Another Lawsuit Filed Against Rocky Flats, Trying To Keep It Closed

AP Photo
Visitors approach a former ranch house and barn during a guided hike on the Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge near Denver.
Photo: Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge
Visitors approach a former ranch house and barn during a guided hike on the Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge near Denver.

A Colorado town near a former nuclear weapons plant has filed a lawsuit to keep part of the site from opening to the public as a wildlife refuge.

The town of Superior asked a federal judge to keep the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service from opening Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge, saying the agency hasn't adequately studied safety, the Boulder Daily Camera reported Friday.

Agency officials declined to comment.

It was the second lawsuit seeking to keep the refuge closed. A group of environmental and community activists filed a similar challenge earlier this year. A hearing in that case is scheduled for Tuesday in Denver federal court.

Rocky Flats was used to manufacture plutonium triggers for nuclear bombs from 1952 until 1989 on a wind-swept mesa about 16 miles (26 kilometers) west of downtown Denver.

After a $7 billion cleanup of the manufacturing area, the site's buffer zone — about 8 square miles (21 square kilometers) — was turned over to the Fish and Wildlife Service for a refuge. The service plans to build trails, a visitors center and open the refuge to the public this year.

The northeast corner of the refuge is adjacent to the southwest corner of Superior.

Superior's lawsuit, filed Tuesday, raises concerns that visitors to the refuge could disturb the soil and carry contaminants off the site.

The Fish and Wildlife Service and the Colorado health department have said the refuge is safe.

The central area where plutonium was processed is under the control of the U.S. Energy Department and won't be open to the public. It covers about 2 square miles.