivers more nuclear job seekers than any other career site with the only database of nuclear resumes. NukeWorker ranks 1 in search engines for nuclear jobs and is the most visited nuclear site on the Internet with more than 7 million page views each month. NUVIA Booth 322 Contact John Antignano Charlotte NC USA P 704-998-5511 E johnafireriskmgt.com Website www.nuvia.fr Nuvia is a subsidiary of the specialist engineering group Soletanche Freyssinet with 16500 staff and a revenue of 3.4 billion. Freyssinet has been involved in the nuclear industry through worldwide use of its advanced engineering and innovative products. Nuvia can trace its roots from the beginning of the French and British nuclear industries. The group has grown organically and through mergers and acquisitions. Pioneering work in construction engineering energy nuclear RD design new build operations radiation protection fire and flooding protection and decommissioning. As a leader in these areas our strong emphasis is on safety quality and sustainability has been our number one priority. The companys rich heritage is reflected in the wide range of services provided today. OC Robotics Booth 942 Contact Adam Mallion UK Pavilion Filton Bristol United Kingdom P 440117-314-4700 E adamocrobotics.com Website www.ocrobotics.com OC Robotics is a world leader in robotics for confined and hazardous environments. Our core technology snake-arm robots can have a reach exceeding 4m and their flexible design is ideal for working in confined and hazardous spaces conducting inspection maintenance and cleaning tasks with integrated off-the-shelf or custom- designed tools. 142 Off-Site Source Recovery Project LANL Contact Cristy Abeyta Booth 617 Los Alamos NM USA P 505-667-3631 E cabeytalanl.gov Website osrp.lanl.gov OSRP is a US Government activity sponsored by NNSA with a mission to remove excess unwanted abandoned or orphan radioactive sealed sources that pose a potential risk to health safety and national security. ORTEC Booth 619 Contact Susie Brockman Oak Ridge TN USA P 865-483-2124 E Susie.Brockmanametek.com Website www.ortec-online.com ORTEC manufactures a wide range of radiation measurement instruments and systems for use in waste management operations associated with plant operation decommissioning and waste disposal including in situ characterization measurements and containerised waste assay. Visit the ORTEC booth to learn about our latest products including our latest HPGe detectors ICS mechanical coolers and ISOCART-85 mobile system for free release waste assay. PacTec Inc. Booth 822 Contact Mike Sanchez Clinton LA USA P 800-272-2832 E mikesanchezpactecinc.com Website www.pactecinc.com PacTec Inc. has more than 25 years experience in the design and manufacturing of the most innovative and cost efficient packaging solutions for the nuclear and hazardous wastes industries. PacTecs IP1 and IP2 flexible containers are used on decommissioning sites and remediation projects around the globe. Pajarito Scientific Corporation Booth 201 Contact Michael Pitts Silver Sponsor Santa Fe NM USA P 505-424-6660 E mpittspscnda.com Website www.pajaritoscientific.com Pajarito Scientific Corporation PSC is an internationally recognized supplier of comprehensive integrated solutions in the field of non-destructive assay NDA containment filtration and specialist shielding. Where there is a requirement to locate identify characterize contain or shield radioactive material PSC has the solution. PSC has over 25 years of custom manufacturing experience from rapid prototyping through to fully developed systems. PSC offers a range of products and services based on our advanced design and manufacturing capability at our facilities in Santa Fe NM and Groton CT. The Company employs highly qualified Physicists Engineers Electrical Mechanical and Software Field Operations personnel and Project Managers. Paragon DE Booth 1136 Contact Bill Smith Grand Rapids MI USA P 616-949-2220 E billcompucraft.net Website www.paragonde.com Paragon DE specializes in taking product development from concept to design to production. Paragon is DOE certified to NQA-1 and machines all materials from exotic high temperature alloys non-metalic materials and composite structures. Paragon designs tool families that assure a customer has a quality product. Paragon also produces extremely large tools and parts. Our 5 6 axis machines have up to 60 ft tables that can handle unlimited weight. Pentek Inc. Booth 501 Contact Kathy Lefkowitz Coraopolis PA USA P 412-262-0725 E kathy.lefkowitzpentekusa.com Website www.pentekusa.com WM2016 marks Penteks 30th year of service to the nuclear DD industry. From early roots established during Three Mile Island Unit 2 accident recovery activities Pentek is now a global supplier of engineering services and specialized equipment to support facility remediation and waste management including decontamination of structural steel concrete wood and synthetic materials. VAC-PAC MOOSE and WallWalker are Penteks flagship products. 143 Perma-Fix Environmental Services Inc. Contact Autumn Bogus Booth 415 Knoxville TN USA P 865-251-2090 E abogusperma-fix.com Website www.perma-fix.com Perma-Fix Environmental Services Inc. is a nuclear services company and leading provider of nuclear waste management services. The companys nuclear waste services include management and treatment of radioactive and mixed waste for hospitals research labs and institutions Department of Energy DOE Department of Defense DOD and the commercial nuclear industry. The companys nuclear services group provides project management waste management environmental restoration decontamination and decommissioning new build construction and radiological protection safety and industrial hygiene capability to our clients. The company operates four fixed based nuclear waste treatment facilities and provides the most comprehensive mixed waste management services nationwide. Petersen Inc. Booth 919 Contact Susan Chrisman Ogden UT USA P 801-732-2000 E susancpeterseninc.com Website www.peterseninc.com Porvair Filtration Group Table Top A Contact Kate Treagust Small Business Pavilion Fareham United Kingdom P 4401489-86433 E Kate.Treagustporvairfiltration.com Website www.porvairfiltration.com Premier Technology Inc. Booth 425 Contact Lyle Freeman Blackfoot ID USA P 208-785-2274 E lfreemanptius.net Website www.ptius.net Premier Technology Inc. began manufacturing operations in 1996 and has grown to over 340 employees in that time. Customer growth has provided Premier the opportunity to move from a 24000 sq. ft. facility to a 200000 sq. ft. facility and maintain a constant workflow. With our current shop capacity management and manufacturing experience Premier is capable of performing large-scale projects ranging up to 100M. Premier is a progressive manufacturing company focused on the integration of technology and science with professional craftsmanship. We perform construction management custom engineering design fabrication testing and installation for the nuclear Department of Defense Department of Energy aeronautical food and chemical processing industries. We are known for our ability to supply the highest quality turnkey engineering custom fabrication system integration and field installation solutions to those industries. Examples of custom fabricated items are vessels heat exchangers exhausters gloveboxes hot cells stairs railing platforms conveyors conveyance systems structural steel items skid technology etc. Radwaste Solutions Magazine Booth 817 Contact Jeff Mosses LaGrange Park IL USA P 708-579-8225 E jmossesans.org Website www.ans.org Created by the American Nuclear Society in 1994 this specialty trade publication caters to any professional or company involved in the business of radioactive waste management decommissioning or the remediation of radiologically impacted sites. Editorial coverage includes the generation handling transportation treatment cleanup storage and disposal of radioactive including mixed waste. If you are performing or seeking work within the niche radwaste segment of the nuclear industry visit our booth to Advertise or Subscribe. A complimentary copy of our Spring issue can be found in your WM2016 registration bag. REI Nuclear LLC Booth 820 Contact Steve Garner Columbia SC USA P 803-791-8550 E sgarnerreinuclear.com Website www.reinuclear.com REI Nuclear LLC REIN provides Nuclear DD and Waste Management Services in the areas of Comprehensive Project Planning Mechanical Segmentation Tooling Design and Fabrication Material Handling System Project Execution REIN offers our product and services to all sectors of the nuclear industry including commercial government academic and reactor and non- reactor facilities. Our services are also offered internationally through our subsidiary REI Nuclear Europe Limited. 144 ResinTech Inc. Booth 510 Contact Frank DeSilva West Berlin NJ USA P 856-768-9600 E fdesilvaresintech.com Website www.resintech.com ResinTech Inc. an acknowledged leader in ion exchange manufactures a broad range of ion exchange resins for water and wastewater treatment including deionization softening metals removal product purification resource recovery and pollution control. In addition to its ion exchange resins ResinTech supplies activated carbon and inorganic selective exchangers. Restoration Services Inc. Booth 1026 Contact Yvette Cantrell Oak Ridge TN USA P 865-297-4900 x102 E ycantrellrsienv.com Website www.rsienv.com RSI is an employee-owned small business headquartered in Oak Ridge TN with offices in Oak Ridge Portsmouth OH and Aiken SC offering services focused on environmental cleanup and beneficial site reuse. RSI performs a wide range of services and able to provide an integrated approach to project planning execution and closure activities. RSIs core competencies include regulatory strategy comprehensive characterization long-term stewardship project controls and renewable energy. RJ Lee Group Booth 508 Contact Steven LaZar Monroeville PA USA P 720-692-6188 E slazarrjleegroup.com Website www.rjleegroup.com RJ Lee Group is an accredited analytical laboratory and scientific consulting firm. We partner with our clients to solve problems encountered during manufacturing and product development to ensure regulatory compliance and to determine the root cause of product failure as part of warranty claims or performance improvement efforts. Our network of technical experts provides you with customized solutions that are flexible scalable and best-suited to your application. For more than 30 years we have worked toward one goal to solve the technical challenges you face every day. Our comprehensive laboratory and expert staff are the foundation for all the services that we provide including Full Service Materials Characterization Laboratory Root Cause Failure Analysis Environmental Health Safety Manufacturing Process Quality Control Standardized Testing for Compliance Product Development Support RD Litigation Support Laboratory Management Software At RJ Lee Group we believe that science speaks for itself. We just give it a confident voice. Robatel Technologies LLC Booth 614 Contact Donna Martin Roanoke VA USA P 540-989-2878 E dmartinrobateltech.com Website www.robateltech.com Robatel Technologies was established in 2009 as the US subsidiary of Robatel SA. We are in charge of Robatels development of the American Nuclear market. We specialize in design and fabrication of transportation and storage casks hot cells glove boxes metallic structures waste processing systems and neutron shielding. Additionally we design turn-key process lines comprised of multiple systems for unique applications. Robatel has provided engineering services since 1830 and has embraced the nuclear field since 1953. Our technical capabilities include engineering design and calculations regulatory approval expertise fabrication testing and site operations. Our customer base is spread over Europe Asia Africa Australia and the Americas. RussTech Language Services Inc. Contact Marilyn Young Booth 724 Tallahassee FL USA P 850-562-9811 E mjyoungrusstechinc.com Website www.russtechinc.com RussTech Language Services Inc. is a full-service language company specializing in written translations and interpreting services for more than 100 languages and dialects worldwide. We provide our clients with the ability to further their international objectives through consistent high quality language support. RWM Ltd Booth 746 Contact John Dalton UK Pavilion Harwell Oxford United Kingdom P 4401925-80-2820 E john.daltonnda.gov.uk Website www.nda.gov.ukrwm Savannah River National Laboratory Contact Jeannette Hyatt Booth 1126 Aiken SC USA P 803-725-1341 E Jeannette.Hyattsrs.gov145 Scientific Sales Inc. Table Top D Small Business Pavilion Contact Katherine Bumgardner Oak Ridge TN USA P 865-483-9332 E kbumgardnerscisale.com Website www.scisale.com Scientific Sales is a small minority woman-owned business in Oak Ridge TN. In business supplying federal local and municipal governments with lab chemical safety industrial instrumentation optical and law enforcementfirst responder products for over 27 years. We have direct relationships with most major manufacturers. SKOLKOVO FOUNDATION Booth 714 Contact Tatiana Sharipova Moscow Russian Federation P 7-495-956-0033 x2126 E TSharipovask.ru Website www.sk.ru Skolnik Indutries Inc Booth 723 Contact Dean Ricker Chicago IL USA P 773-884-1510 E deanskolnik.com Website www.skolnik.com Skolnik Industries is a manufacturer of carbon and stainless steel drums for storage and disposal of radioactive material. In addition Skolnik manufactures custom packaging for the DOE and nuclear industries. Smoky Mountain Solutions Booth 620 Contact Shannon Eaker Oak Ridge TN USA P 865-964-1124 E seakerbestechtn.com Website www.bestechtn.com Smoky Mountain Solutions SMS specializes in radioactive laundry radioactive waste water and respirator cleaning and repair services. Located in Oak Ridge TN SMS is a service-disabled veteran- owned small business SDVOSB focused on environmental processes and issues. SMS leases and sells Anti-Cs and PPE for DOE and commercial nuclear reactor applications. SMS also specializes in DOE and commercial nuclear material and waste handling and operational support. SNC-Lavalin Inc. Booth 1037 Contact Neha Maria Mississauga ON Canada P 905-823-9040 E neha.mariasnclavalin.com SNC-Lavalins Nuclear team provides leading nuclear technology products and full-service solutions to nuclear utilities around the globe. Our team of engineering procurement construction and project management experts offer customized operations maintenance and plant life management services including waste management and decommissioning for BWR PWR and CANDU-type reactors. Our experts in nuclear steam plant and balance of plant engineering carry out life extension projects and design and deliver state-of-the-art CANDU reactors which are capable of operating on many types of fuel including natural uranium mixed oxide MOX fuel recycled uranium RU and thorium. SOURIAU Booth 713 Contact Chris Eason Greer SC USA P 864-561-2797 E ceasonsouriau.com Website www.nuclear-connectors.com For over 40 years SOURIAU part of Esterline Connection Technologies has offered high performance and reliable electrical interconnect solutions designed for the most critical nuclear applications. Nuclear Fuel Production Spent Fuel Reprocessing Waste Management Nuclear Power Plants Nuclear Experimental Facilities With a product range that is UL certified and with an established NQA-1 program Souriau is ready to meet your needs. Spectra Tech Inc. Booth 606 Contact Loong Yong Silver Sponsor Oak Ridge TN USA P 865-483-7210 E lyongspectratechinc.com Website www.spectratechinc.com Spectra Tech Inc. is an engineering environmental and nuclear services company that focuses on providing high quality and cost- effective technical solutions for our Federal Government and commercial clients worldwide. We are headquartered in Oak Ridge TN with additional offices in Norcross GA. 146 STA-AESS-RES LLC Booth 725 Contact Richard Rose PhD Mount Pleasant SC USA P 208-546-1370 E radconenvironmentalgmail.com Provide radioactive shieldingdose blocking high density polyurethane foam and macro- encapsulation services for radioactive and contaminated waste. Stoller Newport News Nuclear Booth 708 Contact Mark Fertitta Bronze Sponsor Broomfield CO USA P 303-546-4331 E mfertittastoller.com Website www.sn3.huntingtoningalls.com Stoller Newport News Nuclear Inc. SN3 combines complex nuclear facility management and high-consequence operations expertise with environmental management experience. SN3 delivers Tier 1 Prime contractor capabilities to government and private-sector clients and has performed safe high-quality services for over 56 years. SN3 is a wholly owned subsidiary of Huntington Ingalls Industries HII which employs 38000 people within its divisions and subsidiaries. HII enterprises share resources and personnel and collectively manage more than 100 nuclear assignments. Strategic Packaging Systems LLC Contact Al Beale Booth 730 Madisonville TN USA P 423-545-9505 E al.bealespsonline.biz Website www.spsonline.biz Custom Packaging Manufacturer for low level IP-1 or IP-2 packaging bags. We manufacture packages of all sizes and for all sorts of site cleanups. Studsvik Booth 701 Contact Howard Stevens Atlanta GA USA P 404-497-4908 E howard.stevensstudsvik.com Website www.studsvik.com Founded in 1947 Studsvik is a leading supplier of specialty services to the international nuclear industry and has a proven history of innovation efficiency and safety. With a corporate commitment to environmental responsibility and sustainability the company provides technologically advanced services in four main areas waste treatment decommissioning engineering and operating efficiency. Success Staging International LLC Contact William Jackson Booth 527 Augusta GA USA P 706-250-4603 E bill.jacksonsuccesstaging.com Website www.successtaging.com SSI is a specialized consulting firm utilizing an energetic committed resourceful team of seasoned professionals to enable success. We excel at resolving hard executive-level challenges facilitating corporate change implementing technology and making lasting differences. Specializing in corporate governance management operating systems Six-Sigma Lean value-added risk Mgmt. programproject Mgmt. engineering studies and technology-centric Integrated Emergency Operations and Security. For 25 years our staff has helped organizations examine and transform the way they think and manage. Teledyne Brown Engineering Booth 927 Contact David Downs Huntsville AL USA P 256-726-5624 E david.downsteledyne.com Website www.tbe.com Teledyne Brown Engineering Inc. is a recognized leader in providing innovative and proven systems engineering advanced technology application software development and manufacturing solutions to Department of Energy commercial nuclear environmental and military requirements. Our strengths in both engineering and manufacturing distinguish us from our competitors. The WM Mobile App is available on Apple Android and Blackberry operating systems through the Apple App Store Google Play or Blackberry. Be sure to download it onto your smart phone while onsite to get updates and up-to-date conference information throughout the event. 147 TestAmerica Laboratories Inc. Booth 600 Contact Kim Johnson Milton WI USA P 309-264-7200 E kim.Johnsontestamericainc.com Website www.testamericainc.com TestAmerica the leader in environmental testing has a network of over 80 locations nationwide providing technical expertise and comprehensive analytical testing services. TestAmericas team of more than 2000 professionals is dedicated to providing exceptional service and innovative solutions for our clients environmental testing needs. Offering analytical services including routine and specialty organics metals general chemistry and radiochemistry testing TestAmerica provides comprehensive environmental testing services for commercial and government entities. Tidewater Inc. Table Top M Contact James Reese Small Business Pavilion Elkridge MD USA P 410-540-8700 E james.reesetideh2o.net Website www.tideh2o.net Tioga Pipe Supply Company Inc Booth 421 Contact Glenn Reigel Philadelphia PA USA P 215-831-0700 E greigeltiogapipe.com Website www.tiogapipe.com Global supplier of nuclear and safety-related piping components plate sheet structural shapes machined parts forgings fasteners and fabrications. Carbon stainless chrome-moly and special melts. QSC 467. 247 emergency service. Tri-State Motor Transit Co. Booth 317 Contact Kyla Jewsbury Joplin MO USA P 417-621-2213 E kyla.jewsburytsmtco.com Website www.tsmtco.com Radioactive transportation TWI Ltd Booth 944 Contact Chris Punshon UK Pavilion Cambridge United Kingdom P 4401223-899000 E chris.punshontwi.co.uk Website www.twi.co.uk TWI is a world leading research and technology organisation. From bases in UK USA China Malaysia Middle East India and Australia over 700 staff provide technical support in joining and technologies such as material science structural integrity. NDT surfacing electronic packaging and cutting. Services include generic research contract RD technical information consultancy standards drafting training and qualification. TWI offers a single impartial source of service for joining engineering materials. TWI is internationally renowned for its multidisciplinary teams that implement established or advanced joining technology solving problems at any stage from initial design materials selection production and quality assurance through service performance to repair. UKTI Booth 837 Contact Michael Rosenfeld London United Kingdom P 44 0 20 7034 3266 E Mike.Rosenfeldmobile.ukti.gov.uk Website www.ukti.gov.uk UltraTech International Inc. Booth 625 Contact Mark Shaw Jacksonville FL USA P 904-292-1611 x 205 E mark.shawspillcontainment.com Website www.spillcontainment.com UltraTech provides innovative product and technology solutions ranging from vents and filters packaging storage absorbents bag-out bags Type A packaging containers secondary containment and customized products to meet specific site needs. Recent developments to be highlighted will include macroencapsulation technology and a new line of gas sampling filter vents. 148 UniTech Services Group Inc. Booth 704 Contact Lonnie Perez Longmeadow MA USA P 413-543-6911 E lperezunitechus.com Website www.unitechus.com UniTech Services Group Inc. is the worlds largest supplier of nuclear protective clothing and accessories. Our nuclear licensed decontamination facilities throughout the US and Europe provide the following services radiological laundering of protective clothing decontamination and testing of respirators and the decontamination of tools equipment scaffolding hand tools portable HEPA vacuums etc.. Our products and services are designed to provide our customers cost-effective protection of their workers with minimal generation of radioactive waste. US DOE Office of Environmental Management Contact Steven Sylvester Booth 326 Washington DC USA P 202-586-7804 E Steven.Sylvesterem.doe.gov Website www.energy.gov The mission of the Office of Environmental Management EM is to complete the safe cleanup of the environmental legacy brought about from five decades of nuclear weapons development and government-sponsored nuclear energy research. EM has made significant progress in shifting away from risk management to embracing a mission completion philosophy based on reducing risk and environmental liability. EM is demonstrating the importance of remaining steadfast to operating principles while staying focused on the mission. US DOE NV Field Office Booth 418 Contact Dona Merritt North Las Vegas NV USA P 702-295-3521 E envmgtnnsa.doe.gov Website www.nv.energy.gov The US Department of Energy National Nuclear Security Administration Nevada Field Office Environmental Management Program is responsible for addressing contamination from historic nuclear testing in Nevada disposing low-level and mixed low-level radioactive waste from approved generators and conducting environmental protection and compliance activities at the Nevada National Security Site. US DOE Office of Legacy Management Contact Tony Carter Booth 816 Washington DC USA P 202-586-3323 E tony.carterhq.doe.gov Website www.hq.doe.gov The US Department of Energy Office of Legacy Management LM was established in 2003 to provide a long-term sustainable solution to the legacy of the Cold War. LM is responsible for long- term surveillance and maintenance of environmental remedies promotion of beneficial reuse and management of records and information for former weapons production sites across the nation. US Ecology Booth 800 Contact Amy Jo Haratyk Livonia MI USA P 734-521-8055 E amyjo.haratykusecology.com Website www.usecology.com US Ecology is the nations most comprehensive supplier of cost-effective transportation treatment and disposal services for low-level radioactive wastes hazardous and PCB wastes and naturally occurring accelerator produced and exempt radioactive materials. US Ecology has provided radioactive waste services since 1952 and hazardous waste services since 1968. Vigor Booth 430 Contact Carol Reid Clackamas OR USA P 503-653-6300 E carol.reidvigor.net Website www.oregoniron.com In-house CNC capabilities include cutting burning shearing milling machining turning forming rolling painting and sophisticated inspection. Our integrated machine shop houses one of the largest custom CNC floor mills on the West Coast. We fabricate to the highest quality standards. Our customers receive reliability predictability performance and quality through their entire projects fabrication schedule. The result is outstanding finished product from the material sourced to the complete documentation. This combination of experience and advanced equipment has resulted in a company that not only specializes in products for a specific industry but can readily respond to new customer requirements and apply unique solutions across a variety of manufacturing and engineering disciplines. Experience our outstanding customer service.149 Visionary Solutions LLC Booth Semi E Contact Kirste Webb Knoxville TN USA P 865-482-8670 E kwebbvs-llc.com Website www.vs-llc.com Visionary Solutions LLC VS is a certified minority business enterprise providing a complete range of transportation alternative energy and additive manufacturing services for governmental and commercial clients. We offer comprehensive solutions including personnel packaging equipment and training for nuclear hazardous medical and classified materials andor waste projects. VS services are designed to provide safe effective and compliant solutions to complex technical issues within budget and schedule. Visionary SolutionsWIPP Booth Semi D Contact Mary Burnette Knoxville TN USA P 865-482-8670 x508 E mburnettevs-llc.com Website www.vs-llc.com VJ Technologies Inc. Booth 520 Contact Sheetal Alreja Bohemia NY USA P 631-589-8800 E sheetalavjt.com Founded in 1987 VJ Technologies VJT developed custom imaging software and hardware for government agencies and later radiographic digital imaging products for NDT markets. VJTs highly-specialized divisions develop and manufacture a complete line of automated x-ray inspection systems for the industrial electronic medical and nuclear industries. VJ Technologies delivers a competitive advantage over other companies through our network of global offices. In the 21st century VJT continues to develop new technologies and solutions designed to enhance NDT products in all of its divisions. Wagstaff Applied Technologies Booth 505 Contact Dan Payne Spokane WA USA P 509-321-3184 E Dan.PayneWagstaff.com Website www.WagstaffAT.com Wagstaff Applied Technologies provides the nuclear industry with mechanical and electrical engineering fabrication machining assembly and test services. Products include automated material handling equipment ASME U Stamped pressure vessels gloveboxes code-compliant lifting beams and automated control systems. Wagstaff ATs NQA-1 compliant quality assurance program has been audited and approved by several DOE contractors. Walischmiller Engineering Booth 631 Contact Jean-Michel Wagner Markdorf Baden-Wrttemberg Germany P 49-7544-9514-80 E jean-michel.wagnerhwm.com Website www.hwm.com Wlischmiller Engineering is a German company which has been providing safe smart and cost- effective remote handling solutions with the famed German quality and reliability for over 60 years worldwide. Wlischmiller Engineering specializes in manufacturing remote-handling systems radiation protection equipment and robotics for hazardous environments for the application in nuclear and chemical industries. Wlischmiller has a hard earned international reputation for performance excellence in engineering and exceptional robotic hardware. In the most difficult and challenging nuclear environments Wlischmiller has demonstrated the ability to bring solutions and success to many of the most difficult high-radiation remediation challenges. Waste Control Specialists LLC Booth 1107 Contact Ken Grumski Silver Sponsor Cranberry Township PA USA P 724-312-3031 E kgrumskivalhi.net Website www.wcstexas.com Waste Control Specialists LLC WCS has emerged as the nations leading provider of treatment storage and disposal services for low-level radioactive waste mixed low-level radioactive waste and hazardous waste. The Texas-sized 14000 acre facility is a one-stop shop for radioactive generators across the country. At WCS we are providing the most secure safe and compliant waste treatment storage and disposal services for our customers and employees by using technical expertise and innovation while incorporating the highest ethical standards. Wastren Advantage Inc. Booth 519 Contact Ben Thompson Piketon OH USA P 740-443-7924 E ben.thompsonwastrenadvantage.com Website www.wastrenadvantage.com Wastren Advantage Inc. WAI is an SBA-Certified 8a small disadvantaged business that provides focused solutions for managing the entire life cycle 150 of hazardous and radioactive materials. WAI has over 20 years of proven performance in environmental remediation environmental consulting waste management and facility management and operations. Westinghouse Electric Company Contact Kathleen Posteraro Booth 1031 Cranberry Township PA USA Platinum Sponsor P 412-374-5888 E posterkmwestinghouse.com Website www.westinghousenuclear.com Westinghouse Electric Companys unique expertise includes integrated services and solutions to the Decommissioning and Dismantling DD and Waste Management to the global nuclear power plant market. We provide state-of-the-art solutions for the treatment and handling of radioactive waste and offer proven solutions for the storage of low intermediate and high-level waste. Our global workforce is a mix of highly skilled technical and craft personnel who focus on safety and quality to deliver predictably successful results. Our technology offerings range from complex decommissioning and dismantling solutions to unique welding and machining capabilities. Weston Solutions Booth 609 Contact Sean McGraw West Chester PA USA P 610-701-3415 E sean.mcgrawwestonsolutions.com Website www.westonsolutions.com Building upon 30 years of service to the DOE our team specializes in low-level and transuranic waste strategy characterization disposal and management solutions high hazard remediation environmental compliance groundwater modelingmonitoring and community outreach. Beyond in-depth environmental expertise and an EMR consistently below .54 Weston also ranks an ENR top design firm. 151 107 Federal Engineers and Constructors 115 Brokk Inc. 121 Leidos 201 Pajarito Scientific Corporation 223 DESTACO 301 Canberra Industries 317 Tri-State Motor Transit Co. 319 Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance 321 Energy Technology and Environmental Business Association 322 NUVIA 324 Eastern Technologies Inc. 326 US DOE Office of Environmental Management 401 AREVA Federal Services 407 Columbiana Hi Tech 409 Applied Research Center 411 Metal Solutions Design Fabrication LLC 415 Perma-Fix Environmental Services Inc. 417 Amec Foster Wheeler 418 US DOE NV Field Office 421 Tioga Pipe Supply Company Inc. 425 Premier Technology Inc. 430 Vigor 431 Navarro Research and Engineering Inc. 434 North Wind Group 501 Pentek Inc. 505 Wagstaff Applied Technologies 506 DAHER-TLI 508 RJ Lee Group 509 NAC International 510 ResinTech Inc. 511 NFT 513 iRobot Corporation 517 AVANTech DTS 519 Wastren Advantage Inc. 520 VJ Technologies Inc. 521 GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy Hitachi-GE Nuclear Energy 525 Global Emergency Resources LLC 526 In-Place Machining Company 527 Success Staging International LLC 528 ARCADIS US Inc. 530 Rolls-Royce 531 533 Cutting Edge Services Corporation Wheelift - Doerfer 535 Hot Cell Services 600 TestAmerica Laboratories Inc. 601 American Crane Equipment Corporation 602 New York Blower Company SSM Industries 603 Nuclear Safety Technology Services 604 Nuclear Plant Journal 605 Container Products Corporation 606 Spectra Tech Inc. 608 Envirocon Inc. 609 Weston Solutions 611 NukeWorker.com 612 Cabrera Services Inc. 613 Exchange Monitor Publication Forums 614 Robatel Technologies LLC 615 Major Tool Machine Inc. 617 Off-Site Source Recovery Project LANL 619 ORTEC 620 Smoky Mountain Solutions 623 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 624 Enercon Services Inc. 625 UltraTech International Inc. 628 Alliant Corporation 630 NSSI Source and Services Inc. 631 Walischmiller Engineering 631 James Fisher Technologies 632 General Plastics Manufacturing Co. 700 CAST Transportation 701 Studsvik 702 Bluegrass Concrete Cutting Inc. 704 UniTech Services Group Inc. 705 ECC 708 Stoller Newport News Nuclear 709 NitroCision LLC 710 Attention IT Inc. 711 Joseph Oat Corporation 712 ANTECH Corporation 713 SOURIAU 714 Skolkovo Foundation 715 ARS International LLC 717 Dedicated Nuclear Solutions 718 ARS Aleut Analytical LLC 720 Ultra Electronics Nuclear Control Systems 723 Skolnik Indutries Inc 724 RussTech Language Services Inc. 725 STA-AESS-RES LLC 728 Diversified Metal Products Inc. 730 Strategic Packaging Systems LLC 732 Camfil 738 Croft Associates 740 Aquila Nuclear Engineering Ltd 744 Atkins 746 RWM Ltd 748 ARUP 800 US Ecology 801 EnergySolutions 804 GEL Laboratories LLC 806 Eksorb Ltd 808 Longenecker Associates Inc. 810 Canal Barge Company 811 Kurion Inc. 152 812 NUCON International Inc. 814 ISO-Pacific Nuclear Assay Systems 816 US DOE Office of Legacy Management 817 Radwaste Solutions Magazine 817 Nuclear News 818 GoldSim Technology Group LLC 820 REI Nuclear LLC 822 PacTec Inc. 823 CH2M 835 Nuclear Decommissioning Authority 837 UKTI 839 AECOM 844 Augean PLC 846 Attention IT Ltd 848 International Nuclear Services 910 Dade Moeller 916 CBI 919 Petersen Inc. 925 Container Technologies Industries LLC 927 Teledyne Brown Engineering 940 National Nuclear Laboratory 942 OC Robotics 944 TWI Ltd 1019 Fluor 1024 Marshallton Research Laboratories Inc. 1026 Restoration Services Inc. 1031 Westinghouse Electric Company 1035 Transco Products Inc. 1037 SNC-Lavalin Inc. 1100 AECOM 1107 Waste Control Specialists LLC 1113 Mega-Tech Services LLC 1119 I.C.E. Service Group Inc. 1125 BWX Technologies Inc. 1126 Savannah River National Laboratory 1134 Nuclear Waste Partnership LLC 1136 Paragon DE 1138 Mobile Characterization Services LLC Semi B CAST Transportation Semi D Visionary Solutions LLCWIPP Semi E Visionary Solutions LLC Small Business Pavilion Table Top A Porvair Filtration Group Table Top B Energysteel Table Top C Arizona Energy Education Fund Coalition Table Top D Scientific Sales Inc. Table Top F Geotech Computer Systems Table Top G Dufrane Nuclear Shielding Inc. Table Top L AGI Engineering Inc. Table Top M Tidewater Inc. 153 www.wmsym.org WM2017 Important Dates Planning for WM2017 on March 59 2017 is well underway. If you would like to participate as a presenter volunteer attendee or exhibitor listed are some important milestones. June 1 2016 Opening of Call for Abstracts Technical Program Submission website July 15 2016 Deadline for Returning Exhibitors to Secure Previous Years Booth Location August 10 2016 Open Sell of Exhibit Booth Begins -Any booth not secured by August 10 is now available on a first-come first-served basis. August 12 2016 - Deadline to submit Abstracts September 11-13 2016 - Program Development Meeting for Program Advisory Committee PAC. PAC members gather in Phoenix to create the preliminary program for the WM2017 Conference. Once finalized authors are notified and draft papers are written. October 3 2016 - Authors Notified of Acceptance October 31 2016 Deadline for Financial AidVisa Requests and Anticipated Closure of DOE iPortal November 4 2016 Deadline for Full-length Draft Papers Draft papers are submitted and reviewed by members of the PAC in their area of expertise. December 9 2016 Deadline for Paper Reviewer Comments to Authors Authors are then given several weeks for any requested updates or revisions and to submit their final paper in January. December 31 2016 - Deadline for Early Bird Registration January 13 2017 Deadline for Final Papers Copyrights Student Abstracts Poster Videos February 17 2017 - PowerPoint Presentations due for all Presenters. March 5-9 2017 - WM2017 Conference Dates at the Phoenix Convention Center Future Conference Dates 2018 - March 18 - 22 2018 2019 - March 3 - 7 2019 2020 - March 8 - 12 2020 154 155 From the operation of nuclear production facilities at Savannah River to site remediation and waste management at Hanford SN3 manages complex projects that are crucial to national security advancing science and technology and protecting the environment. With a half-century legacy of safe performance SN3 earned the rst nationwide multi-site Department of Energy Voluntary Protection Program STAR award. sn3.huntingtoningalls.com PO BOX 27646 TEMPE ARIZONA 85285 USA 480-557-0263 A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION CONNECT WITH US ON SOCIAL MEDIA WMS2016 WMS SUPPORTERS American Nuclear Society IAEA - International Atomic Energy Agency IFNEC - International Framework for Nuclear Energy Cooperation Nuclear Energy Agency OECD - Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development Roy G. Post Foundation Socit Franaise dEnergie Nuclaire Waste Management Education and Research Consortium WNA - World Nuclear Association The conference is organized in cooperation with the US Department of Energy The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission the US Environmental Protection Agency and the US Department of Defense. CCOUNTRIES REPRESENTED AT WM SYMPOSIA REPRESENTATION OF COUNTRIES VARIES EACH YEAR AUSTRALIA AUSTRIA BELGIUM BRAZIL CANADA CHINA CZECH REPUBLIC FINLAND FRANCE GERMANY ITALY JAPAN KAZAKHSTAN RUSSIAN FEDERATION SAUDI ARABIA SLOVAKIA SLOVENIA SOUTH AFRICA SOUTH KOREA SPAIN SWEDEN SWITZERLAND TAIWAN TAJIKISTAN THAILAND TURKEY UKRAINE UNITED ARAB EMIRATES UNITED KINGDOM USA wmsym.org EDUCATION OPPORTUNITY IN WASTE MANAGEMENT WM2016 MARCH6-102016