eer.

Department of Energy
Nevada Operations Office

PO, Box 14100

.

Las Vegas, NV 89114

BESS y97y
Mahlon E. Gates

Manager
_

ENEWETAK RADIOLOGICAL SUPPORT PROJECT
Over the past few months we have had several conversations
the role of the DOE Enewetak Project Manager. Of specific
to me at this time is the role of the Project Manager as a
in the DNA decision-making process. My concern has become
because of two recent occurrences:

regarding
concern
participant
acute

i. Our early November discussion with Hal Hollister, wherein he
expressed disagreement with my philosophy of participation.
2.

A recent request received by John Stewart (currently acting for
me as Deputy Project Manager on site) that he concur in the

establishment of the detailed cleanup objective for one of the
Northern islands, Lujor.
.
In this paper I describe what I visualize as the appropriate mechanism
and sequence of decision and the DOE Project Manager's role. JI know
that this scenario is at variance with what some-others both in DNA
and in our Headquarters expect; but it is the product of almost six
years of study of, and experience with, the Enewetak situation, and
of many tens of hours of argument, debate, and soul searching. I
believe that each of my six Project Management Deputies feels completely
free to disagree with me and to express his disagreement. Yet I believe
that you will find unanimous agreement with the concept herein descrined,
by these seven senior people (including myself) who are closest to the
issue and who each mist individually represent the Departmentof Energy
during rotational on~site tours.
Let me. first review a few of the "givens" in the cleanup program.
First, by its very nature, the scope and magnitude of the program are
ill-defined, and will remain so until we are well into the actual
implementation.
It was for this reason that I suggested in 1972 that

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