The EEOICPA was passed in 2000. It provides compensation to workers who became ill as a result of their employment manufacturing nuclear weapons in the USA, as well as their spouses, children, and grandchildren. Puerto Rico Nuclear Center EEOICPA coverage is available for qualified former Workers and their families.
Are you eligible for compensation? If you or a family member worked at this or another DOE facility and became ill, you may be entitled to compensation of up to $400K plus medical benefits. Call EEOICPA Counsel Hugh Stephens at 1-855-548-4494 or fill out our free claim evaluation, We can help even if you’ve already filed, even if your claim was denied!
Here, we have compiled publicly available information and documentation about the facilities covered by the Act to clarify how their activities relate to the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act.
Puerto Rico Nuclear Center
Also Known As: Center for Energy and Environment Research, CEER
State: Puerto Rico
Location: Mayaguez
Time Period: 1957-1976; 1987 (Remediation)
Facility Type: Department of Energy
Facility Description: The Puerto Rico Nuclear Center (also known as the Center for Energy and Environment Research) was established in 1957 as a nuclear training and research institution. The facility included a one megawatt MTR research reactor, which became operational in 1960. During the next ten years, the AEC supported training and research activities at an annual level of approximately $2 million. The MTR was shut down in 1971 and replaced a two megawatt TRIGA research reactor. Except for brief periods of time, TRIGA was never operated at power levels in excess of 1.2 megawatts.
In 1976, the facility was renamed the Center for Energy and Environmental Research (CEER) and the mission was broadened to include research, development and training for both nuclear and non-nuclear energy technologies. The programs were transferred to the University of Puerto Rico at that time.
The TRIAGA reactor was shut down on September 30, 1976 and a program for decommissioning and removal of the reactor was initiated.
CONTRACTOR: University of Puerto Rico (1957-1976) , BNI(1987), Cleveland Wrecking Caribe, Inc. (1987).
Listing:
Puerto Rico Nuclear Center is listed as a Department of Energy (DOE) site under the EEOICPA.
Compensation:
As of 03/15/2015, the total compensation paid under Parts B and E of the EEOICPA, including medical compensation, for workers suffering from the effects of having worked at the Puerto Rico Nuclear Center is $0.
Puerto Rico Nuclear Center Workers:
If you or your parent worked at this or any other DOE or AWE facility and became ill, you may be entitled to compensation of up to $400K plus medical benefits from the US Department of Labor. Call EEOICPA Counsel Hugh Stephens at 1-855-EEOICPA (336-4272) or fill out the form to the right, whether or not you have already filed a claim and even if your claim has been accepted or denied.
We can help with all OWCP (Federal Workers Compensation) claims, impairments, wage loss and health care. 2495 Main Street, Suite 442, Buffalo, NY 14214.
*Site Description and History:
The Center for Energy and Environmental Research (CEER) was established in 1957 as the Puerto Rico Nuclear Center, with facilities in Mayagüez and Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico. The U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), a predecessor agency of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), built both facilities. The Mayagüez site is on the University of Puerto Rico Mayagüez campus. The facility occupies about 20 acres adjacent to the university’s College of Agriculture and Mechanical Arts and the U.S. Department of Agriculture Experiment Station, northeast of the Mayagüez city limits. The Rio Piedras site is located about 2 miles south of San Juan and consists of a biomedical facility. In 1976, the Puerto Rico Nuclear Center was renamed the Center for Energy and Environmental Research. Both facilities conducted work under contract to AEC.
CEER Rio Piedras Site :
AEC established the Bio-Medical Life Sciences Research and Training Center under the 1958 Atoms for Peace program. The University of Puerto Rico has used the facility since 1961 for research, education, and training programs in the medical applications of radio- isotopes. Substantial amounts of radioactive materials were used for nuclear medicine and radiation therapy, and CEER also conducted extensive radiochemical and terrestrial ecology studies at the El Verde Field Station in the Caribbean National Forest. When the Puerto Rico Nuclear Center was renamed CEER, activities at the Rio Piedras facility focused more on nonnuclear research. The federal Energy Research and Development Administration, a successor to AEC, agreed to transfer the facilities to the University of Puerto Rico and to release some areas of the facility for unrestricted use. The Health and Safety Division of CEER performed radiation surveys and decontamination activities before releasing the Bio-Medical Building, “the shop”, and the “animal house”. CEER published a report documenting the survey and decontamination results in 1981. DOE requested a review of the report to verify that radiological conditions of the facility were acceptable for unrestricted use.
Argonne National Laboratory’s Radiological Survey Group reviewed the report and, as a follow-up, conducted an independent radiological survey between June 15 and June 25, 1982. The Argonne survey detected small areas of elevated radioactivity in three locations. These were cleaned to background levels and are no longer detectable. A molybdenum-99 source was left in place when survey calculations determined that the source did not constitute a radiological exposure hazard.
After completing radiological surveys and facility decontamination, DOE transferred the land and buildings to the University of Puerto Rico in 1982 by means of a quitclaim deed. An underground diesel fuel storage tank was removed from the site in 1994, and no contamination remains on the site today. The CEER Rio Piedras facility has been released for unrestricted use.
CEER Mayagüez Site:
The Mayagüez site has multiple buildings that housed a marine studies program, a research reactor, a training reactor, and associated laboratories. The site became operational in 1960 with the start-up of a 1-megawatt materials testing reactor. The reactor was shut down in 1971, and the fuel elements were removed and shipped to DOE’s Savannah River, South Carolina, site. The facility was refitted with a 2-megawatt TRIGA (Training, Research, Isotope, General Atomics) research reactor, which operated until September 1976. An L-77 training reactor was periodically operated onsite until 1976. The reactors were operated as part of a University of Puerto Rico nuclear training and research institution, particularly addressing the needs of Latin American students studying nuclear medicine and technology. Reactor research activities concluded in 1976, and the two reactors were decommissioned. Activities at the facility shifted to nonnuclear energy research and technology development.
DOE removed the TRIGA reactor fuel and components from the Mayagüez site in 1977 and transferred them to Argonne National Laboratory in Idaho Falls, Idaho. In October 1981, the L-77 reactor fuel core was removed and shipped to DOE’s Y-12 Plant in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Reactor decommissioning, decontamination, and restoration of the facility were completed by 1997. Soils contaminated by PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls), underground fuel oil storage tanks, gas cylinders, glass windows from hot cells (heavily shielded enclosures for remote handling of highly radioactive material), asbestos, and miscellaneous laboratory chemicals were also removed.
Multiple radiation and site characterization surveys were conducted at the Mayagüez site between 1977 and 1992, including an independent verification survey conducted by Oak Ridge Associated Universities in 1987. Following a final 1992 site investigation, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency concurred that the CEER Mayagüez site was cleaned up to applicable standards and no further action was required.