Nuclear Security & Deterrence Monitor Vol. 28 No. 18
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Nuclear Security & Deterrence Monitor
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May 03, 2024

Mo. Senate passes KCNSC tax bill after nixing proposal to add waste-cleanup aid

By Sarah Salem

Missouri state senators this week passed a bill to provide tax breaks for the expansion of the National Nuclear Security Administration’s factory for non-nuclear nuclear-weapon parts.

The bill now heads to the state legislature’s House of Representatives, where it had not been scheduled for a vote at deadline Friday for Nuclear Security & Deterrence Monitor.

The bill — sponsored by then-state-Sen. Greg Razer (D-Jackson County) — offers sales tax exemptions for construction materials. Last week, state senators defeated a proposed amendment that would have added assistance for St. Louis residents affected by radioactive waste to Razer’s bill.

The exemptions are meant to lessen the cost of the National Nuclear Security Administration’s (NNSA) expansion of the Kansas City National Security Complex, which produces the non-nuclear components of nuclear weapons. A Honeywell International subsidiary operates the plant.

State Sen. Nick Schroer (R-St. Charles County) last week attempted to amend the bill to create a tax credit for soil and water testing near parts of suburban St. Louis, where the Army Corps of Engineers is cleaning up radioactive contamination from the Manhattan Project. 

Razer wanted to pass the bill as is to speed up the process and add jobs to his community.

Razer said NNSA plans to add 2.5 million square feet of new nuclear facilities and create thousands of new jobs. NNSA plans to spend over $3 billion on Kansas City facilities.

Schroer’s proposed amendment is one of several efforts by lawmakers to bring relief to St. Louis-area residents affected by radioactive waste, including similar federal legislation that senators Josh Hawley pushed and President Joe Biden (D) backed.

As part of the Manhattan Project during World War II, several facilities in north St. Louis County were contaminated by uranium processing and the storage of waste material from those processes. The local Missouri Independent in 2023 reported that current and former residents of these areas suffered from rare cancers. 

The Army Corps of Engineers, through its Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program (FUSRAP) is responsible for Manhattan Project cleanup in the St. Louis area. The Corps, which began sampling Coldwater Creek for contamination in March, collectively calls the contaminated areas the North St. Louis County Sites.

 

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