A research facility at Deseret Chemical Depot near Stockton, Tooele County, will close by October 2007, costing 130 jobs.
Meanwhile, the depot's drive to incinerate chemical weapons is not affected by the country's probable failure to meet its treaty obligations by destroying all such munitions by 2012.
Officials of the Army Chemical Material Agency, of which the depot is a part, informed workers on Nov. 14 that the Chemical Agent Munitions Disposal System will be closing by next October. Another 370 workers will remain at the depot.
Since the 1970s, the depot's CAMDS plant has been an important test and development facility for chemical agent destruction.
Deseret Chemical Depot is one of the bases identified in 2005 for closure by the Base Realignment and Closure Commission. It is tentatively slated to close by 2012, although the money could be available to operate until 2016 if necessary, said spokeswoman Alaine Southworth.
"We're a BRAC base," Southworth said. "We're on the BRAC list and we have always know that CAMDS would close first." Meantime, CAMDS will continue "with a much, much smaller mission, segregating hazardous waste for us."
Not all CAMDS workers are expected to lose jobs, as some may be able to move into slots opening at the depot while others could bump people with lower seniority. Some are likely to retire.
Contractors from the Tennessee Valley Authority will help close CAMDS.
Chemical Weapons Working Group, based in Berea, Ky., distributed copies of a recent Army briefing on the status of the nationwide effort to destroy chemical weapons. In April, after officials realized they could not meet a 2007 deadline, they requested an extension to 2012.
But that deadline won't be met, according to the briefing by Jean Reed, special assistant in the Defense Department.
The document shows that plants at Pueblo Chemical Depot, Colo., and Blue Grass Army Depot, Ky., will complete operations by November 2020 and October 2023, respectively long after the deadline.
"This is absolutely unacceptable," said Craig Williams, director of the working group, commenting by e-mail. Putting tens of thousands of people at risk by continuing to store the weapons is reprehensible, he added.
But while Pueblo and Blue Grass are delayed by the new timetable, apparently the Utah incinerator is not.
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