Specialists Commend Passage of Legislation
Texas Insider Report: DALLAS Texas The Texas Legislature put the best interests of Texas consumers and ratepayers first by devising a way to keep disposal costs low for Texas generators while providing tens of millions of dollars annually for the state budget through a voluntary access surcharge paid by generators outside the Texas Compact states of Texas and Vermont" said William J. Lindquist CEO of Waste Control Specialists (WCS") in praising Legislators for approving legislation that strengthens the partnership between the state of Texas Andrews County and WCS providing a
Texas Solution to longstanding environmental challenges.
The legislation received overwhelming support in the legislature; near unanimous approval in the Senate and three-quarters approval in the House of Representatives.
Noting the significant efforts and investments made by all three partners in developing a disposal facility Lindquist said the legislature put the final piece in place.
By recognizing waste from outside the state was necessary to make the facility affordable and cost-effective for Texas generators legislative approval paves the way for disposal operations to begin later this year at the WCS site in Andrews County.

The legislation was sponsored by Representative Tryon Lewis of Odessa & Senator Kel Seliger of Amarillo. Both represent Andrews County withing their respective Legislative Districts.
Senator Seliger and Representative Lewis have taken a very conservative approach in this legislation mindful of the fact that this facility will be owned by the state and that the investment must be sound" Lindquist said.

The Lewis-Seliger legislation protects Texas interests by banning foreign waste while setting annual limits on the amount of domestic waste that can be received from outside the Compact states.
It also instructs the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality to conduct an updated facility capacity study in 2012. The legislation mandates that 70 percent of disposal capacity at the state facility be reserved for the Compact states.
With low-level radioactive waste temporarily stored at 1500 locations across Texas mostly in urban areas the need for a sound cost-effective solution was clear. Much of the waste comes from the operations of nuclear power plants that provide base load electrical supplies for Texas businesses and residents. Some of the waste comes from medical research and treatments of cancer diabetes and other critical illnesses.
This legislation makes it possible for essential medical research and electricity generation to continue with the disposal of the waste generated to become much safer and more efficient" Mr. Lindquist said.
About the WCS Facility
The WCS facility in western Andrews County is the only commercial facility in the United States licensed to dispose of Class A B and C low-level radioactive waste. It is also licensed for the treatment and storage of low-level radioactive

waste and has safely and successfully served as a temporary storage facility for past U.S. Department of Energy projects.
In its existing semi-arid and isolated location the WCS facility sits atop a formation of 500 feet of impermeable red-bed clay which makes it an ideal setting for the storage and disposal of low-level radioactive waste.
The state of Texas has determined the WCS facility does not sit above or adjacent to any underground drinking water formations.
The WCS facility is the site of the disposal facility for the
Texas Low Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Compact and mostly recently was the site of the successful storage and disposal of byproduct material from the DOE Fernald Ohio cleanup site.
WCS has been processing and storing low-level radioactive waste at its facility since 1998.